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IMDbPro

Les amants réguliers

  • 2005
  • 3h 3m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
Les amants réguliers (2005)
DramaRomance

Amidst the chaos of student and union protests, 20-year-old Parisian poet François finds himself in legal hot water for dodging a stint in the French military. While at a party, he falls in ... Read allAmidst the chaos of student and union protests, 20-year-old Parisian poet François finds himself in legal hot water for dodging a stint in the French military. While at a party, he falls in love with Lilie, a would-be sculptor.Amidst the chaos of student and union protests, 20-year-old Parisian poet François finds himself in legal hot water for dodging a stint in the French military. While at a party, he falls in love with Lilie, a would-be sculptor.

  • Director
    • Philippe Garrel
  • Writers
    • Philippe Garrel
    • Arlette Langmann
    • Marc Cholodenko
  • Stars
    • Louis Garrel
    • Clotilde Hesme
    • Julien Lucas
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    3.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Philippe Garrel
    • Writers
      • Philippe Garrel
      • Arlette Langmann
      • Marc Cholodenko
    • Stars
      • Louis Garrel
      • Clotilde Hesme
      • Julien Lucas
    • 15User reviews
    • 64Critic reviews
    • 76Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 5 nominations total

    Photos3

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    Top cast96

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    Louis Garrel
    Louis Garrel
    • François Dervieux
    Clotilde Hesme
    Clotilde Hesme
    • Lilie
    Julien Lucas
    • Antoine
    Eric Rulliat
    • Jean-Christophe
    Nicolas Bridet
    Nicolas Bridet
    • Luc - le cousin d'Antoine
    Mathieu Genet
    • Nicolas
    Raïssa Mariotti
    Caroline Deruas
      Rebecca Convenant
      • Charlène
      Marie Girardin
      Maurice Garrel
      Maurice Garrel
      • Lucien - le grand père de François
      Cécile Garcia-Fogel
        Marc Barbé
        Marc Barbé
        • Jean
        Nicolas Maury
        Nicolas Maury
        • Gauthier
        Brigitte Sy
        Brigitte Sy
        • la mère de François
        Nicolas Chupin
        Martine Schambacher
        Martine Schambacher
        • la mère de Jean-Christophe
        Robert Bazil
        • Director
          • Philippe Garrel
        • Writers
          • Philippe Garrel
          • Arlette Langmann
          • Marc Cholodenko
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews15

        6.83K
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        Featured reviews

        5paulmartin-2

        Terrible

        This is one of many films I have seen at the Melbourne French Film Festival 2006. I average 100 films a year on the big screen and this is only the third film I have ever walked out on (after 75 minutes).

        Yes, it looks absolutely beautiful. Cinematography and lighting are great. The characters all look authentic and you'd swear you were watching a film made 30 or more years ago. It looks like a piece of art, but for me cinema is all about telling a story. And that's where this film falls apart - all style and no substance.

        There is no story, nothing compelling. It was so laborious to watch and a struggle to stay awake. There was little to differentiate this film from just looking at a book of old European photography (and that's not what I go to a cinema for, as much as I love photography). I felt that if it was like this after 75 minutes, how can I sit here for 3 hours! Obviously many others felt the same way because about 10% of the audience left before us. The only other time that I have seen a walkout like this was with The Aristocrats. This film was a wasted opportunity.
        3jasongbeale

        Great start then downhill

        The first 60 minutes of 'Regular Lovers' is highly recommended. The first long sequence depicts the street riots in Paris of 1968, and are extremely convincing in the combination of random images and sounds.

        After such a promising start, it's downhill... For another 2 hours the 'story' dwells on a tedious and passionless relationship between two young artists. Unnecessarily extended shots with no action or dialogue are little more than insipid imitations of Godard's style, without his wit or intelligence. They add nothing to this particular film I'm afraid.

        I love the nouvelle vague, don't get me wrong, but this film mimics 'avant-garde' techniques to end up with the equivalent of an endless Calvin Klein advertisement - bored and handsome youths lolling about, being decadent and looking so photogenic. It needs much more dynamism and emotion, either in the acting or in the editing. It might have made a tolerable 2 hour film, and perhaps more involving for this audience member.
        10naluvara

        Cinema as art.

        This is a very long movie, indeed. But it is quite beautiful, and a good example to show why cinema can be considered art. A story easily told cannot be expected in Les Amants Réguliers, but every scene, every silence here tells much more than a hundred dialogs. Touching, different, perfect in its pictures and soundtrack, showing why the close brought by the cinema as one of its main features became the greatest innovation in any dramatic representation. Someone who is used to that kind of movies where everything is told, and action takes place all the time, will find this tiring. But it is worth watching, to find out other possibilities of feeling a story.
        8Aquilant

        Let's breathe the forgotten atmosphere of the Nouvelle Vague!

