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Le voyage de Morvern Callar

Original title: Morvern Callar
  • 2002
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Le voyage de Morvern Callar (2002)
Theatrical Trailer from Cowboy Pictures
Play trailer1:40
2 Videos
72 Photos
Psychological DramaDrama

After her beloved boyfriend's suicide, a mourning supermarket worker and her best friend hit the road in Scotland, but find that grief is something that you can't run away from forever.After her beloved boyfriend's suicide, a mourning supermarket worker and her best friend hit the road in Scotland, but find that grief is something that you can't run away from forever.After her beloved boyfriend's suicide, a mourning supermarket worker and her best friend hit the road in Scotland, but find that grief is something that you can't run away from forever.

  • Director
    • Lynne Ramsay
  • Writers
    • Lynne Ramsay
    • Liana Dognini
    • Alan Warner
  • Stars
    • Samantha Morton
    • Kathleen McDermott
    • Linda McGuire
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lynne Ramsay
    • Writers
      • Lynne Ramsay
      • Liana Dognini
      • Alan Warner
    • Stars
      • Samantha Morton
      • Kathleen McDermott
      • Linda McGuire
    • 126User reviews
    • 73Critic reviews
    • 78Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 17 nominations total

    Videos2

    Morvern Callar
    Trailer 1:40
    Morvern Callar
    Morvern Callar
    Trailer 1:53
    Morvern Callar
    Morvern Callar
    Trailer 1:53
    Morvern Callar

    Photos72

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    Samantha Morton
    Samantha Morton
    • Morvern Callar
    Kathleen McDermott
    Kathleen McDermott
    • Lanna
    Linda McGuire
    Linda McGuire
    • Vanessa
    Paul Popplewell
    Paul Popplewell
    • Cat in the Hat
    Ruby Milton
    • Couris Jean
    Dolly Wells
    Dolly Wells
    • Susan
    Dan Cadan
    Dan Cadan
    • Dazzer
    Carolyn Calder
    • Sheila Tequila
    Raife Patrick Burchell
    • Boy in Room 1022
    Steve Cardwell
    • Welcoming Courier
    Bryan Dick
    Bryan Dick
    • Guy with Hat's Mate
    El Carrette
    • Gypsy Taxi Driver
    Andrew Flanagan
    • Overdose
    Des Hamilton
    Des Hamilton
    • Him
    Mette Karlsvik
    • Sick Girl…
    Andrew Knowles
    • Green Boy #1
    Duncan McHardy
    • Red Hanna
    Mischa Richter
    • Rick, the American Courier
    • Director
      • Lynne Ramsay
    • Writers
      • Lynne Ramsay
      • Liana Dognini
      • Alan Warner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews126

    6.811.7K
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    Featured reviews

    8Classybird

    very strange, but very good

    I won't summarise the plot as it is done so by other reviewers.

    This is a highly original and unconventional yet mesmerising piece and I agree with many others that Lynne Ramsay is an exceptional talent, who possesses a vision the likes of Guy Ritchie could never even begin to imagine.

    This is not an easy film to watch and it requires patience and concentration. Ramsay lets the film unfurl, slowly, with confidence and an assured touch that uses mystery and a touch of incoherence to create a confusing but oddly compelling dreamscape. Where are we? What are we seeing? What exactly is Morvern thinking and feeling? She is clearly in a very strange, disorientated headspace and this film is perfectly engineered to assist us in understanding and occupying that space.

    The mystery and enigma of Morvern is wonderfully portrayed by Samantha Morton and the soundtrack encapsulates the atmosphere, as does the lack of incidental music.

    Those that want to quibble over inconsistencies such as the direction of the computer keyboard delete key and whether it is in fact possible to bury a body on the moors with a trowel should get over it, step back and look at the big picture.
    7ThurstonHunger

    Generation Existential

    I purveyed the comments on IMDB before deciding *first* to read the book and then watch the movie. I think this was the right move, and would strongly advise those so inclined to do the same.

    So, Samantha Morton may be the greatest silent film actress of the 21st century. Her muteness in "Sweet and Lowdown" and "Minority Report" and now here speaks volumes. Seriously though she took on an extremely difficult character to portray, one whose impenetrability is at her very essence, Ms. Morton made this character seem real.

    Real, albeit alien. But then a degree of alienation I think comes with what I perceive as an existential novel and film. Initially in the book, I felt that Alan Warner, the author, was too removed from his main character...across chasms of gender and age.

    But as I read the book, and now watch the film...it seems to me that Morvern is a person removed from herself. Many of us fill up our days, our thoughts and such online sites as this with words.

    Words....words...words.

    Morvern is almost sub-literate, her interaction with publishers in both book and film is thus comical, in a sort of Chauncey Garner mode of just being there. Morvern's character always lived through her senses more than her mind. As did her best "friend" who ultimately remains the happy hedonist.

    But Morvern...like the many insects shown onscreen...moves on, not with any necessary destination...she just moves for the sake of moving. I think that this ultimately is the light this film brings. I can see how others cite grief as the focus; both the suicide that impels our story, and the hotel interlude near its crossing raise the spectre of death around Morvern.

    However, I see her as more absent than abjectly anguished in both of those pivotal scenes... This is the conundrum of Morvern Callar for me, while I'm attracted to such an existence, the fact that I consider it...means I'm already living more through mind than senses. If she's remote to herself, than that puts me at an even greater distance. I think this was underscored by the soundtrack switching from sound to softened sound to silence throughout.

