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IMDbPro

JCVD

  • 2008
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
41K
YOUR RATING
Jean-Claude Van Damme in JCVD (2008)
JCVD: Trailer
Play trailer2:22
1 Video
36 Photos
Dark ComedyComedyCrimeDrama

Jean-Claude Van Damme gets involved in a bank robbery with hostages situation and reflects about his life during it.Jean-Claude Van Damme gets involved in a bank robbery with hostages situation and reflects about his life during it.Jean-Claude Van Damme gets involved in a bank robbery with hostages situation and reflects about his life during it.

  • Director
    • Mabrouk El Mechri
  • Writers
    • Mabrouk El Mechri
    • Frédéric Benudis
    • Frédéric Taddeï
  • Stars
    • Jean-Claude Van Damme
    • Valérie Bodson
    • Hervé Sogne
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    41K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mabrouk El Mechri
    • Writers
      • Mabrouk El Mechri
      • Frédéric Benudis
      • Frédéric Taddeï
    • Stars
      • Jean-Claude Van Damme
      • Valérie Bodson
      • Hervé Sogne
    • 156User reviews
    • 171Critic reviews
    • 64Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    JCVD: Trailer
    Trailer 2:22
    JCVD: Trailer

    Photos35

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    + 30
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    Top cast53

    Edit
    Jean-Claude Van Damme
    Jean-Claude Van Damme
    • JCVD
    Valérie Bodson
    • Veuve Film Budapest
    Hervé Sogne
    • Lieutenant Smith
    Rock Chen
    • Réalisateur asiatique
    Huifang Wang
    • Traductrice asiatique
    John Flanders
    John Flanders
    • Avocat ex-Femme
    Renata Kamara
    • Juge Tribunal Los Angeles
    Mourade Zeguendi
    • Client Vidéo club
    Vincent Lecuyer
    Vincent Lecuyer
    • Vendeur Vidéo Club
    Jenny De Chez
    • Taxiwoman JCVD
    Patrick Steltzer
    • Policier 1
    Bernard Eylenbosch
    • Technicien Telecom
    François Damiens
    François Damiens
    • Bruges
    Pascal Lefebvre
    • Le deuxième képi
    Jacky Lambert
    • Le troisième képi
    Norbert Rutili
    • Perthier
    Olivier Bisback
    Olivier Bisback
    • Docteur GIGN - Eric
    Armelle Gysen
    • Journaliste 1
    • Director
      • Mabrouk El Mechri
    • Writers
      • Mabrouk El Mechri
      • Frédéric Benudis
      • Frédéric Taddeï
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews156

    7.041K
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    Featured reviews

    8robby-deblauwe

    The best I've seen from Van Damme

    OK, I saw the movie today and here's my review: This movie is by far the best movie I've seen with Van Damme. Not his best action movie, because it's not what you would expect of a Van Damme movie, but the best movie he ever made. For me this is the highlight of his career and he'll probably never make a better movie.

    The movie had indeed a dog day afternoon, even a Tarantino feel to it. The story is told in pieces and by the end of the movie all the pieces come together.

    The beginning with the action scene is nicely done, and the one-take scene puts you right in the action.

    Then the story continues with Van Damme arriving in Schaarbeek and going to the postoffice. From that moment one the story unravels.

    Van Damme plays a portrait of himself and does this extremely well. He does have a sense for drama, and he really acts well. I do believe this has something to do with him being more comfortable in his native language.

    The other main characters are perhaps not very well developed, no real background story, which for me is a bit off a flaw. But the movie off course centers around Van Damme.

    The famous monologue is definitely a must see and is a summing of what he has encountered in his life, very moving.

    This movie, for me, shows us that he definitely CAN act given the right director and script. I hope this opens eyes, and also his.

    The direction for me was excellent and I think the director will go far. He clearly has talent.

    I think the movie should've given a chance on the festival circuit, it definitely would've found an audience. (maybe they should do this in te states).

    So conclusion? The best I've seen from Van Damme... A must see.

    8/10.
    8Craig_McPherson

    Spectacular

    There's some word combinations that you simply can't envisage together. "Jean-Claude Van Damme can act" is one of them. Yet, remarkable as it may seem, the Muscles from Brussels turns in a truly career turning performance in JCVD.

