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Les lumières du faubourg

Original title: Laitakaupungin valot
  • 2006
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
8.6K
YOUR RATING
Janne Hyytiäinen in Les lumières du faubourg (2006)
CrimeDrama

In Helsinki, a lonely night watchman is caught up in a series of misadventures with a femme fatale and a crooked businessman.In Helsinki, a lonely night watchman is caught up in a series of misadventures with a femme fatale and a crooked businessman.In Helsinki, a lonely night watchman is caught up in a series of misadventures with a femme fatale and a crooked businessman.

  • Director
    • Aki Kaurismäki
  • Writer
    • Aki Kaurismäki
  • Stars
    • Janne Hyytiäinen
    • Maria Järvenhelmi
    • Maria Heiskanen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    8.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Aki Kaurismäki
    • Writer
      • Aki Kaurismäki
    • Stars
      • Janne Hyytiäinen
      • Maria Järvenhelmi
      • Maria Heiskanen
    • 36User reviews
    • 57Critic reviews
    • 57Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 7 nominations total

    Photos25

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    Top cast82

    Edit
    Janne Hyytiäinen
    Janne Hyytiäinen
    • Seppo Ilmari Koistinen
    Maria Järvenhelmi
    Maria Järvenhelmi
    • Mirja
    Maria Heiskanen
    Maria Heiskanen
    • Aila
    Ilkka Koivula
    Ilkka Koivula
    • Lindholm
    Sergei Doudko
    • Russian
    Andrei Gennadiev
    • Russian
    Arturas Pozdniakovas
    • Russian
    Matti Onnismaa
    • Shift Manager
    Sulevi Peltola
    • Foreman
    Antti Reini
    Antti Reini
    • Security Guard
    Neka Haapanen
    • Security Guard
    Santtu Karvonen
    Santtu Karvonen
    • Security Guard
    Sesa Lehto
    • Security Guard
    Jukka Rautiainen
    • Security Guard
    Jukka Salmi
    • Security Guard
    Heikki Heimo
    • Bartender
    Erkki Lahti
    • Man at Bar
    Pihla Penttinen
    • Girl at Bar
    • Director
      • Aki Kaurismäki
    • Writer
      • Aki Kaurismäki
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    6.88.5K
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    Featured reviews

    9mcnally

    Kaurismäki's sympathies lie with the common people

    I saw this film at the Toronto International Film Festival. This is the third film in Kaurismäki's "Helsinki Trilogy" (the others are Drifting Clouds (1996) and The Man Without a Past (2002)) While I haven't seen the first, this film shares many thematic and formal elements with the second film, and I enjoyed it just as much.

    Koistinen is a lonely security guard who is ignored by his co-workers; that is, when he's not being teased by them. His life is soon turned upside down by a femme fatale, with heartbreaking results. Despite the grim-sounding plot, the film is full of the director's trademark deadpan humour. And I'm in awe of how he can make the film just radiate love despite the mannered acting and awkward staging. Perhaps it has to do with the warmth of the lighting and the colour palette, as well as the use of nostalgic music and art direction. Whatever it is, from the first frame, you know the director loves this sad sack and wants us to love him too.

    The films of the Helsinki Trilogy all deal with people on the margins, and it's clear that Kaurismäki's sympathies lie with the common people and not with those whose success or power has dehumanized them. He is a true humanist, and his "heroes" all bear their sufferings stoically; in fact, they quite literally personify a "never-say-die" attitude, and that makes them admirable. Their hangdog expressions may make us pity them, but it's their core of inner strength that makes us love them.
    9slake09

    Kaurismaki is a god of cinema

    Lights in the Dusk is another in the series of movies about Finnish life that contain the same elements; deadpan dialog, subtle humor, stubborn protagonists, semi-happy endings. If you're into this style of film, you'll really like it. However, it's an acquired taste, not for everyone.

    Our anti-hero is a security guard, caught up in a criminal plot, ultimately taken advantage of by a beautiful femme fatale but redeemed by the love of a good woman. That sounds like a simple plot, but as seen in the movie it's anything but simple.

    I've seen references to a trilogy, mentioning this film along with Man Without A Past and Drifting Clouds. That seems to ignore Match Factory Girl, which fits right in with the rest. I've seen most of Kaurismaki's work and liked everything, I really groove to the retro style, the deadpan acting, the plots which seem simple but are in fact very complicated.

    If you like Kaurismaki, or are in the mood for something different, check it out. At the very least you'll remember it and think about it.
    10mykxxxxxxx

    downward spiral

    This film is an excellent comment on the downward spiral of an individual resulting from a very unequal society with a faulty / oblivious criminal justice system that punishes the innocent, band-aids the symptoms of social ills, but does not address root causes, and the long term social effects of imprisonment. The little guy's life is ruined while the real criminals get away with anything - just like in the real world! Hard work gets you nowhere! Neither does loyalty! It presents in a wonderfully bittersweet way the existential angst of a life at the bottom, just scraping by, against the coldness and apathy of a kind of extreme-Darwinian world where life is brutish and short. Ultimately, a tiny crack of light opens at the end, through humans simply caring for each other. But, like in the real world, you might die before anything good happens. A very stylized film, filmed almost like a comic book, impeccably detailed, spare, and melancholy but beautiful.
    8Chris Knipp

    Karuismäki rounds out his Loser Trilogy

    At the center of this film is a man named Koiskinen (Janne Hyytiainen). He is an isolated security guard and his story is one of cruel deception and eventual, utter downfall.

