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La Vie aquatique

Original title: The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou
  • 2004
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
217K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,338
251
Jeff Goldblum, Bill Murray, Willem Dafoe, Cate Blanchett, Bud Cort, Anjelica Huston, Michael Gambon, and Owen Wilson in La Vie aquatique (2004)
CT #1 Post
Play trailer2:32
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark ComedyQuirky ComedyActionAdventureComedyDramaRomance

With a plan to exact revenge on a legendary shark that killed his partner, oceanographer Steve Zissou (Bill Murray) rallies a crew that includes his estranged wife, a journalist, and a man w... Read allWith a plan to exact revenge on a legendary shark that killed his partner, oceanographer Steve Zissou (Bill Murray) rallies a crew that includes his estranged wife, a journalist, and a man who may or may not be his son.With a plan to exact revenge on a legendary shark that killed his partner, oceanographer Steve Zissou (Bill Murray) rallies a crew that includes his estranged wife, a journalist, and a man who may or may not be his son.

  • Director
    • Wes Anderson
  • Writers
    • Wes Anderson
    • Noah Baumbach
  • Stars
    • Bill Murray
    • Owen Wilson
    • Anjelica Huston
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    217K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,338
    251
    • Director
      • Wes Anderson
    • Writers
      • Wes Anderson
      • Noah Baumbach
    • Stars
      • Bill Murray
      • Owen Wilson
      • Anjelica Huston
    • 733User reviews
    • 246Critic reviews
    • 62Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos2

    The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou
    Trailer 2:32
    The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou
    A Guide to the Films of Wes Anderson
    Clip 1:57
    A Guide to the Films of Wes Anderson
    A Guide to the Films of Wes Anderson
    Clip 1:57
    A Guide to the Films of Wes Anderson

    Photos133

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    Top cast78

    Edit
    Bill Murray
    Bill Murray
    • Steve Zissou
    Owen Wilson
    Owen Wilson
    • Ned Plimpton
    Anjelica Huston
    Anjelica Huston
    • Eleanor Zissou
    Cate Blanchett
    Cate Blanchett
    • Jane Winslett-Richardson
    Willem Dafoe
    Willem Dafoe
    • Klaus Daimler
    Jeff Goldblum
    Jeff Goldblum
    • Alistair Hennessey
    Michael Gambon
    Michael Gambon
    • Oseary Drakoulias
    Noah Taylor
    Noah Taylor
    • Vladimir Wolodarsky
    Bud Cort
    Bud Cort
    • Bill Ubell
    Seu Jorge
    Seu Jorge
    • Pelé dos Santos
    Robyn Cohen
    Robyn Cohen
    • Anne-Marie Sakowitz
    Waris Ahluwalia
    Waris Ahluwalia
    • Vikram Ray
    Niels Koizumi
    • Bobby Ogata
    Pawel Wdowczak
    • Renzo Pietro
    Matthew Gray Gubler
    Matthew Gray Gubler
    • Intern #1
    Seymour Cassel
    Seymour Cassel
    • Esteban du Plantier
    Antonio Monda
    • Festival Director
    Isabella Blow
    • Antonia Cook
    • Director
      • Wes Anderson
    • Writers
      • Wes Anderson
      • Noah Baumbach
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews733

    7.2217.4K
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    Featured reviews

    tedg

    Swimming Beneath and Yet Breathing

    I'm not generally a fan of Wes Anderson. He relies too heavily on the charm of detachment. Burton has this problem too, hidden under the humorous tone. The appeal is a generational thing and I guess I'm too old to simply find that enough.

    But here, he does something different than what I have seen elsewhere from him. I think it is because the Owen influence is small here. The form is a movie about making a life which is a movie. Both the movie and the movie within have fantastic elements, but we do have a clear shift to brighter colors and crisper landscapes when within the inner world.

    Its all based on synthetic notions of drama: love, purpose, worth. When you sneak up on things this way, you have to play a delicate game, one I think Wes usually flubs. You have to engage by setting a distance that is far enough from the norm that we as viewers can lean into it, and near enough to what we think of as real flesh that we want to.

    Bill Murray doesn't understand this balance, because he's all about distance. Never mind, he's just an actor. So you select actors that try for the closeness. Dafoe and Blanchett get this. What they choose to do is simple: they form a real person and layer some cartoonish mannerisms on top. We see through the play and value the real underneath, where we cannot with Murray and Wilson.

    Because the whole thing can blend together, we get a wonderful balance of this tension: engagement and studied apartness. I credit Anderson with maintaining this container. It works. And it works because he was smart. You can see that he understands this dynamic well enough to know that we will be impatient with his tricks for very long. So the movie changes tone as it moves along. It changes slowly with less emphasis on the personal abstraction and more on abstracting the physical: the ship, the rooms, beds, sub. It allows Cate to present her womb, which is quite a miracle.

    If you read the trivia at IMDb, you find that many top actresses wanted this part. So it is pretty amazing that Cate's condition as a pregnant woman who knows how to turn herself inside out was able to have that condition become so central to the world we see.

    This isn't quirky. This isn't comedy. This is extremely sensitive positioning of the audience to allow for deeper penetration. Its a triangulation of "Incident at Loch Ness" and "Cowards Bend the Knee ."

    I felt blessed watching it.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
    Starlet1414

    Very funny! Favorite Wes Anderson movie...

    My favorite Wes Anderson movie. Very funny. It is sweet and Bill Murray along with the rest of the cast (esp. Dafoe) does some of their best work. The soundtrack (David Bowie songs) is really inventive and Willem Dafoe is hysterical as is Jeff Goldblum. I think this movie will be Anderson's biggest financial hit because it stays true to his style but is also understandable by people who don't usually "get" his type of humor. I don't really know what that other guy is talking about when he says that it isn't very funny. I saw it in a 300 person packed theater and everyone laughed the whole way through.

