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The Vintner's Luck

  • 2009
  • R
  • 2h 1m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
1K
YOUR RATING
The Vintner's Luck (2009)
In 19th century France, a peasant winemaker endeavors to create the perfect vintage.
Play trailer2:04
1 Video
11 Photos
DramaFantasyRomance

In 19th century France, a peasant winemaker endeavors to create the perfect vintage.In 19th century France, a peasant winemaker endeavors to create the perfect vintage.In 19th century France, a peasant winemaker endeavors to create the perfect vintage.

  • Director
    • Niki Caro
  • Writers
    • Niki Caro
    • Elizabeth Knox
    • Joan Scheckel
  • Stars
    • Jérémie Renier
    • Keisha Castle-Hughes
    • Vania Vilers
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Niki Caro
    • Writers
      • Niki Caro
      • Elizabeth Knox
      • Joan Scheckel
    • Stars
      • Jérémie Renier
      • Keisha Castle-Hughes
      • Vania Vilers
    • 18User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Vintner's Luck
    Trailer 2:04
    The Vintner's Luck

    Photos10

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Jérémie Renier
    Jérémie Renier
    • Sobran Jodeau
    Keisha Castle-Hughes
    Keisha Castle-Hughes
    • Celeste
    Vania Vilers
    Vania Vilers
    • Jodeau Senior
    Eric Godon
    Eric Godon
    • Father Lesy
    Patrice Valota
    • Comte de Vully
    François Beukelaers
    • Chief Winemaker
    Gaspard Ulliel
    Gaspard Ulliel
    • The Angel Xas
    Stephane Garneau-Monten
    Stephane Garneau-Monten
    • Young Soldier
    • (as Stephane Garneau)
    Juliette Mariotte
    • Baby Sabine
    Finn Van Mell
    • Baby Nicolette
    Charlotte Cheveau
    • Sabine - 2-3 Years
    Felicity-Amore Castle-Hughes
    • Nicolette - 12-18 Months
    Julie Berthoux
    • Sabine - 4-5 Years
    Vera Farmiga
    Vera Farmiga
    • Aurora de Valday
    Jean-Louis Sbille
    Jean-Louis Sbille
    • Henri
    Eloise Despres
    • Nicolette…
    Hans Ropiteau
    • Baby Baptiste
    Matthias Javos
    • Baptiste - Toddler
    • Director
      • Niki Caro
    • Writers
      • Niki Caro
      • Elizabeth Knox
      • Joan Scheckel
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    5.61K
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    Featured reviews

    7kosmasp

    Threes a lucky charm(?)

    If you really truly want something different - well look no further. You have it here. A movie that is as different even if it sometimes feel same. And with a cast that is .. angelic of sorts (no pun intended). And with love all around (again no pun intended). Go grab the grapes (is that a pun? Or at least some form of innuendo?).

    There is drama, there is a different level of ... well otherworldly. You have to like something - well with costumes, but also something that has actors going out there. I mean the angelic stuff that I already mentioned ... is quite something. And not everyones cup of tea of course.

    Actors are great - and I was a bit surprised that there was also some nudity in it. Not too much of it, but still. In case you care one way or the other of course. This is about relationships ... about love and how one individual handles/tackles these things.
    7Hallelujah289

    Oddly moving, humanistic, erotic film

    Didn't know about a book, had no expectations. Surprised by supernatural element involving an angel. Being impatient, the slow moving pace left me wanting, but I stuck through because I liked the strength of the actors, especially the lead. Glad I did by the end. Was ambivalent about the many allegories about wine making and life spoken by the angel, but eventually these ideas did became more than words. Betrayal, reconciliation, the many shades of love and loss. Eventually you understand.

    Didn't like the dark color palette in the beginning, but was impressed by the authenticity of the dirt and grunge of the peasant laborers. Much like the Game of Thrones franchise in that way. And when the lead becomes richer by his Wine taking risks, the velvet brocade and ruby wine bedazzles the scene like darkly gorgeous vintage. Very pleasing.

    The film is odd because it seems to have a Christian spiritual feel, yet it is decidedly gray area rather than black and white. It is even hedonistic, existentialist and atheistic, while also speaking about heaven and hell in a manner reminiscent of how Frankenstein's monster spoke with his creator in Mary Shelley's violent and philosophical book. Where "Frankenstein" is violent though "A Heavenly Vintage" is intensely erotic in a way that is sometimes like violence except sublimated into passion. The slow burn nature of "A Heavenly Vintage" coupled with its underlying eroticism (and sometimes homoeroticism) is mysteriously affecting, even while being an oddly uplifting tale based in an extraordinary humanism.
    9lleone8

    A beautiful film that brings forth a world of desire, lust and passion as well as death and anguish. The true duality of life.

