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La Cité des enfants perdus

Original title: La cité des enfants perdus
  • 1995
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
74K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,655
92
La Cité des enfants perdus (1995)
Home Video Trailer from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Play trailer2:22
1 Video
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyDark FantasyDystopian Sci-FiSteampunkAdventureDramaFantasySci-Fi

A scientist in a surrealist society kidnaps children to steal their dreams, hoping that they slow his aging process.A scientist in a surrealist society kidnaps children to steal their dreams, hoping that they slow his aging process.A scientist in a surrealist society kidnaps children to steal their dreams, hoping that they slow his aging process.

  • Directors
    • Marc Caro
    • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
  • Writers
    • Gilles Adrien
    • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
    • Marc Caro
  • Stars
    • Ron Perlman
    • Daniel Emilfork
    • Judith Vittet
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    74K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,655
    92
    • Directors
      • Marc Caro
      • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
    • Writers
      • Gilles Adrien
      • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
      • Marc Caro
    • Stars
      • Ron Perlman
      • Daniel Emilfork
      • Judith Vittet
    • 278User reviews
    • 66Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 14 nominations total

    Videos1

    The City of Lost Children
    Trailer 2:22
    The City of Lost Children

    Photos116

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    Top cast86

    Edit
    Ron Perlman
    Ron Perlman
    • One
    Daniel Emilfork
    • Krank
    Judith Vittet
    • Miette
    Dominique Pinon
    Dominique Pinon
    • Le scaphandrier…
    Jean-Claude Dreyfus
    Jean-Claude Dreyfus
    • Marcello
    Geneviève Brunet
    • La Pieuvre
    • (as Genevieve Brunet)
    Odile Mallet
    • La Pieuvre
    Mireille Mossé
    • Mademoiselle Bismuth
    Serge Merlin
    • Gabriel Marie (Cyclops Leader)
    Rufus
    Rufus
    • Peeler
    Ticky Holgado
    Ticky Holgado
    • Ex-Acrobat
    Joseph Lucien
    • Denree
    Mapi Galán
    Mapi Galán
    • Lune
    • (as Mapi Galan)
    Briac Barthélémy
    • Bottle
    • (as Briac Barthelemy)
    Pierre-Quentin Faesch
    • Pipo
    Alexis Pivot
    • Tadpole
    Léo Rubion
    • Jeannot
    • (as Leo Rubion)
    Guillaume Billod-Morel
    • Child
    • Directors
      • Marc Caro
      • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
    • Writers
      • Gilles Adrien
      • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
      • Marc Caro
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews278

    7.473.8K
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    Featured reviews

    8stazza

    one of the most memorable movie experiences I've seen

    Many disagree with the previous reviewer.

    Not sure what the last reviewer watched, but City of lost Children is amazing cinema from the sets, color, acting, lighting, plot, it had everything pushed to the Nth from what I experienced.

    It is NOT a typical American style movie. It is French and luckily, they are allowed to have an alternate path to interesting movie making.

    This guy Jeunet puts a LOT into all of his productions. Almost a mentally overwhelming amount of style, info and actions (not action packed, but activities that go on in or behind the scene). He also did Amelie which is just as astounding and one of the best films ever made. Watch it start to finish if you don't believe that.

    The City of Lost Childen extends its name sake across many peoples from the twisted characters that are adults and act like the children they never were, to the children who are lost from being children and must be adults. Not to mention the abductions and the reason for that.

    So it is a win on many levels. One of the best, and I am so grateful I happened across this bazaar gem of a flick.

    Wish more movies were as intricately entertaining as this art piece is.
    8Varekai

    It's so bizarre that it's beautiful; it's so illogical that it's funny; it's so dark that it's so sweet.

    It's so bizarre that it's beautiful; it's so illogical that it's funny; it's so dark that it's so sweet. That's The City of the Lost Children. The plot it's that the evil -and weird- Krank (Daniel Emilfork) kidnap children to stole their dreams due to the lack of his ability of dream. Or at least he did it, until it came One (Ron Perlman), in the search of his adoptive little brother, aided by Miette (Judith Vittet), a street smart orphan child.

    In technical aspects it's a master piece. The decoration give a baroque sensation of always being in small places, yet it's a full city populated of bizarre characters as the story itself.

    The acting it's great. I'm quiet impressed for the flawless french that Ron Perlman show us, he's just simply astounding. I cannot say less of Judith Vittet, that being a child in that time she was a tremendous actress. The two have a good chemistry as a girl mature as an adult and a grow up man with the innocence of a kid.

