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Lemming

  • 2005
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 9m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
5.4K
YOUR RATING
Charlotte Gainsbourg and Charlotte Rampling in Lemming (2005)
DramaMysteryThriller

After developing a flying web-cam Alain has his boss and wife over for dinner. She turns up to be very rude, and the same night Alain finds a live rare Scandinavian lemming clogging up the k... Read allAfter developing a flying web-cam Alain has his boss and wife over for dinner. She turns up to be very rude, and the same night Alain finds a live rare Scandinavian lemming clogging up the kitchen sink. The night things start going wrong.After developing a flying web-cam Alain has his boss and wife over for dinner. She turns up to be very rude, and the same night Alain finds a live rare Scandinavian lemming clogging up the kitchen sink. The night things start going wrong.

  • Director
    • Dominik Moll
  • Writers
    • Gilles Marchand
    • Dominik Moll
  • Stars
    • Laurent Lucas
    • Charlotte Gainsbourg
    • Charlotte Rampling
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    5.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dominik Moll
    • Writers
      • Gilles Marchand
      • Dominik Moll
    • Stars
      • Laurent Lucas
      • Charlotte Gainsbourg
      • Charlotte Rampling
    • 45User reviews
    • 72Critic reviews
    • 65Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 nominations total

    Photos36

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    Top cast14

    Edit
    Laurent Lucas
    Laurent Lucas
    • Alain Getty
    Charlotte Gainsbourg
    Charlotte Gainsbourg
    • Bénédicte Getty
    Charlotte Rampling
    Charlotte Rampling
    • Alice Pollock
    André Dussollier
    André Dussollier
    • Richard Pollock
    Jacques Bonnaffé
    Jacques Bonnaffé
    • Nicolas Chevalier
    Véronique Affholder
    • Francine
    Michel Cassagne
    • Le vétérinaire
    Florence Desille
    • L'infirmière
    Emmanuel Gayet
    • Le médecin de garde
    Félix Gonzales
    • Félix, le fils du voisin
    Nicolas Jouhet
    • L'employé des eaux
    Fabrice Robert
    • Bruno
    Natacha Boussaa
    • Une call-girl
    Luc Thelliez
    • Getty's Neighbour (Felix' Father)
    • Director
      • Dominik Moll
    • Writers
      • Gilles Marchand
      • Dominik Moll
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews45

    6.75.4K
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    Featured reviews

    7colinmetcalfe

    Well made film whose slickness almost succeeds in disguising a random and weak plot.

    Well made, glossy, professional, well acted in fact everything about it was great except the story and a weak premise. I like the fact it was unpredictable and you didn't know what was going to happen next, but that was because I couldn't make my mind up as to what type of film it was.

    If you believe there should be no rules in story telling and you can throw in what you like, when you like then you will like this. On the other hand if you think David Lynch and his like make it up as they go along in between having a good laugh at everybody who reads so much into their films then you won't.
    8matthewglasson

    not Hitchcockian, Lewtonesque!

    I saw this film today and thought it was beautifully constructed with layers of metaphor and 'reality' that one can choose to attend to at will. I don't think the film was Hitchcockian - the pace was much more leisurely and atmospheric than most Hitchcock or American films. However, if there is any point of comparison, i would say it is with Val Lewton, who seemingly loved making stories about the supernatural aspects of human relationships (and the screeching train reminded me of the braking bus in 'Cat People'). By the end of 'Lemming' i totally accepted the bizarre rationality implied as an explanation for the whole thing - those actors and Moll made me believe it.
    8Didier-Becu

    french suspense in hitchockian style

    The latest festival in Cannes (2005 that is) was opened by the French movie "Lemming" which meant a lot for the French cinema as after all, it was directed by Dominik Moll. Moll has already been described as the French equivalent of Alfred Hitchcock and even if 4 movies are a bit too less to speak of such a comparison, the symptoms are there. Moll's previous masterpiece ("Harry") was already one of the finest pieces of French cinema you'll ever going to see and in "Lemming" Moll just goes on the path that suits him best. We are witnessing a modern couple, Benedicte (Charlotte Gainsbourg) and Alain (Laurent Lucas), who are building their luck. Everything's got pretty disturbed when one day Alain decides to invite his boss (Andre Dussolier). The wife's boss (Charlotte Rampling) seems at first a shameless bitch who is fed up with her husband's flirts but a deeper look, let us see that the woman is more than just a tragic figure. Coincidence or not, but all problems started when the couple found a lemming in their sink. A lemming is a sort of rat which only lives in Scandinavian countries (and we're somewhere in France) whose way of living is determined by its suicidal character. It's business as usual that people start to compare one movie to another but Moll made a great effort which can compete with the best things François Truffaut has done. The viewer is like some peeping tom who sees the high and lows in a marriage and it goes hand in hand with genius acting from both Charlotte Gainsbourg and Laurent Lucas. Now already one of the movies of 2005!
    6Terrell-4

