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L'ennui

  • 1998
  • 12
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
2.4K
YOUR RATING
L'ennui (1998)
DramaRomance

Martin is a philosophy teacher in the midst of a mid-life crisis. Lacking direction or purpose in his life, he initiates an affair with Cécilia, a young artist's model who might have killed ... Read allMartin is a philosophy teacher in the midst of a mid-life crisis. Lacking direction or purpose in his life, he initiates an affair with Cécilia, a young artist's model who might have killed her former lover.Martin is a philosophy teacher in the midst of a mid-life crisis. Lacking direction or purpose in his life, he initiates an affair with Cécilia, a young artist's model who might have killed her former lover.

  • Director
    • Cédric Kahn
  • Writers
    • Cédric Kahn
    • Laurence Ferreira Barbosa
    • Alberto Moravia
  • Stars
    • Charles Berling
    • Sophie Guillemin
    • Arielle Dombasle
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    2.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Cédric Kahn
    • Writers
      • Cédric Kahn
      • Laurence Ferreira Barbosa
      • Alberto Moravia
    • Stars
      • Charles Berling
      • Sophie Guillemin
      • Arielle Dombasle
    • 25User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
    • 59Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 5 nominations total

    Photos61

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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Charles Berling
    Charles Berling
    • Martin
    Sophie Guillemin
    Sophie Guillemin
    • Cécilia
    Arielle Dombasle
    Arielle Dombasle
    • Sophie
    Robert Kramer
    Robert Kramer
    • Meyers
    Alice Grey
    • Cécilia's Mother
    Maurice Antoni
    • Cécilia's Father
    Tom Ouedraogo
    • Momo
    Patrick Arrachequesne
    • Doctor
    Mirtha Caputi Medeiros
    • Meyers' concierge
    Pierre Chevalier
    • University dean
    Oury Milshtein
    • Jean-Paul
    Anne-Sophie Morillon
    • Agnes
    Marc Chouppart
    • Ferdinand
    Cécile Reigher
    • Ferdinand's girlfriend
    Antoine Beau
    • Pierre
    Serge Bozon
    • Philosophy Student
    Nicole Pescheux
    • Owner of disreputable bar
    M'mah Maribe
    • Girl in disreputable bar
    • Director
      • Cédric Kahn
    • Writers
      • Cédric Kahn
      • Laurence Ferreira Barbosa
      • Alberto Moravia
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    6.02.3K
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    Featured reviews

    6Bunuel1976

    L' ENNUI (Cedric Kahn, 1998) **1/2

    Yet another overheated French melodrama about sexual obsession, this time based on an old Alberto Moravia novel.

    While the three main roles are more than adequately filled by Charles Berling, Sophie Guillemin and Arielle Dombasle, the surfeit of pretentious talk wears the film down and soon grows tiresome (even to hardened art-house film addicts like myself). The main reason to keep watching (apart from the copious sex scenes, of course) is to follow Berling's gradual deterioration from a merely curious seeker of a casual sexcapade to fully-fledged manic depressive. Having a teenaged, plump ugly duckling as the object of his desire has some novelty value, but ultimately her character is so distant and self-centered that one cannot fully empathize with Berling's plight. Also, I haven't read the novel myself but the (relative) happy ending seems misjudged. The vaguely surreal dinner sequences where Berling is introduced to the girl's parents as her music teacher (especially those scenes featuring her cancer-ridden, speech-impaired father) ironically offer a respite from all the glumness but, in retrospect, seem to belong to a totally different film.

    Italian film director Damiano Damiani had previously adapted the same source material for the screen as LA NOIA aka THE EMPTY CANVAS (1963) which starred Horst Buchholz, Catherine Spaak and Bette Davis (as Buchholz' mother!), a role which was omitted completely by Cedric Kahn for his modern version. I haven't watched the Damiani film but I would certainly like to, especially since it features a good cast: besides those already mentioned, Isa Miranda, Georges Wilson and Daniela Rocca, also appear.
    10groggo

    Existentialism in full view

    When you adapt a work by Alberto Moravia to the screen, you know that human detachment, alienation or themes thereof are going to dominate.

    That's what happens in 'L'Ennui' -- characters driven by excess, searching for the unsearchable or the unreachable. The ambiguity of the word 'ennui' fits very well: in English translation, the word can mean not only boredom but also human emptiness. This is what I believe director Cedric Kahn was aiming for, and he's certainly on target.

    This is a descent into an obsessive abyss by Martin, played by Charles Berling with such frenetic neuroticism that he all but leaps off the screen. He lives and suffers through the lives of others. He meets Cecilia, a 17-year-old artist's model, stunningly portrayed by Sophie Guilleman. Martin asks questions about the artist, who died shortly after an obsessive love affair with Sophie. Despite his extensive intellectual training in philosophy (a Moravia-Kahn 'in-joke' here), Martin cannot fathom the emotional emptiness of Cecilia, who is a character straight out of, well, the existential literature of Moravia and Camus (Cecilia reminded me of the latter's Mersault in 'L'Etranger,' a classic study of human detachment).