    I can't say that this is a movie that everyone would like, because it's not. It have a little of nonsense that might be not of the like of all the public. And all the dark atmosphere might be a little suffocating. So, take the risk and watch it, and then decide: you love it, or you hate it.
    film-critic

    Quiet! You vegetable!

    The City of Lost Children gets two platinum stars and also moves up to one of my top ten favorite films of all time. This is a confusing story, from beginning to end it expands your mind, reaches into your nightmares, and creates a story that is part Dark City and part of a novel called "The Golden Compass" by Phillip Pullman.

    Yes, this film was everything and more. Not only visually beautiful, but the creative and symbolic meaning of the actions and words of the characters are "jaw dropping". Also, there are so many sub-stories in this film that reminded me of the style that Run Lola Run was done. This is the style that due to a connection of unrelated events something extraordinary happens. Let me give you an example from this film: There is a scene where the girl and One (Ron Pearlman-also a very biblical name) are trying to escape from the two women who want their jewels. There are events that lead from a dog finding its female companion to a boat almost hitting/splitting the women in half. Wild coincidences...imagine this times ten, and you have this film.

    Keep in mind this is a French film with English subtitles, so you are not only getting the true voice of the film, but seeing the darkness of the cinematography without any American input. This really shows the purpose behind making this film, it really takes you to a new place so dark and dreamlike that you the viewer actually feel like you are in the picture itself. A movie about dreams and nightmares that takes place in a world of dreams and nightmares.

    Overall, a heavily religious and symbolic film, The City of Lost Children should be put at the top of your foreign film list. Put it in your DVD player, open your mind, and be ready for a wild and intense ride!!

    Grade: ***** out of *****
    lwjoslin

    M. Perlman parle francais aussi!

    "City of Lost Children" is a beautifully-realized if derivative dark fantasy in which a mad scientist named Krank, aided by a half-dozen clones, a midget woman, and a brain in a tank, abducts children to his offshore lab so he can steal their dreams. Seems he's unable to have any of his own. A sideshow strongman, played by a radiantly fit Ron Perlman, goes in search of his little brother, who has been taken by Krank's goons. Perlman, in another of his growing gallery of bizarre roles, is a perfect example of why I like character actors better than big-name stars. And how many languages does he speak, anyway? French here, Spanish (and English, of course) in "Cronos"; polyglot in "The Name of the Rose"; what next?

    The strongman, named One, enlists the aid of Miette, a homeless, streetwise girl who, along with her fellow urchins, is part of a ring of thieves employed by a pair of sinister female Siamese twins named the Octopus. (Watch carefully how these evil twins smoke a cigarette. There are more weird characters per square inch in this flick than anywhere else outside a Heironymus Bosch painting.) Miette is played by Judith Villet, whose gonna-be-a-great-beauty looks, her air of intelligence and experience beyond her years, make her a sort of Gallic Natalie Portman.

    Anyway, that's the plot: rescue little brother from the mad doctor. The images are the thing: with its rendering of a bleak, low-tech retro-future, "City" looks more like a Terry Gilliam movie than "Twelve Monkeys" does! And it slyly slips in ideas and images from other sources, to good effect: Krank himself is as much of the mad-doctor stereotype as is the character in "The Nightmare Before Christmas"; his outlandish electro-headgear is similar to that used in Disney's "Merlin Jones"; a nightmare on the loose swoops low along the ground through streets and alleys as a trail of green mist, improving on a similar image from "Bram Stoker's Dracula"; there's a confrontation in dreamland a la the "Elm Street" series; and while the idea of a brain in a tank isn't a new one, this is the first benign one I've ever seen. Familiar or not--and I'm thinking also of "The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T"--"City of Lost Children" is still engaging, enjoyably weird, fantastic and funny, helped greatly by the fact that One and Miette are so endearing. The pace is a tad slower than it might have been. But this is, after all, a French movie.
    9Jeremy-93

    a feast for the imagination

    I can't help myself: I adore this film. I freely accept that it's not going to be everyone's cup of tea; if pushed, I might even accept that it's not perfect. But there's no film I love more, or more enjoy re-watching. One caveat though: I've seen both the subtitled and the dubbed print, and the English dubbing frankly comes close to ruining the movie. Ron Perlman dubs himself and is fine, and some of the other adult English actors are perfectly OK, though they tend to be blander than the French originals. But most of the children are terrible, and with her own voice it's Judith Vittet's extraordinary performance (all the more extraordinary considering she was nine at the time) that helps give "La Cité" the genuine emotional centre that some viewers don't feel it has.