        Philippe Garrel makes us breathe the forgotten atmosphere of the Nouvelle Vague, almost lost among the vestiges of its ancient splendor but ready to rise again from its ashes if recalled from the past. They who are a little acquainted with the director's subjects, on the other hand, may know very well how he's obsessed by a lingering sense of loss as far as fickleness of reality is concerned. "Les amants réguliers", therefore, show us the parallel stories of an "amour fou" and of a tempted revolution gone to ruin under the direction of young French students.

        The first part of the story is about the dramatic events of May '68 in France evoked in a series of astonishing plan-sequences, a sort of cinema verité style, that place the student insurrection in anything but an enviable light against a pitch-black background.

        There's much that can be said about the peculiarities of black-and-white photography used to describe the battle between students and police, where the high contrasts confer an unrealistic atmosphere to the sequences and darkness closes in upon the excited bodies wrapping them in mystery. The images, completely deprived of words, show the real consistence of the myth, made of crude violence, more and more emphasized by the exasperated reality of the movie shootings. The individual doesn't count anything at all here: he tends to disappear in the mass. What really matters in these fight scenes are the significance of the mass-suggestion, the blind fury of the juvenile assault, sinister eulogies of the power of the mob, even if conceived like separate entities apart from any kind of emotion, with the cold and distant look of an entomologist intent to catalog his insect collection.

        The second part of the story is described in a quieter and most intimate way. Stands out on the horizon the distressing portrait of a self-centered generation in search of its lost time, completely disenchanted about the individual values of men, inclined to rotate on its own axis between opium fumes and making a funeral oration in the praise of its recent defeat.

        "Les amants réguliers" seems to evoke from time to time the shadow of the great Robert Bresson, revised and corrected by Garrel's particular sensibility without drifting away from the main argument, trying to expand overall perspectives on the subject of human disillusions that though painful may bring us to the truth. In my opinion, trying to penetrate deeply into the substrate of the story, if a man lets himself go and play things by ear, he probably will find that he can bring out the dark side of his self with dire and irretrievable consequences.
        7dromasca

        1968 without Bertolucci

        Seeing Les Amants Reguliers calls immediately for comparison with Bertolucci's movie 'The Dreamers', in my opinion the best film made about the 1968 revolt of students in Paris. Actually director Philippe Garrel does not seem to avoid comparing with his much more famous colleague, sharing the principal actor and even including a direct replica eye-in-viewer-eye about an older film of Bertolucci. And yet, LAR is a different film, and an interesting one.

        The story line seems also familiar. The movie starts with long scenes of the 1968 'emeutes', maybe among the best done until now. The film is made in black-and-white, and the perspective of the static camera on one side or the other of the barricade reminds Eisenstein. Then, as in The Dreamers, the action moves in the Parisian flat where the heroes of the defeated revolt make art, smoke drugs, dream, and fall for one other. There is no direct social comment, no real explanation of the background of the revolt. The movie focuses on the psychology of the characters and on the love story between the main characters. It's like a premonition of the process of transition to the establishment that the generation of the 1968 went through, it's just that not all the participants may adapt or survive.

        The film is more about the characters than about the events. And it is merely for the style it will be remembered about. The black-and-white cinema is memorable not only in the revolution scenes, but also when looking at the characters evolution. Many sequences are enhanced by a technique that is derived from the silent films movies, with long takes accompanied by a off piano tune. The effect is exquisite. Yet the length of the film is hardly justified, it lasts more than three hours and I doubt that cutting it to only two hours would have been a miss - actually I am convinced it's quite a contrary.

        Without raising at the depth and subtlety of Bertolucci's movie LAR is another perspective to remember about one of the more important years in the history of France and of the world in the 20th century.

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        Storyline

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        Did you know

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        • Trivia
          Clémentine Poidatz's debut.
        • Goofs
          A Volvo 66 is featured prominently during the riot scenes in the beginning of the film. The production of this model hadn't begun until 1975.
        • Soundtracks
          Vegas
          Written by Nico and Philippe Quilichini

          Performed by Nico

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        FAQ15

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        Details

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        • Release date
          • October 26, 2005 (France)
        • Country of origin
          • France
        • Language
          • French
        • Also known as
          • Les Amants réguliers
        • Production companies
          • Maïa Films
          • Arte France Cinéma
          • MEDIA Programme of the European Union
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Box office

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        • Gross worldwide
          • $125,381
        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

        Tech specs

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        • Runtime
          3 hours 3 minutes
        • Color
          • Black and White
        • Sound mix
          • Dolby Digital
          • Dolby
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.37 : 1

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