    Something for people who are politically minded to watch out for and pay attention to are the scenes involving the pirates who storm Zissou's ship. When the passengers are taken hostage, it is really unsettling, especially given the current situations overseas.
    tua05089

    GREAT Flick

    Listen, it isn't the most artsy film on earth. It doesn't have the richest plot ever. What it has is Bill Murray and Owen Wilson teaming up with Wes Anderson to portray a wonderful story. To like any of those three involved is to like this film. Definitely worth 2 hours out of any life, unless you'll be dying in less than 2 hours. This movie signifies the new way of storytelling for movies to come for years. The days of the old-fashioned drama starring a powerful actor, supported by wonderful character actors is over. To be a good movie anymore, the lead must have the capability to play more than himself in real life (i.e. Bruce Willis is always Bruce Willis). Bill Murray fits the mold perfectly, as he portrays the washed-up sea adventurer. Not to mention the wonderful cast around him, the best performance coming possibly from Willem Dafoe (who is great in every movie he's in).
    TxMike

    Typical Wes Anderson film, love it or leave it. I didn't love it.

    "Life Aquatic" may best be described by the term the critic Ebert gave it, "terminal whimsy." There is a story but, as the writer/director says on the DVD extras, the characters are what count. They are interesting, but it is mostly all silliness, which I got tired of pretty quickly. As did my wife. We also didn't care much for "Royal Tennenbaums", another whimsical Anderson film. The only movie of his I have enjoyed, so far, is "Rushmore" which has more substance.

    In a parody of Jacques Cousteau, Bill Murray is good as Steve Zissou, famous explorer who seems more interested in filming something that will sell, than in making legitimate discoveries. Owen Wilson is Ned Plimpton, who shows up after his mother dies, looking for Zissou who may be his father. Cate Blanchett is a reporter, and pregnant, Jane Winslett-Richardson, who goes along on the next adventure intent on documenting it, but also becoming attracted to Ned. Anjelica Huston is Steve's ex-wife, Eleanor Zissou, looking her mannish best. Willem Dafoe is a hoot as Klaus Daimler, and Jeff Goldblum, always good, is Alistair Hennessey, competing and wealthy aquatic explorer.

    SPOILERS. The movie begins at a showing of the latest Zissou film where the theater audience finds out Steve's buddy was eaten by what he calls a Leopard Shark, and his next mission is to hunt it down. So that is what most of this movie is about. There are mishaps, but in the end the small sub with "maximum capacity 6 people" is tracking the shark with a dozen people in it. They find the man-eating shark, it is beautiful, they do not kill it. Terminal whimsy. For those who love it, I congratulate you.
    6ccthemovieman-1

    A Strange Film Hard To Rate On One Viewng

    I find this a hard movie to rate. Maybe a second viewing would make it easier. It's a odd film: one of these low-key black humor films which is a mixture of drama and comedy. What set this apart were a few other shocking scenes of violence, something not normally in this type of movie. For a comedy, albeit a tongue-in-cheek one, that violence doesn't seem to fit, but it makes the film all the more intriguing.

    At times I was totally bored with this movie and at other times fascinated. I know one thing: this is a bizarre story! That automatically means it's a good vehicle for Bill Murray, who excels at wacky characters, event he low-key ones as he sometimes plays (i.e. Lost In Translation, The Royal Tenebaums, etc.). Speaker of the latter, this movie was written and directed by Wes Anderson, the same man who did "Tenenbaums." If you saw that, you have an idea of what you might get here, although I thought Royal Tenenbaums was far funnier.

    At 118 minutes, this a bit long for what it offers. I'd like to have seen it 15 minutes shorter with a tighter script. But it does offer some good photography in addition to the strange story. This movie, as they say, is not for all tastes.

    Wes Anderson Films as Ranked by IMDb Rating

    Wes Anderson Films as Ranked by IMDb Rating

    See how IMDb users rated Wes Anderson's feature films from Bottle Rocket to The Phoenician Scheme.
    See the full list
    Production art
    List

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Matthew Gray Gubler (Intern #1) was also co-writer and director Wes Anderson's intern in real life.
    • Goofs
      While on the submarine, Zissou inserts a tape into the player. The clock reads 2:18. The camera immediately cuts to Zissou turning the volume up, but the time now reads 1:45.
    • Quotes

      [a woman asks a question about the shark Zissou is hunting]

      Festival Director: [translating] That's an endangered species at most. What would be the scientific purpose of killing it?

      Steve Zissou: Revenge.

    • Crazy credits
      During the end credits the filmmakers acknowledge that the real Steve Zissou is a prominent attorney in New York City specializing in complex federal litigation.
    • Connections
      Featured in Late Night with Conan O'Brien: Bill Murray/Tony Bennett (2004)
    • Soundtracks
      Main Title
      from Innerspace

      Written and Performed by Sven Libaek

      Courtesy of Ron Taylor Film Productions

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    24 Frames From Wes Anderson Films

    24 Frames From Wes Anderson Films

    Explore the memorable career of Wes Anderson through 24 stills from his movies.
    See the gallery
    Production art
    Photos

    FAQ

    • How long is The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 9, 2005 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Icelandic
      • Filipino
      • Portuguese
      • French
      • Tagalog
      • German
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • La vida acuática con Steve Zissou
    • Filming locations
      • Naples, Campania, Italy
    • Production companies
      • Touchstone Pictures
      • American Empirical Pictures
      • Scott Rudin Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $50,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $24,020,403
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $113,085
      • Dec 12, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $34,810,817
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 59 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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