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Le battement d'ailes du papillon

  • 2000
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
4K
YOUR RATING
Le battement d'ailes du papillon (2000)
Happenstance Scene: A Good Samaritan
Play clip1:40
Watch Happenstance Scene: A Good Samaritan
4 Videos
13 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

How, thanks to what's known as the "Butterfly theory" (a random series of unlinked events), can a young woman and a young man meet ?How, thanks to what's known as the "Butterfly theory" (a random series of unlinked events), can a young woman and a young man meet ?How, thanks to what's known as the "Butterfly theory" (a random series of unlinked events), can a young woman and a young man meet ?

  • Director
    • Laurent Firode
  • Writer
    • Laurent Firode
  • Stars
    • Audrey Tautou
    • Faudel
    • Eric Savin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Laurent Firode
    • Writer
      • Laurent Firode
    • Stars
      • Audrey Tautou
      • Faudel
      • Eric Savin
    • 38User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
    • 59Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins total

    Videos4

    Happenstance Scene: A Good Samaritan
    Clip 1:40
    Happenstance Scene: A Good Samaritan
    Happenstance Scene: Eccentric Grandmother
    Clip 1:08
    Happenstance Scene: Eccentric Grandmother
    Happenstance Scene: Eccentric Grandmother
    Clip 1:08
    Happenstance Scene: Eccentric Grandmother
    Happenstance Scene: Chance Encounter With Metro
    Clip 1:56
    Happenstance Scene: Chance Encounter With Metro
    Happenstance Scene: Pathological Liar
    Clip 2:29
    Happenstance Scene: Pathological Liar

    Photos13

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Audrey Tautou
    Audrey Tautou
    • Irène
    Faudel
    • Younès
    Eric Savin
    Eric Savin
    • Richard
    Nathalie Besançon
    Nathalie Besançon
    • Marie
    Lysiane Meis
    • Elsa
    Irène Ismaïloff
    • Stéphanie
    Eric Feldman
    • Luc
    Frédéric Bouraly
    • Bobby
    Franck Bussi
    • The Waiter from the Philosophic Cafe
    Marina Tomé
    • Julie
    Félicité Wouassi
    Félicité Wouassi
    • The Vigilant
    Antoine Coesens
    Antoine Coesens
    • The Clochard
    Saïd Serrari
    • The Pickpocket
    Lily Boulogne
    • Luc's Mother
    • (as Lili Boulogne)
    Gilbert Robin
    • The Destiny Man
    Manu Layotte
    • Cailloux's Lanceurs
    Husky Kihal
    • The Magazin Owner
    Deen Abboud
    • The S.A.V. Salesman
    • (as Nor-eddin Abboud)
    • Director
      • Laurent Firode
    • Writer
      • Laurent Firode
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews38

    6.73.9K
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    Featured reviews

    10mercedesmoon

    loved it

    Most people who chase after movies featuring Audrey Tautou seem to not understand that Amelie was a character - it is not really Audrey Tautou's real life personality, hence, every movie she partakes in is not going to be Amelie part 2, part 3, etc.

    Now with that said, I too picked up this movie simply because Audrey was in it. Yes, it's true, there is a big gap after the first scene where she isn't seen at all for maybe 45 min, but I didn't even miss her because I was having so much fun with the other characters. The guy who lies about everything is too funny, the guy who justifies people who run out of his cafe and skip out on the bill by finding coupons and such which balance out the loss, actually.... getting into all the characters here could take quite a while, but this is one of the best movies I've seen in a while.

    Audrey Tautou's character Irene is not the overdone sugary girl that Amelie was. In fact, as Irene, her rudeness to a bum asking for change caught me off guard at first. In this film, Irene is a girl with good intentions, but over the course of a (very awful) day, her disposition becomes more and more sour and pessimistic.

    What makes this film completely great is you have all these really interesting stories and plots building... very entertaining to watch, great scenery and shots, very colorful and never too slow, and all of the characters can actually act. The best part of the movie comes with about 20 minutes left.... this is when all of the plots start to mesh together and the ride really picks up and everything ties together and makes sense, and the whole butterfly effect blossoms. I swear, it was the best 20 minutes of film I've seen in quite a while, and the ending.... It made me think "damn I really lucked out finding this movie". The ending to this movie is top notch. Whoever wrote the script for this is brilliant, because not only are there all these other subplots going on, but to somehow make them all tie in together (and in a sensible manner, which is the case here) but also to make each character feel human and come alive, not just some stale persona used as a crutch to build up this whole butterfly effect... very impressive.

    I highly suggest this movie as it's a great film to watch anytime, in any mood, with any company or alone.
    johnnyleston

    fate and perception

    Laurent Firode's film Happenstance (2000) is an extended meditation on the relationship between fate and perception. In a film with few real characters and no discernable plot, Firode would seem to be doing nothing more than expounding a form of applied chaos theory if it wasn't for the fact that this film is so much fun. The joy of this film comes with the god's-eye view afforded to the viewer. In a single day of Parisian urban interactions, none of the characters perceive the intricate web of chance that ties them together to the delight of the audience.

    Happenstance uses chance relations to construct a paradigm which allows for a kind of karmic justice to flourish. As the human mind develops free will from the deterministic relationships of atoms and molecules, so justice emerges from a series of random seeming encounters. The lovers meet, as they were destined to. The cheating husband avoids harming his innocent son. Luc Gossard admits his failings, and while he loses his job, he gains his inheritance.

