IMDb RATING
6.7/10
4.2K
YOUR RATING
When a man murders his wife, children and parents, the ensuing investigation reveals that he's been living a lie for almost 20 years.When a man murders his wife, children and parents, the ensuing investigation reveals that he's been living a lie for almost 20 years.When a man murders his wife, children and parents, the ensuing investigation reveals that he's been living a lie for almost 20 years.
- Awards
- 4 nominations total
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Featured reviews
8xu
This is a tough, poignant film - as it evolves, the viewer becomes submerged in the dark universe of the main character, a man living a lie for years in front of his family and friends. Daniel Auteuil is, as usual, absolutely masterful, expressing extremely well the quiet and sombre nature of the character and the conflicts going on in his mind. Sadly a true story, it approaches us to the dark universe of a person capable of the worst to hide the truth.
I must admit my French is a little rusty and I could have done with some subtitles so I was having trouble following the first half of the film on DVD. I borrowed it because I think Daniel Auteil is a good actor and had no idea what it was about except something about a man who lives a lie.
I watched it through to the end and recalled reading so many similar true stories in the last few years on cnn.com that I really got a shock by the end. As one of the scriptwriters comments in the extras on the French edition of the DVD says, "those scenes brought the film back into reality".
I found some of the editing a little jarring but perhaps that was intentional. It all makes sense in the end. Interestingly the producer - again, on the French edition of the DVD - said that she just wanted to follow the main character through his life without judging or diagnosing him, so perhaps those of you who know something about psychiatry will have a different perspective.
Stick with it, revel in the details of the film, and hug your family tightly afterwards.
I watched it through to the end and recalled reading so many similar true stories in the last few years on cnn.com that I really got a shock by the end. As one of the scriptwriters comments in the extras on the French edition of the DVD says, "those scenes brought the film back into reality".
I found some of the editing a little jarring but perhaps that was intentional. It all makes sense in the end. Interestingly the producer - again, on the French edition of the DVD - said that she just wanted to follow the main character through his life without judging or diagnosing him, so perhaps those of you who know something about psychiatry will have a different perspective.
Stick with it, revel in the details of the film, and hug your family tightly afterwards.
This true story had already been told one year earlier, back in 2001, with L'EMPLOI DU TEMPS, a film that many viewers found less interesting than this one. Let me say that I don't agree at all. Both are outstanding films. Nicole Garcia's film and the Laurent Cantet's one. Here, Daniel Auteuil is purely awesome, but he is not alone, the whole result is engrossing, riveting, the perfect example of a flawless movie. Such a story has not been remade by the American film industry, at least as far as I know,, and that's very strange. I mean such a scheme has not been made before, but maybe I am wrong after all. A real must see. From a true story, I repeat. Chilling.
Emmanuel Carrere's novels are chilling, desperate and very well told. This adaptation to screen by Nicole Garcia works pretty well. If it wasn't based on a true story, you'd think that it's silly and a bit too much. The movie certainly doesn't leave a happy feeling with you, it's hopeless and sad, in everyone's point of view. So the story is told in the beginning of the movie, in the matter of fact before to movie starts, but the point isn't that at all. Film is about what's going on inside Jean Claude Romand's (played by great Daniel Auteuil) head and life during the times before he murders everyone he knows. The music in L'Adversaire is by Angelo Badalamenti, one of my favorite composers (escpecially Twin Peaks -soundtrack), and it fits perfectly. Latest adaptation of Carrere's work is La Moustache and it's directed by himself
The magnificent Daniel Auteuil is ... well ... magnificent once again in this study of a common man whose world turns unaccountably pear-shaped, and who is powerless to get out of the increasingly large hole he's dug for himself. The sequencing of the film is very neatly done - we know from the word 'go' that Faure has done something horrendous, we're pretty sure what it is, and we are led to find out why through a complex series of flashbacks. The art of Auteuil is in his ability to make Faure a sympathetic character, despite his many flaws and the gruesome crime he commits. The painstakingly constructed portrait of a man in torment may get painted on a little too thickly at times, but Auteuil's descent from mixed-up family-man to lethal psychopath is gripping stuff.
Did you know
- TriviaBased on a true story, that of Jean-Claude Romand, who on January 9, 1993, killed his wife, two children and both his parents.
- GoofsThe movie takes place in 1989. In France all the cars had yellow headlights. White headlights were legalized in 1993.
- ConnectionsFeatures Les histoires du Père Castor (1993)
- SoundtracksApprends-moi des Mots d'Amour
Music by Cyril Assous
Lyrics by Maurice Dulac and Jacqueline Sorano
Performed by Maurice Dulac and Marianne Mille
- How long is The Adversary?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- The Adversary
- Filming locations
- Hotel Carlton InterContinental, 58 Boulevard, De La Croisette Cannes, France(When Faure is told by his mistress he's a somber, sad man)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $5,747,342
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