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IMDbPro

Elegy

  • 2008
  • R
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
24K
YOUR RATING
Ben Kingsley and Penélope Cruz in Elegy (2008)
This is the theatrical trailer for Elegy, directed by Isabel Coixet.
Play trailer2:14
7 Videos
99+ Photos
Psychological DramaTragic RomanceDramaRomance

Cultural critic David Kepesh finds his life, which he indicates is a state of "emancipated manhood," thrown into tragic disarray by Consuela Castillo, a well-mannered student who awakens a s... Read allCultural critic David Kepesh finds his life, which he indicates is a state of "emancipated manhood," thrown into tragic disarray by Consuela Castillo, a well-mannered student who awakens a sense of sexual possessiveness in her teacher.Cultural critic David Kepesh finds his life, which he indicates is a state of "emancipated manhood," thrown into tragic disarray by Consuela Castillo, a well-mannered student who awakens a sense of sexual possessiveness in her teacher.

  • Director
    • Isabel Coixet
  • Writers
    • Nicholas Meyer
    • Philip Roth
  • Stars
    • Ben Kingsley
    • Penélope Cruz
    • Patricia Clarkson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    24K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Isabel Coixet
    • Writers
      • Nicholas Meyer
      • Philip Roth
    • Stars
      • Ben Kingsley
      • Penélope Cruz
      • Patricia Clarkson
    • 117User reviews
    • 139Critic reviews
    • 66Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos7

    Elegy: Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:14
    Elegy: Theatrical Trailer
    Elegy
    Clip 1:00
    Elegy
    Elegy
    Clip 1:00
    Elegy
    Elegy: A Future With Me
    Clip 1:26
    Elegy: A Future With Me
    Elegy: Im Not Hiding
    Clip 1:25
    Elegy: Im Not Hiding
    Elegy: One Shot Encounter
    Clip 0:51
    Elegy: One Shot Encounter
    Elegy: Diet Coke
    Clip 1:50
    Elegy: Diet Coke

    Photos138

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    + 132
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    Top cast25

    Edit
    Ben Kingsley
    Ben Kingsley
    • David Kepesh
    Penélope Cruz
    Penélope Cruz
    • Consuela Castillo
    Patricia Clarkson
    Patricia Clarkson
    • Carolyn
    Dennis Hopper
    Dennis Hopper
    • George O'Hearn
    Peter Sarsgaard
    Peter Sarsgaard
    • Kenny Kepesh
    Debbie Harry
    Debbie Harry
    • Amy O'Hearn
    • (as Deborah Harry)
    Charlie Rose
    Charlie Rose
    • Charlie Rose
    Antonio Cupo
    Antonio Cupo
    • Younger Man
    Michelle Harrison
    Michelle Harrison
    • 2nd Student
    Sonja Bennett
    Sonja Bennett
    • Beth
    Emily Holmes
    Emily Holmes
    • 1st Student
    Chelah Horsdal
    Chelah Horsdal
    • Susan Reese
    Marci T. House
    Marci T. House
    • Administration Nurse
    Alessandro Juliani
    Alessandro Juliani
    • Actor #3 in Play
    Tiffany Lyndall-Knight
    Tiffany Lyndall-Knight
    • Actor #2 in Play
    Laura Mennell
    Laura Mennell
    • Cute Girl
    Andre Lamal
    • Talk Show Host
    Shekhar Paleja
    Shekhar Paleja
    • 3rd Student
    • (as Shaker Paleja)
    • Director
      • Isabel Coixet
    • Writers
      • Nicholas Meyer
      • Philip Roth
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews117

    6.723.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7stensson

    Aging

    OK. Professor starts an affair with one of his students. You may have prejudices about that. Not about this kind of affairs, but about this kind of movies.

    But it's a story about aging and jealousy and so far touching. The professor goes through hell, including all objections he's supposed to have about his own behavior in this certainly true love. A love which is regarded as ridiculous. Most so by himself.

    Cruz and Kingsley are great as you could expect, but the greatest performance is delivered by Dennis Hopper. A certain amount of sentimentality is a little disturbing, but this film obviously takes aging as an emotional problem seriously.
    9peskenaz

    Ben Kingsley gives another Oscar-worthy performance

    'Elegy' is a small, yet powerful film for adults. Focusing on a relationship between a well-respected college professor (Ben Kingsley) and his former student (Penelope Cruz), 'Elegy' shows the audience a multi-faceted, complex man whose past experiences with women and his own family have dampered his ability to participate in a healthy relationship with a woman he is truly infatuated with.

    The film was carried by a masterful performance by Kingsley, who successfully portrayed Kepesh as a complex man with complex relationships. His desire and lust for Cruz was so emotional and real that I believed it for every second until the very end. Kingsley was able to spark empathy with the audience as a victim of numerous losses in his life: his wife, family, son, best friend, love interest (Cruz), and most importantly, it was his loss of youth that made Kepesh the man he is when we first meet him.

    I truly believed his internal struggles with adapting to life as a man romantically involved with a much younger woman (30 years his junior).
    7C-Younkin

    Take a look inside

    "Elegy" is the fifth movie Ben Kingsley has done this year and its been so good to see him back in form the last couple years cause I honestly thought that doing "Bloodrayne" was his way of saying "I'm losing my mind." Nicholas Meyer wrote the movie from a novel by Phillip Roth. The last time Meyer adapted something from Roth we got Anthony Hopkins playing a black guy in "The Human Stain", and that was just one of many problems that that movie had. "Elegy" was directed by Isabel Coixet though, who I really only know from the short film "Bastille", one of a group of films that can be found in the all-around beautiful love letter to Paris film, "Paris J'Taime." She seems well-suited for this love story, as do Kingsley and Penelope Cruz. Only the question is, can they all make a better movie than "The Human Stain"? Kingsley plays cultural critic David Kepesh, a man who spent most of the 60's sexual revolution unfortunately married. Now a divorced college professor, Kepesh has devoted much of his after graduation activities to hitting on former students, his most recent conquest being Consuela Castillo (Penelope Cruz), a hard working woman from a Cuban family. Just Consuela awakens a sense of passion in him and soon he is thrown into a confusing situation where he jealously wants to have her for his own but his fear of commitment to another woman has him pushing her back when she wants to get closer.