    Though Koiskinen's slicked-back hairstyle wouldn't seem fashionable outside of a Forties gangster film, he's really not a bad-looking guy; he just isn't a leading man. But Koiskinen's outcast status is a given we can't question. He has a slightly hangdog quality. He has dreams of starting his own company, but this seems a laughable illusion; he is scorned even by his coworkers. He has no life. The uniform, cigarettes, the lockers, the cold nightly guard duty, a dreary flat. These are the boundaries of his existence.

    In fact what's curiously enchanting about Kaurismäki: the analytical certainty of his downbeat riffs.

    Quite inexplicably, Mirja (Maria Jarvenhelmi), a well-dressed, striking, enigmatic woman, almost albino in her blondness, picks Koiskinen up in a bar and begins dating him. How can he resist? Her motives, however, are none too good. In fact they are of the worst kind. She is the agent of a nefarious higher power. You might not think Finland had gangsters but this is Helsinki, and the wide shots of the dark city at night are luminous and powerful, underlined by haunting tango music -- not an arbitrary but an indigenous choice, because after Argentina, Finland is the first capital of the tango. The movie is drenched in romantic music -- Puccini, Manon Lescaut, Gardel's "Volver," and Finnish tangos. There is a sweep about it, but the sweep is ominous.

    Koiskinen has no part of the city's power, except as its victim. He exists to be exploited -- and with rigor. It's sad, because no matter how bad things get, he goes on dreaming. But his life is a dream, and he is unaware of what's happening to him. Out of deference, Finns don't like to look you in the eye when they speak. Aila (Maria Heiskanen), the woman who cares about Koiskinen, who runs a refreshment stand in a vacant lot, he has little use for.

    Kaurismäki's sequences of scenes are as bold and assured as they are ironic. This is a pessimistic, but curiously vibrant view of life. There was never a more willing dupe than Koiskinen. This film has the squirming life of a pool full of sharks devouring carp.

    Laitakaupungin Valot, called Les lumières du faubourg or "suburban lights" in its French release and Lights in the Dusk in Canada, is in fact a coolly ironic reference to Charlie Chaplin's City Lights. It is a devastating finale to Kaurismäki's "Loser Trilogy," which began with Drifting Clouds and continued with A Man without a Past. This may be the best of the three. Its mood of twilight doom is unforgettable.
    8LunarPoise

    the arid, bitter-sweet beauty of despair

    Night watchman Koiskinen lives an alienated life. Ridiculed and shunned by his workmates, regarded as incompetent by his employers, he lives alone, drinks alone, and only manages to talk in any decent way with the woman who sell hot dogs in the fast food stand. His life changes when a mysterious blond takes a sudden and unexpected interest in him.

    As a Kaurismaki novice, I was struck by the spartan sets, strong primary colours, and the actors penchant for walking briskly into frames and then freezing, akin to amateur theatre in the village hall. Once you figure out it is all a send up, the film is fun and moves along quickly enough. The dry, pared down dialogue, lack of sentiment, and black humour are interspersed judiciously. There seems to be a record attempt for number of cigarettes smoked in a film going on. The Finnish attitude to alcohol makes Scotland seem like Utah. Throughout it all, Koiskinen infuriates with his passivity. His minor triumph at the end, finally making the right decision, is small, fleeting and perfect in this context. The film is both downbeat and uplifting. I don't recommend watching Kaurismaki films back-to-back, but as an antidote to an overdose of Transformers or Harry Potter, this works perfectly.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Suomen Filmikamari, which selects the Finnish candidate for Academy Awards Best Foreign-Language Picture, had already chosen Laitakaupungin valot in September 2006, but in October 2006 Aki Kaurismäki informed them that he did not want his film considered for that competition. This also meant that there was no Finnish entry in the Academy Awards pre-selection.
    • Quotes

      Bank Manager: [Bank manager is reviewing Koistinen's application for a small-business loan] Tell me, Koistinen... Are you some kind of comedian?

      Koistinen: Why?

      Bank Manager: Did you come to cheer us up? What are these papers? A trade school diploma... Did you think it will give you a loan of two hundred thousand - without any security, any guarantors?

      Koistinen: I'll guarantee it myself, until the company gets going and...

      Koistinen: [Interrupting him] Guarantees from trash like you are worthless.

      Koistinen: But I've got an account here.

      Bank Manager: I won't even take your application further. It's rejected. You're only wasting my time and yours. Go away.

    • Connections
      Follows Au loin s'en vont les nuages (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      El día que me quieras
      Carlos Gardel

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Lights in the Dusk?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 25, 2006 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Finland
      • Germany
      • France
      • Italy
      • Sweden
    • Languages
      • Finnish
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Lights in the Dusk
    • Filming locations
      • Kaivokatu, Helsinki, Finland
    • Production companies
      • Sputnik
      • Yleisradio (YLE)
      • Pandora Filmproduktion
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €1,380,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $14,056
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $2,757
      • Jun 17, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,615,018
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 18m(78 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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