    But I'll come back to that. In any version, at least Jeunet and Caro's astonishing visual flair and artistry come over. I can't think of a film that has such a concentration of memorable shots - time and again, especially watching on DVD with a freeze-frame facility, you realize how many beautiful compositions Jean-Pierre Jeunet gives us: though the cast of characters could easily fill a freak show, and the sets are dark and quite unglamorous in themselves, the cinematography is gorgeous and the mise-en-scène often strangely elegant. It has a look all of its own, perfect for a modern, urban fairy-tale. The music too is gorgeous, one of the finest scores by David Lynch's regular musical collaborator, Angelo Badalamenti.

    "Fairy tale" is I think the best generic starting-point for this film, so long as you think Grimm rather than Disney. (Unlike "Delicatessen", it isn't really a comedy, though it has comic elements). And the plot works according to its own logic, even if the progression from scene to scene is occasionally a bit lumpy or obscure. Krank (the astonishing Daniel Emilfork), grown prematurely old because he cannot dream, uses a cult of blind, messianic preachers to abduct children from a decaying industrial port and steal their dreams - but they have only nightmares, and Krank falls ever deeper into despair and evil. It's up to the orphan pickpocket Miette and a none-too-brainy circus strongman, One, to put a stop to him. This rich idea is elaborated with all sorts of visual conceits and eccentric characters - Jeunet mounts, for example, a couple of astonishing sequences in which chains of unlikely effects proceed from the smallest of causes - but never at the expense of the central relationship of One and Miette.

    In a sense Miette, like Krank, has grown old too fast: the orphaned street-children of this city are savvy and unsentimental, and never seem to have had a childhood; meanwhile there's something deeply childish, in various ways, about most of the adults. Sensitively directed and never overacting, Judith Vittet's Miette gradually thaws, and Ron Perlman brings a lot of sympathy and pathos to what could have been an oafish, cartoonish role: Jeunet gives plenty of space and subtlety to their gradually-developing friendship, and dares to do what I suspect no English director would dare to do at the moment, which is to make their relationship innocently sexualized. Neither of them is really a grown-up, but it's still an extremely risky move, exploring the first stirrings of pre-pubescent sexuality while trying not to be exploitative or prurient. I do think the film pulls it off, though I can imagine some viewers feeling distinctly uncomfortable with it. For me it's one of the most convincingly unsentimental and nuanced (if mannered) portrayals of childhood I've ever seen on the screen, and there is real compassion and tenderness along the way, as well as some darker twists and turns.

    It's a film that rewards analysis if you're prepared to surrender to its strange world with its strange rules. But it rewards the senses and the emotions too - and it radiates love of cinema as the perfect medium for sophisticated fantasy. One elderly actress who appears towards the end (Nane Germon) acted - as Jeunet's DVD commentary points out - in Jean Cocteau's "La Belle et la Bête" about fifty years earlier (there are, by the way, distinct references to the Beauty and the Beast story here), and "La Cité des enfants perdus" deserves to join that film as one of the classic cinematic fairy-tales. Pity about Marianne Faithfull over the closing credits, though!

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    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      To achieve the slightly skewed color scheme of the movie, the actors were made up in white face and the color palette corrected until they were flesh-toned.
    • Goofs
      The words from The Original that Miette remembers in flashback (after she receives Uncle Irvin's dream message) differ slightly from what The Original actually said, although the point of the message is still the same.
    • Quotes

      [after Mlle. Bismuth has been harpooned]

      Clone: Does it hurt?

      Mlle. Bismuth: Yes, I'm allergic to steel.

    • Alternate versions
      There are two different audio tracks for the film - one is the original French language version and another is an English language dub.
    • Connections
      Featured in Les enfants de la cité perdue (1995)
    • Soundtracks
      Who Will Take Your Dreams Away
      Music by Angelo Badalamenti

      Lyrics by Marianne Faithfull

      Performed by Marianne Faithfull

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    FAQ20

    • How long is The City of Lost Children?Powered by Alexa
    • Why do One and Miette need the map through the minefield if they easily avoid the mines with a rowboat?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 17, 1995 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Germany
      • Spain
      • Belgium
    • Official sites
      • Sony Pictures Classics (United States)
      • StudioCanal International (France)
    • Languages
      • French
      • Cantonese
    • Also known as
      • La ciudad de los niños perdidos
    • Filming locations
      • Studios 91 Arpajon, Saint-Germain-les-Arpajon, Essonne, France(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Constellation
      • Lumière Pictures
      • Le Studio Canal+
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $18,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,738,611
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $34,348
      • Dec 17, 1995
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,784,338
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby SR

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