    At times funny and heartbreakingly moving, this movie mostly just makes you think how lazy most men are when it comes to relationships. I found it interesting how even a cultural critic, a man who spends his life looking for deeper meaning in everything, can look at a woman and only see a sex toy. That what a woman holds inside is a short substitute for what she holds outside. David being self-conscious about his age adds another dimension, backing up that long held belief by men that women are also more concerned with what's on the outside as well. It's all material that has been worked over before in countless romances and the ending relies on that old romantic cliché of throwing in a fatal disease that threatens the life of one of the characters but in general director Isabel Coixet creates a moving, heartfelt love story complete with sensual sex scenes, beautiful piano-background music and some really nice (and tasteful) shots of Penelope Cruz's boobs and ass.

    There is also some really excellent acting going on in this movie. Kingsley charges into his role like a lion, showing David's brashness in preying on the young girls he so dearly missed out on during his married youth, but he also brings regret, vulnerability, and cluelessness to David that make him worthy of sympathy. And Penelope Cruz couldn't be better as his above-age Lolita, bringing a soft-spoken sexiness and warmth to a woman trying mightily to disarm a man primarily drawn to women as play things. And where has Dennis Hopper been? This is one of his best performances in a long time, playing a man whose gone through the wringer a couple times with relationships himself who now offers up his own wisdom, coupled with some comic relief as well. Patricia Clarkson does what she can in a small role as an on-again off-again sex buddy for David. She has a fantastic scene in the movie later on where she describes what life is like for older women but then unfortunately the character is never seen again.

    "Elegy" doesn't simmer with romance but it's not exactly a slow-moving disaster either. It offers up some food for thought and it's artfully created while Kingsley, Cruz, and Hopper each supply fantastic performances. If you're interested in a May-December romance, this one fits the bill just fine for the time being.
    8seawalker

    Erotic, touching and beautiful

    Everybody is allowed to do a job just for the money, I know that I do, but when it comes to the acting profession, I irrationally think that I expect a little bit more from our finest thespians. I don't know why. I just do. Take, for example, the actor Ben Kingsley.

    Ben Kingsley sometimes annoys the hell out of me. He is one of the best actors in the world, but sometimes plys his trade in the likes of films like "Thunderbirds", "A Sound Of Thunder" and "The Love Guru". Such a waste. Such a shame. Thank God he occasionally realises how good he is and signs up for a movie as sublime as "Elegy".

    "Elegy" is a great movie. Ben Kingsley is supreme in it. He plays David Kapesh, an expat British teacher and writer. Kapesh is selfish. He is a player and a commitment phobe, who takes and drops lovers at the drop of a hat. That is until he meets Penelope Cruz's Consuela Castillo, with whom he begins a pretty standard affair and, against all expectations, and much to his dismay, falls in love with her.

    "Elegy" has some seriously good, sure footed performances. Ben Kingsley is on Oscar worthy form. It is as different, but as good a performance, as his Oscar nominated turns in "Sexy Beast" and "House Of Sand And Fog". Patrica Clarkson, as Kapesh's long standing mistress, defines hurt and betrayal, Penelope Cruz completely puts word to the lie of one daft critic who said that she simply cannot act in the English language, but the surprise here is Dennis Hopper: His performance as Kapesh's best friend is light years away from the eye rolling villain that he normally portrays to make a crust.

    "Elegy" is erotic, touching and beautiful. I think that it is a cracking movie and deserves a bigger audience.
    7TheHorn100

    Elegant and eventually wise

    When a film offers some good quotes and/or insights concerning how we live our lives it is for me always worth the ticket, and Elegy offers plenty. It is definitely not for the entertainment junkie, but it is nicely paced and keeps the intellect awake for the duration of the experience.

    Ben Kingsley is an art and literature professor who still has not grown up, and this is mainly represented by him not being able to have a committed adult relationship, his jealousy, and the fact that he still holds a silly, bitter grudge against his son. It is a film about what growing up means, but also the possible pain and loneliness growing old.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      David (Sir Ben Kingsley) tells Consuela that she looks like Goya's Maja Desnuda. Penélope Cruz (Consuela) plays Pepita Tudó in Volavérunt (1999), possibly a model for the Maja Desnuda.
    • Goofs
      At one point Ben Kingsley says to Penelope Cruz, "The beast with two backs. Where's that from?" She answers Shakespeare and he agrees that it's from Othello. The fact is that Shakespeare borrowed it from the original author, Francois Rabelais. The phrase appears in French as "la bête à deux dos" in Gargantua and Pantagruel, 1532.
    • Quotes

      David Kepesh: When you make love to a woman you get revenge for all the things that defeated you in life.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: The Pineapple Express/Elegy/The Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants 2/Vicky Christina Barcelona/Hell Ride (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Adagio from Concerto in D Minor
      Written by Johann Sebastian Bach

      Performed by David Troy Francis

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    FAQ23

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    • What is an "elegy"?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 18, 2008 (Spain)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Lovers
    • Filming locations
      • Coquitlam, British Columbia, Canada
    • Production company
      • Lakeshore Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $13,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,581,642
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $104,168
      • Aug 10, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $14,894,347
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 52 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • SDDS
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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