    This perspective could be termed a sort of theoretical physicist's version of karma. Complex systems with seemingly random cause-effect relations are recognized to have very significant levels of emergent organization when seen from different scales. The human mind is one example; the formation of the solar system from clouds of cosmic dust is another. Biology can offer the concept of evolution, which is based on random-seeming interactions between predator and prey leading to extremely complex forms and survival mechanisms, from the venus fly trap to the giraffe. Is it so very unbelievable that a network of humans (intelligent particles) can exhibit an emergent intelligence of its own?

    jonny muggs
    eric.rambeau

    a clever scenario is not just a clever scenario

    Films that crisscross different stories are no novelty (Short Cuts, Magnolia, Iossellani's "Favoris de la lune"...) but few of them have dared go as far as "Le battement d'ailes...". It would take a good deal of thinking and remembering to tell just HOW MANY stories are embedded in this wonder. And it would be pointless because, precisely, the object of the film is to show that it is not possible to separate one individual story from another.

    One day in the life of so many people, characters that can be in turn charming, infuriating, lovable... And, on top of that, you get the feeling the director really loves them all (or, at any rate, most of them because some are frankly off-putting. That's life, here, just for you, on the screen.
    9deming

    This jewel of a film really shines

    The fluttering of butterfly wings in the Atlantic can unleash a hurricane in the Pacific. According to this theory (somehow related to the Chaos Theory, I'm not sure exactly how), every action, no matter how small or insignificant, will start a chain reaction that can lead to big events. This small jewel of a film shows us a series of seemingly-unrelated characters, most of them in Paris, whose actions will affect each others' lives. (The six-degrees-of-separation theory can be applied as well.) Each story is a facet of the jewel that is this film. The acting is finely-tuned and nuanced (Audrey Tautou is luminous), the stories mesh plausibly, the humor is just right, and the viewer leaves the theatre nodding in agreement.
    5ThurstonHunger

    hapless stances of the crassed criss-crossing

    An admirable attempt that winds up about as charming and magical as calculating a checksum. Still to create a "love story" wherein the main characters never speak to each other was an interesting feat. Ultimately I got the sense that the director didn't want us to attach to any one character too much for fear that we would lose track of the plight and the path of the cosmic pinball connecting them all.

    Other films have traced the vagaries of existence, I'll never forget "Slacker" and its camera-as-transmittable-disease approach. That film, and others had characters that drew you in with more than a powerful pout and a pop star. Also the idiots in that film were more reckless than wretched. Here we have some despicable folks...

    One of them is, pardon my (lack of) french, a dick. Indeed that is how he is introduced to us, full frontal and head on. We've also got a heartless mother, a selfish roommate, a compassionless store clerk, a petty thief and a liar. Well at least the liar does have a bit of reckoning, and provides some humor along the way.

    At various points in the film, popular methods of charting the fates are engaged. A horoscope, tarot cards, a palm reading, a strange scrambling of the letters of a name, I don't think there were any tea leaves to be read. These methods are generally dismissed, but the intricate criss-crossing of the crasser crowd does help to guide our stars towards a more star-crossed pairing.

    Will they meet or miss by the width of a butterfly's wing??

    More importantly, will the audience care? At the end of the film, I found myself more intrigued by a bald character who we meet during another game of chance in a park (when "le penis" stakes his actions to the toss of a pebble). His bald comments and clear voicing of intention make him stand out like a lucid dream.

    What the hell is he doing? Is his act of volition meant to taunt us, the invisible voyeurs in every scene? Or is he god...not playing dice with the universe, but loading the pebble? I'm afraid I'm making this film seem more interesting than it was...the battle of will versus fate versus karma versus various crystal balls, like the depth of the characters never quite gets to the foreground.

    But perhaps by my not enjoying this film so much, I will not tip as much the next time I go out to eat, so your roommate will come home in a crabby mood, so you'll not go out to the Bottom of the Hill together, instead you'll rent a movie from the bald incarnation of Zeus at your local video store who *intentionally* will slip this DVD into the "Slacker" box you thought you were going to rent.

    And you'll love it...

    But in case that doesn't happen...

    5/10

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The original French title translates as "the flapping of a butterfly's wings". In Hong Kong it was titled Amelie 2, to capitalise on the success of Audrey Tautou's breakout movie Le Fabuleux Destin d'Amélie Poulain (2001). Although Le battement d'ailes du papillon (2000) predates Amelie by a year, the two were released in reverse order in most non-French markets.
    • Goofs
      When the old lady takes the faulty coffee machine back to the store it is seen in a Phillips box, when she arrives back home with the same faulty machine it is in a Moulinex box.
    • Quotes

      Irène: Excuse me...

      Waiter: Sorry, I didn't see you.

      Irène: I'm the one who's sorry. I'm transparent.

      Waiter: What'll it be?

      Irène: Coffee.

    • Connections
      References Austin Powers : L'Espion qui m'a tirée (1999)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 21, 2000 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official site
      • Lot 47 Films (United States)
    • Languages
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Happenstance
    • Filming locations
      • Paris, France
    • Production companies
      • Les Films des Tournelles
      • Les Films en Hiver
      • Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée (CNC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $251,444
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $8,777
      • Nov 4, 2001
    • Gross worldwide
      • $251,444
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 30 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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