    We need a stronger key motivator, I think, but at least we learn about lemmings

    Lemming starts promisingly with the dinner party from hell. A young, much in love couple is preparing dinner for their guests, his boss and the boss' wife. Alain Getty (Laurent Lucas) is the newly hired home automation designer at The Pollack Company. He's smart, decent and good-looking. His wife, Benedicte, is alert, pretty and bright. She cooks. He tastes. They smooch. Then their guests show up. His boss, Richard Pollack (Andre Dussollier), is older, gracious and friendly. Alice Pollack (Charlotte Rampling), grim and puffy-eyed, is something else, from the sunglasses she wears at table to the glass of wine she throws in her husband's face. In between, the young couple hears her accusations of his infidelity. She trains her venom on the young wife as she leaves. On top of all this, the kitchen sink's drain is stopped up with what we later find is a lemming.

    So far, so good.

    But if we were expecting the clever, unnerving suspense of director Dominik Moll's With A Friend Like Harry from 2000, we're going to be not only disappointed but also surprised at Moll's miscues. The blame must be shared with his co-writer, Gilles Marchand. There simply are no motivations or situations that arise other than what, over and over, Moll and Marchand create out of thin air for us. That is, of course what the movies are all about. But with A Friend Like Harry, all we had to do was accept one unlikely situation...that there might be someone lurking about like Harry. Once we swallowed that hook, we were caught. With that accepted, everything else Moll threw at us was accepted, however unlikely or extreme. With Lemming, there's no first cause that makes sense or is believable. The hook we have to swallow is that Alain's hormone's will respond to the aging stimulus of Mrs. Pollack's unsmiling attempt at seduction, and that Alain's involuntary and momentary arousal makes him just as guilty as if he'd agreed to jump in the sack with her. Alain doesn't agree to do that, regardless of how a few hormones responded, because he honorably loves his wife. Moll needs a motivating cause for what he has in store for us. This isn't believable enough, but Moll doesn't seem to notice. He gives us a director's indulgence. Consequently, everything that follows is a director's indulgence, too.

    The first 46 minutes of Lemming, even if not especially engaging, have a nice uneasiness about them, culminating in a genuinely unexpected action. From then on, however, I was never especially engaged in the creepy shenanigans of isolated cabins, dreams, waves of rodents, adultery, the Mini Flying Webcam, hints of the Exorcist, murder and even the origin of lemmus lemmus and how one got stuck in a drain in the south of France. All seemed to be manipulations of a director who, this time, might not have been as smart as he thought he was.

    If Moll with his lemming wants to deal in metaphors, perhaps our metaphor should be the last thing we hear...Mama Cass and the rest of the Mamas and the Papas singing Dream a Little Dream of Me. It's a great song but we have it pasted a little pretentiously onto the end of a French psycho thriller. As hard as this is to say, Mama Cass doesn't exactly swing it.
    Camera-Obscura

    Got stuck in the kitchen sink

    I've recently been going through a couple of French films that lean heavily on the suspense. The French know their business. They make dozens of these every year. One might label them simply as thrillers. Some recent ones; this one, Haneke's CACHÉ (2005) (half-Austrian, all right), THE BEAT THAT MY HEART SKIPPED (2005) together with Chabrol's - mostly late '60s - work. This dream-like suspense-yarn compares rather unfavourably to the other films mentioned. This is mostly due to the rather ridiculous subtext of the titular Lemming (the framework is built around the mysterious appearance of a dead lemming in the kitchen sink of a young couple). Furthermore, Charlotte Rampling's character behaves in such an abnormal way, it becomes too much to swallow. In a dream sequence, thousand of lemmings appear in the home of Alain Getty, the central character. But his wife, played by Charlotte Gainsbourg, has an almost equally important part. Perhaps I misread the whole thing and this was all a highly associative nightmare sprung from the main characters' minds. In that case, not a very pleasant one. It's quite suspenseful up to a point, but after a while the characters begin to behave in such an irrational (and stupid) fashion, it becomes very tedious. I just wanna know what happened to the lemming?

    Camera Obscura --- 5/10

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film opened the 2005 Cannes Film Festival.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Micmacs à tire-larigot (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      The Lounge Is All Right
      Performed by Philippe Ours (piano, trumpet)

      Malik Fettis (saxophone)

      Alex Zanotti (drums)

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 11, 2005 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official site
      • Diaphana - synopsis, photos
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Kuzey Faresi
    • Filming locations
      • Midi-Pyrénées, France
    • Production companies
      • Diaphana Distribution
      • France 3 Cinéma
      • Canal+
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $81,698
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $11,310
      • May 21, 2006
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,580,017
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 9 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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