    This film, which transports us to 19th century France, is so beautiful in so many ways. It seeps in and touches you with the delicacy of a fine wine. The pace of it let's you digest each moment and allows you to linger in a wonderful world of passion, desire, spiritedness as well as death and anguish. Which is why I loved the film so much...the duality of it. It's not like your typical Hollywood movie in which one thing or another is forced onto you. The film takes you on a journey where you can think about, and more importantly feel the duality of life...the duality of your own life and spirit. It awakens an understanding within yourself through the characters and the script. The acting is superb...Vera Farmiga is at her best and Keisha Castle-Hughes has become a fierce woman with such raw vibrancy I was wishing for more of her. The script takes the kind of turns and risks you can only hope for when watching a film. Filled with such feeling and thought it's a tale that lingers on long after leaving the theater....isn't that what art is all about.
    8gradyharp

    A Period Piece with Stunning Actors

    HEAVENLY VINTAGE (aka THE VINTNER'S LUCK) is a somewhat perplexing film. Based on a novel by Elizabeth Knox and adapted for the screen by Joan Scheckel and writer/director Niki Caro it comes across as a patchwork quilt - many fine story lines that don't seem to fit together into a grand whole. Niki Caro has some fine films in her resume - The Whale Ride, North Country, Memory & Desire - so she has proved that she knows her craft. She is supported by an astonishingly fine group of actors, a sensitive cinematographer (Denis Lenoir) and one of the best teams of costume designers (Justin Buckingham and Harry Harrison) and music composer Antonio Pinto, yet the story never becomes airbourne - and that is a particularly important factor in this film.

    The year is 1815 and Sobran Jodeau (Jérémie Renier in yet another brilliant performance) is a peasant winemaker working or a château owned by Comte de Vully (Patrice Valota). Sobran falls in love with another peasant, Celeste (Keisha Castle-Hughes) despite the warning's about Celeste's mad father Sobran's father (Vania Vilers) claims Sobran will be doomed. Sobran longs to have his own vineyard and to make his own wine and one evening an angel (Gaspard Ulliel) appears to Sobran and encourages him to marry Celeste and begin his own vines and to meet the angel again in a year's time. A year later Sobran again meets his angel and reports he is not only married but that Celeste is pregnant. The angel encourages him to bravely begin his own vineyard. Sobran's goal is interrupted crop failure and by his going off to fight in Napoleon's war. He returns to the demise of Comte de Vully and the takeover of the Château by the counts niece, the beautiful Aurora de Valday (Vera Farmiga). Though Sobran and Aurora represent different classes they join together to make their dream of the perfect wine come true and there is a physical attraction that is consummated despite Sobran's commitment to his wife and children. Sobran meets his angel again and we sense the angel and Sobran are in love but a confession on the part of the angel creates a schism and form there the fortune of Sobran begins to dwindle until the resurgence of hope at the end: Sibran, Aurora, and Celestehave aged and Sobran's children are mature. The secrets of Sobran's heavenly vintage are revealed at last. 'A Heavenly Vintage is a beautiful and sensual tale about what it takes to create the perfect vintage.'

    Jérémie Renier, Gaspard Ulliel and Vera Farmiga offer stunning performances but even they are unable to make the story memorable. Given those involved form the top to the bottom of this production it is difficult to understand why it does eventually work. But perhaps that is the fault of the novelist Elizabeth Knox. The film is worth for the actors and the stunning costumes and décor.

    Grady Harp
    5SnoopyStyle

    melodrama of wine

    It's 19th century France. Sobran Jodeau is a peasant working for a château winemaker. He wants to make more than peasant wine. During one drunken night, he is rescued by angel Xas who offers him special seeds in exchange for meeting him one night every year for the rest of his life. Sobran marries Celeste (Keisha Castle-Hughes) and starts a family. The Chateau's Baroness Aurora de Valday (Vera Farmiga) returns from Paris. It's a fable of love, passion, and wine.

    Niki Caro, who wrote and directed 'Whale Rider', has created a melodrama about French vine during the Napoleanic age. It's a bit of a grind. It's long and melodramatic like an old romance novel. It does go off in unexpected directions. The passion for the vines do come through the screen. Jérémie Renier has a shiftiness that is unappealing and distracts from the assumed passion from Sobran. His European accent don't match either Vera or Keisha. Keisha is underused and is no more than a face. Another lead could tie the whole movie together. This movie struggles to find solid ground but I do like the wine making.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Elijah Wood in Le Seigneur des anneaux : La Communauté de l'anneau (2001)
    Fantasy
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 25, 2012 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • New Zealand
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Blog
      • Facebook
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La veine du vigneron
    • Filming locations
      • Beaune, Côte-d'Or, France
    • Production companies
      • New Zealand Film Commission
      • New Zealand Film Production Fund
      • Ascension Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €8,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $136,295
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 1m(121 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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