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De beaux lendemains

Original title: The Sweet Hereafter
  • 1997
  • R
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
38K
YOUR RATING
Ian Holm and Sarah Polley in De beaux lendemains (1997)
Trailer
Play trailer0:32
1 Video
99+ Photos
TragedyDrama

A bus crash in a small town brings a lawyer to defend the families, but he discovers everything isn't what it seems.A bus crash in a small town brings a lawyer to defend the families, but he discovers everything isn't what it seems.A bus crash in a small town brings a lawyer to defend the families, but he discovers everything isn't what it seems.

  • Director
    • Atom Egoyan
  • Writers
    • Russell Banks
    • Atom Egoyan
  • Stars
    • Ian Holm
    • Sarah Polley
    • Caerthan Banks
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    38K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Atom Egoyan
    • Writers
      • Russell Banks
      • Atom Egoyan
    • Stars
      • Ian Holm
      • Sarah Polley
      • Caerthan Banks
    • 237User reviews
    • 61Critic reviews
    • 91Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 34 wins & 56 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Sweet Hereafter
    Trailer 0:32
    The Sweet Hereafter

    Photos223

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    Top cast25

    Edit
    Ian Holm
    Ian Holm
    • Mitchell Stephens
    Sarah Polley
    Sarah Polley
    • Nicole Burnell
    Caerthan Banks
    • Zoe Stephens
    Tom McCamus
    Tom McCamus
    • Sam Burnell
    Gabrielle Rose
    Gabrielle Rose
    • Dolores Driscoll
    Alberta Watson
    Alberta Watson
    • Risa Walker
    Maury Chaykin
    Maury Chaykin
    • Wendell Walker
    Stephanie Morgenstern
    Stephanie Morgenstern
    • Allison O'Donnell
    Kirsten Kieferle
    Kirsten Kieferle
    • Stewardess
    Arsinée Khanjian
    Arsinée Khanjian
    • Wanda Otto
    Earl Pastko
    • Hartley Otto
    Simon Baker
    Simon Baker
    • Bear Otto
    David Hemblen
    David Hemblen
    • Abbott Driscoll
    Bruce Greenwood
    Bruce Greenwood
    • Billy Adsel
    Sarah Rosen Fruitman
    • Jessica Adsel
    Marc Donato
    Marc Donato
    • Mason Adsel
    Devon Finn
    • Sean Walker
    Fides Krucker
    Fides Krucker
    • Klara Stephens
    • Director
      • Atom Egoyan
    • Writers
      • Russell Banks
      • Atom Egoyan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews237

    7.437.6K
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    Featured reviews

    6Prismark10

    Leading a march

    Atom Egoyan's, The Sweet Hereafter is a film about loss and recovery. An accident involving a school bus in snowy Canadian roads has left a small town devastated which left many children dead.

    The grieving parents are visited by a no win no fee lawyer, Mitchell Stevens (Ian Holm.) He is a partner in a law firm and he might be just doing his job but it seems to be without much vigour or conviction. I am not sure whether money is even a motivation for him. Stevens own daughter is a drug addict who only contacts him when she wants money for more drugs. Apart from that she hates him and he knows he has lost her.

    He persuades some of the parents to file a class action lawsuit by claiming the design or construction of the bus was faulty.

    The grieving parents and some of the survivors all have some secret. Did bus driver Dolores Driscoll (Gabrielle Rose) drive too fast or drive carelessly given the road conditions? Does Nicole Burnell (Sarah Polly) one of the kids paralysed below the waist might want to take revenge on her abusive father?

    One of the parent, Billy (Bruce Greenwood) who was following the bus and waving at his children is against the lawsuit and wants the others to drop it.

    The film does not start with the crash. It is told in non chronological order and we have several story strands. one of them is the use of 'The Pied Piper of Hamelin' which draws parallels of a town suffering from the loss of its children. Maybe Stevens will lead the townsfolk out of the darkness but he is suffering as well when he recounts his struggle with his drug addict daughter to one of her old friends he meets in a plane journey.

    The film is about grief, sadness and the tortuous journey to recovery. Unfortunately the film does not always flow well and although I understand why some people would want to sue for damages, I never really understood why Billy did not want to sue? Nicole is paralysed, money would be useful to her and help her.
    6Andro-3

    Interesting, but not as moving as I thought it would be.