    One word about the soundtrack, where's the Peter Brotzmann? Now that's a sensory overload that shuts off my mind in favor of the senses. I was hoping more of the bands featured in the book would have made it to the film. I thought that the artists listed in the book, typically the heroes of college DJ's and other overthinkers made a remarkable contrast with Morvern's seeming simplicity.

    But there's more to her than meets the eye...and...the ear, the tongue, the nose, the skin...just as there's more to this film than others' comments would indicate.

    7*/10

    * Again I encourage folks read the book and then enjoy the film as a chaser of sorts to flesh it out.
    6paul2001sw-1

    Less Morvern Caller, more Lynne Ramsay

    I haven't read the book of 'Morvern Callar', but I have read a couple of other works by Alan Warner, both of which where distinguished by their spiky characters and irreverent tone. This film, however, is made by Lynne Ramsay, whose first work was 'Ratcatcher', a move both astonishingly affecting and almost unwatchable. In 'Morvern Callar', she opts for a similarly intense style. Ramsay is a master of certain cinematic tricks, which she uses with more skill than discretion: frequent cutting (both within and between scenes) and the use of fragmentary, non-explanatory dialogue. She succeeds in conveying a sense of alienation and a semi-documentary feel, but there's no relief, no variation in mood at any point in the film. Samantha Morton (too old for the role and, crucially, not Scottish) plays Morvern as a kind of semi-moron; and yet their are times when the film seems also to be presenting her as a deep and knowing soul, a not altogether happy conjunction. Also worthy of criticism is the peculiar soundtrack: the songs we hear just don't sound like what we would expect a girl like Morvern to listen to, feeling instead like a heavy handed attempt by the director to set the scene from the outside.

    Perhaps I am being too hard on the film because it wasn't what I expected from my knowledge of the writer. Once I got over this, I did quite enjoy it, many individual scenes are very nicely crafted, and the loose, drifting plot has its own appeal. But it feels more as if it was based on a short story than a novel, and Ramsay's determination to show Morvern as a victim (it's never clear of what) strips it of its potentially comic dimensions and leaves us with a thin outline trying too hard to assert its own significance. An interesting film, but one that appears to have lost sight of its purpose.
    federovsky

    Non-life, non-death

    Ramsey's second film after the totally impressive Ratcatcher has an air of aimlessness about it. I haven't read the book but the film has only one idea: how does a girl behave when she finds her boyfriend dead with slashed wrists on the floor of their flat? Callar's response is almost post-contemporary - what happens here could simply never have been conceived of more than a few years ago. We follow Samantha Morton (as Callar) through subsequent hazy meanderings with her girlfriend. We assume she is in severe temporary shock at the tragedy - so the creeping suspicion that she is simply a half-wit is disappointing, though all the soft drugs confounds the issue. Life seems impoverished here, as if the city has sucked something out of people. Even death is meaningless.

    The early part of the film looks dangerously like Catherine Breillat territory - the last thing we need is an original talent like Ramsey to start ripping people off - and I think she was only partly able to haul herself out of the Breillat groove. The tension lapses completely during the second half when Callar goes on holiday in Spain, and there is a silly scene when she meets publishers and passes herself off as the writer of her dead boyfriend's novel that we could have done without.

    On the whole, very nicely executed though; a fine performance by Morton, a great and atmospheric opening, and some cool music including Aphex Twin make it worth watching. Pity there wasn't more to it.
    6davek28

    Someone else's dream

    I looked at my watch quite frequently during Morvern Callar. I first felt impatient during the opening sequence which seemed unnecessarily drawn out. I'm sure living with a corpse in a small apartment for apparently several days can't have been very pleasant as decay starts to set in.

    There are other parts of the film that just don't ring true, either. How did she use her boyfriend's debit card to get access to his entire balance? Also, I can't believe that the publishers would find her a credible author. I would have been very suspicious of her attitude and empty-headedness.

    There were some beautiful images and some likeable scenes in this film, but it was like sitting through someone else's dream. The more I think about this film the less I really like it. Downgraded from my initial score of seven to a six.

    I have to say that Samantha Morton is a superb actress. She doesn't play a part so much as become the part. I only hope that she's grounded enough in real life to survive this kind of immersion in her roles.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Morvern Callar was the debut novel by Scottish author Alan Warner, first published in 1995.
    • Goofs
      The shot of the railway station at the end of the film shows tracks with a third live rail. Although never mentioned by name, Morvern lives in Oban, where the railway station is served only by diesel-powered trains - in fact, no railway lines in Scotland use a third live rail as a power source.
    • Quotes

      Morvern Callar: Fuck work Lana, we can go anywhere you like.

      Lanna: I'm happy here.

      Morvern Callar: Are ya?

      Lanna: Yeah, everyone I know is here. There's nothing wrong with here. It's the same crapness everywhere, so stop dreaming.

    • Connections
      Featured in Women Make Film: A New Road Movie Through Cinema (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      Japanese Cowboy
      Written by Dean Ween (as Michael Melchiondo Jnr) / Gene Ween (as Aaron Freeman)

      Performed by Ween

      © Browndog Music/Ver Music/Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp

      By kind permission of Warner/Chappell Music Ltd

      By Arrangement with Mushroom Records/Warner Special Products

      from the album "12 Golden Country Greats"

      Courtesy of Elektra Entertainment Group

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 5, 2003 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Canada
    • Official site
      • Company Pictures
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Morvern Callar
    • Filming locations
      • Oban, Argyll and Bute, Scotland, UK
    • Production companies
      • Alliance Atlantis Motion Picture Production
      • BBC Film
      • UK Film Council
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $267,907
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $13,836
      • Dec 22, 2002
    • Gross worldwide
      • $869,820
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 37 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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