    Martin asks Cecelia endless questions about emotional matters, but she cannot answer them. She only understands transient forms of pleasure (never 'happiness'), and her laissez-faire attitude drives Martin into increasing levels of madness. He thinks he loves her, but he has no understanding of love at all, and cannot find the centre of Cecilia's amiable indifference. He screams about 'possessing' her, as if she were a commodity. She neither loves nor hates him; she is simply neutral, which Martin cannot grasp.

    This is a brilliant work on a difficult subject, although it's perhaps about 20 minutes too long. Slowly and meticulously, Kahn unpeels the layers of the endless human dilemma called love.

    Once again, the French have delivered a film that just wouldn't see the light of day in Hollywood. I can hear the producers in LaLaLand now: who wants to pay for a film that focuses on a basic philosophical problem: the nature of human existence? Fortunately, we can still see these kinds of films, but they'll never come from Hollywood.
    9stevenmoody

    Ennui, Why Karl Self Comments are wrong

    This film is a work of genius, capturing the feeling of Ennui in explicit detail. The sex scenes are just that, scenes of sex. To show passion would be to break out of the male leads feeling of boredom or ennui. The female part if one dimensional to give her no redeeming features, after all the male wants her but can't understand why he wants her as she does nothing for him, his pursuit is simply because he can't control her. If she showed any kind of feelings towards him the film would be finished. The film is about obsession and not being able to do anything else because this obsession controls your life and takes all your energy. I found the film both breathtaking and disturbing in equal measures. Definitely one to watch.
    7paul2001sw-1

    Pretty Vacant

    Very French film in which a jaded, self-centred philosophy professor becomes embroiled in a physically consuming, but emotionally vacant, relationship with a blank young girl. Unpleasant, claustrophobic and sharply humorous, it boasts strong performances from all its cast. But eventually the film's focus, as narrow as that of its central character, starts to become a little wearing. Not wholly successful, but interesting nonetheless.
    8Mort-31

    1 real modern man, 1 mythological Helena

    Imagine a relationship divided into two parts: the smaller one is sex and the rest is talking – about sex, sex and love.

    Such is the relationship between Martin and Cécilia in this wonderful movie. I say wonderful because although this premise doesn't sound too entertaining throughout almost two hours, I was really amazed and didn't feel l'ennui – boredom at any phase of the film. Beyond the sex scenes (Sophie Guillemin looks really great, I must say…) and the endless interrogations Martin subjects Cécilia to, the action somehow unfolds and unfolds and in the end we know that we have not only seen a philosophical love film like `Before Sunrise' but a real STORY, a unified whole.

    Martin's character is precisely copied from real life by author Alberto Moravia and perfectly portrayed by Charles Berling. This kind of man, apparently philosophical, but actually egocentric, possessive and concerned only about himself, is in my opinion the only realistic modern kind of man who is worth building a fictitious story around. Of course, this story shows, with Martin, mainly the negative qualities of the `generation X'-man.

    Cécilia's character holds some problems for me. Obviously, Cédric Kahn is one of those filmmakers whose movies are perfect entertainment, but you're not allowed to think about them later because you catch on things that are truly unconvincing but would destroy the whole movie if you changed them: the person of Cécilia is like Helena in the Greek mythology. She cannot exist in reality. She is just an ideal, completely freed from every kind of feeling or humanity. She answers to Martin's questions eagerly and tirelessly and she has hardly any opinion about anything and that's what drives him crazy – that's what the whole movie is built upon. But a Greek Helena doesn't fit into the amazingly realistic world the movie shows: it's impossible to imagine that she had a life before the beginning of the film and will have one after the end.

    By focusing on Martin and his view alle the time, Cédric Kahn is able to prevent us from realizing this while watching and that's a plus for him. However, it is a remarkable flaw in a movie I enjoyed very much. It's a little bit like in `The Sixth Sense': Show one more scene, and the whole movie becomes senseless.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sophie Guillemin's debut.
    • Quotes

      Sophie: Abstinence is turning you sour; give it up.

      Martin: I have.

      Sophie: Really? Do I know her?

      Martin: No, I met her in odd circumstances a few weeks ago.

      Sophie: Really? You must be pleased.

      Martin: You're quite wrong, I don't like her at all. She's totally uninteresting. I'm trying to get rid of her.

      Sophie: Why? Is she ugly?

      Martin: Not particularly.

      Sophie: Is she stupid then?

      Martin: No. Not at all. She never says anything stupid. It's complicated. She bores me. I have no contact with her. Or rather only physical contact.

      Sophie: Why complain? That's not so bad.

      Martin: You can't imagine how basic she is, she has no conversation. When she speaks, she sounds silent. Her only means of expression is sexual.

    • Connections
      References Jade (1988)
    • Soundtracks
      Melao de Cana
      Performed by Celia Cruz with Sonora Matancera (as La Sonora Matancera)

      Written by Hippolita Pedroso

      Edition Originale EDITORA MUSICAL DE CUbA

      Sous éditions J. GARZON

      © DECLIC

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 16, 1998 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Portugal
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Boredom
    • Production companies
      • Gemini Films
      • Ima Films
      • Madragoa Filmes
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $36,666
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $14,064
      • Oct 10, 1999
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 2m(122 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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