    Lately I've been seeing just about every movie that someone recommends to me, and "the Sweet Hereafter" has been on quite a few of my friends' lists. I was excited about finally seeing the movie.

    What I found was less compelling than I expected. None of the characters were really engaging, and perhaps that's the aim of the film. But I honestly can't understand how this movie could have made people cry. Who did they identify with? Ian Holm's character, whose grimacing and silence set my teeth on edge, and whose attitude toward the families of the accident victims was so entirely self-serving? Sarah Polley's character, who almost never displayed any spark of life? And even if I had begun to identify with one character or another, I would have been instantly put off by the trite lines that kept coming out of their mouths. "Let me direct your rage?" Give me a break.

    Not to imply too much of a connection between the films, but if you want to feel the terror and rage surrounding a tragedy as though you were there living through it, see "Boys Don't Cry." The words that go unsaid in that film are worth much more than those voiced-over or spoken all too clearly in "the Sweet Hereafter."
    SheBear

    The Dull Hereafter

    I had to laugh or else I'd cry – and not because a bus full of school children died.

    I honestly can't imagine anyone being moved by this film. It is too distant to be involving, too vague to be meaningful, too slow to be engaging and too cold to be emotional. But boy, oh boy, is it funny.

    The dialogue is so odd and unnatural that it becomes comical. Note the stagy way in which the detective's daughter talks. `Welcome to hard times, DADDY', `I like it when you don't believe me DADDY.' Come on, playing a drug addict is easy – just watch Courtney Love and imitate. Zoe doesn't sound drugged out but she must be because she always calls from a payphone where police sirens blast in the background. And Zoe comes off well in comparison to the unintentionally hilarious stroke victim and the Otto's who put their heads together, dry-eyed and sniffle, expecting us to believe that they are crying over their long lost son named, Bear, of all things.

    Bravo to the generic and lifeless Sarah Polley who musters a tiny ounce of oomph to deliver `the big lie' at the end – you know, the one she said she would NEVER tell. She even attempts to glare at her father and later; if you look really close, it's the beginnings of a grin.

    How ridiculous is the scene where Ian Holm recounts a spider bite story that goes absolutely NOWHERE? Why doesn't he remember Alison's father? Why does he get stuck in a CAR WASH? What is wrong with this guy?

    And why is creepy Billy a saint for trying to convince Nicole's father not to sue? This anti-sue-happy town sure is unrealistic. Oh, they're Canadian. Thank explains it. Sure Ian Holm's acting is bad but does he really deserve the town's wrath for trying to gain a buck?

    There is a really cheesy time transition scene, which illustrates how confused director Atom Egoyan is. He thinks the audience needs to be hand held in order to comprehend the passing of time and yet he fails to explain anything else in this perplexing tale with similar clarity.

    Would people really behave the way these people do and what does it all mean anyway? Detective Stephens says that our children are all lost to us. The Pied Piper story echoes similar sentiments. Some school kids are dead while others grow up to become drug addicts and are as good as gone. One strange girl lives and because she tells a lie she is now, apparently, more pure than anyone else in town and well, that's it.

    It is always wise to heed the immortal words of Radiohead – don't get sentimental, it always ends up drivel. The Sweet Hereafter doesn't even have enough power to illicit the feelings that sentimentality requires. It is the worst kind of drivel -the kind that attempts to be profound, fails and stumbles into pretension, leaving nothing worthy of redemption in its wake.
    10matzucker

    Tragic and beautiful masterpiece

    The Sweet Hereafter is as tragic, sad and matter-of-fact as movies get, but it's still so very beautiful that it becomes a film that's virtually impossible to forget.

    The story makes no secret of the fact what terrible tragedy will happen, right from the outset. A lesser filmmaker than Atom Egoyan would've jumped at the chance to shock the audience with the freak accident that robs the town of Sam Dent of nearly all their children, by telling the story in a linear fashion. Not Egoyan. The story is fragmented, thus enhancing the true point: This is not about the overwhelming power of loss, it is about the overwhelming power of survivor's guilt (nicely represented in Browning's poem The Pied Piper Of Hamelin, which is referred to in the movie). It's all about people who grieve not only for the ones they've lost, but also for themselves, how empty their lives have become because of their tragedies. In focussing on that point, the film refrains from manipulative sentiment (which so many others don't), and presents true and unintrusive emotion, that, in the end, despite all the terror, shines a light of hope, for the sweet hereafter is not only the peaceful afterlife, it's also the peaceful future, the continuation of life...

    The performances speak for themselves. Ian Holm and Sarah Polley shine in particular, through nicely subdued and subtle acting. Polley also excels as a fantastic singer-songwriter. The songs in the movie were written and performed all by herself.

    Egoyan's direction is simply masterful in its beauty, elegance and evocation.

    One of the best films of the 1990s.

    10 out of 10.
    10janesbit1

    Not for everyone, but this melancholy film stays with you long after its over...

    I re-watched The Sweet Hereafter on video last night, and am still haunted by it today. It is structured so that you know some of the basic tragic plot near the beginning. This caused my eyes to water at some of the beautiful lyrical overhead tracking shots of the school bus winding through the snow covered roads of the Pacific northwest.

    The film switches between the time that the lawyer arrives in town to "help" the families receive compensation, and to days just prior to the accident. We witness a loving "hippie" couple who has adopted a beautiful Native American boy, a loving mother of a school phobic learning disabled boy, and a widower who loves his two children a great deal and sees them off to school by following them in his truck. This same widower is having an affair with the mother of the school phobic--she is unhappily married to a "pig" of a husband. Complicating matters is the father who obviously loves his teenage daughter in Lolita-like fashion.

    Part of the theme of The Sweet Hereafter is similar to Magnolia--accidents do happen--perhaps no one at fault... or perhaps all the adults had some part in it without anyone being at fault, as only the innocent children were killed.

    The town had changed... tragedy has taken away the town's joy and innocence. The parents are no longer open with each other, but guarded, suspicious... in deep grief.

    The lawyer is little more than an ambulance chaser, attempting to profit off their tragedy. Yet, he, too is a tragic figure who has already "lost" his daughter--

    He had saved her when she was a baby, yet she has now turned away from him... and his feelings are now ambivalent towards her--he is a grief-stricken, defeated father, who vascillates between wanting to talk with his daughter on his cell phone and deciding to cut her off.

    The story of the Pied Piper is interweaved between various events in the movie to give greater depth to the story. There's also a great scene in the movie between the lawyer and the garage mechanic, who has lost his two children, that shows that the theme is much broader than the literal story:

    "I'm telling you this because... we've all lost our children, Mr. Ansel. They're dead to us. They kill each other in the streets. They wander comatose in shopping malls. They're paralyzed in front of televisions. Something terrible has happened that's taken our children away. It's too late. They're gone."

    This movie isn't for everyone. It's a serious, layered piece with a lot of melancholy. The kind of fare that film critics can love, but Academy voters will avoid. But what it strives to accomplish is done very well. And it will stay with you long after the final scenes have appeared.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      As indicated on writer and director Atom Egoyan's commentary track on the DVD, many people ask about the odd mask worn by the notetaker during the deposition scene. This is a stenographer's mask, an item which is used in real life by a stenographer to record his or her own voice during the deposition.
    • Goofs
      When Stephens visits the Ottos, and Mr. Otto offers him some tea, we hear a tea kettle whistling but the one we see on the wood stove is not the whistling type, and there is no steam coming from the kettle.
    • Quotes

      Mitchell Stephens: You'd make a good poker player, kid.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil/The Sweet Hereafter/John Grisham's the Rainmaker/Deep Crimson (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      One More Colour
      Words and Music by Jane Siberry

      Courtesy of Wing in Music/Red Sky Music

      Arranged by Mychael Danna

      Vocal by Sarah Polley

      Performed by The Sam Dent Band

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    FAQ19

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 8, 1997 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Dulce porvenir
    • Filming locations
      • Stouffville, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Alliance Communications Corporation
      • Ego Film Arts
      • Téléfilm Canada
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • CA$5,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,263,585
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $31,149
      • Oct 12, 1997
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,263,585
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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