    Directed and co-written by Mabrouk El Mechri, JCVD manages to capably straddle art house, action and comedy genres as it captivates the viewer by laying bare the soul of the star of such DVD fare as Bloodsport, Streetfighter, and Universal Soldier, to name only a few.

    Largely based on his real life troubles, JCVD unfolds as Van Damme retreats to his native Belgium in the wake of a losing child custody battle in a Los Angeles court.

    Mounting financial troubles have left our hero with over-maxed plastic and debit cards that no longer yield ATM withdrawals. Forced to tap into his savings reserves, he makes a pit stop at a post office/bank to arrange a money wire transfer to pay his lawyer, only to discover that the bank is in the process of being robbed and he's stuck in the midst of the drama.

    To make matters worse, the manner in which things have unfolded has caused authorities and media alike to believe that Van Damme is the mastermind, orchestrating the heist and hostage taking to pay his legal bills.

    Segmented into chapters and shown out of sequence, similar to Pulp Fiction, El Mechri manages to deftly juggle laughs and tension to deliver a film that uniquely straddles several genres, including breaking the "fourth wall" with an eight-minute long monologue in the film's third act that sees the muscle-bound Belgian recap, with painful tear-inducing pain, his life of cheesy movies, women and drugs.

    Think of Dog Day Afternoon in which Pacino gets to speak to the audience and lay his soul bare and you've got an idea of what's in store with JCVD, which, if there's any justice, will do for Van Damme's career what Tarantino did for Travolta's. Especially now that we know JCVD can act.
    7SnoopyStyle

    Meta Good

    JCVD (Jean-Claude Van Damme) is a struggling B-movie action actor trying to maintain some artistic integrity despite everyone around him. He has custody problems and returned from family court in LA. He has been sleepless for 2 days. He goes into the bank and shots ring out. He's taken hostage but the cops think that he's the hostage taker.

    JCVD shows some acting chop or he's tapping into his inner self. It's so fascinating that he is such a mess. It's also a mess that isn't unrealistic. There is a bit of action but that's not the heart of this movie. It is to watch JCVD break down his public image and then break down his character. The movie could use an A-list actor to be the bad guy as his foil. Nevertheless this is one of the greatest performance from JCVD ever.
    JohnDeSando

    "Shooting pigeons . . ."

    "He'd still be shooting pigeons in Hong Kong," says one of the players In JCVD about director John Woo's debt to action star Jean-Claude Van Damme for their 1993 collaboration, Hard Target. Making that film may have been JCVD's greatest contribution to modern cinema although the current film with his initials in the title is more interesting than any previous kick-butt martial arts flick of his I can remember.

    The story's framing device is Van Damme's fictional character of the same name unwittingly becoming a hostage in a bank robbery where his inability to extricate himself and the other hostages is a commentary on the impotence in real life of the mythical hero on the screen. The gritty, de-saturated look inside and outside the bank reminds me of the urban realism of Sidney Lumet's bank-heist Dog Day Afternoon. There's even a stringy-haired thug, but Van Damme is no Dustin Hoffman.

    In this satire of his mercurial career as an action star, Van Damme ironically manages a mini-Mickey Rourke comeback by expressing feelings for his daughter and for the lost glamorous life of the Muscles from Brussels. His taciturn, expressionless persona is exactly what the satire needs to move it from a comedy about celebrity to a serious attempt to throw his identity into the existential arena. Indeed one long take in which he tearfully philosophizes about his troubled life is either ludicrous or a rather nice reflection on the vagaries of fame, albeit low rent. The other long take during the titles shows the aging hero fighting his way through a gauntlet of bad guys in a current movie. It's not bad given how bad Stallone could be in the same situation.

    Van Damme has had real-life difficulties getting custody of his daughter and righting his tax problems, so JCVD is an apt imagining of his troubles. At some moments he does quite well taking his acting where it has never gone before. That he recently lost a role to Stephen Seagal, who agreed to cut his pony tail for the part, is less an indictment of Jean-Claude than it is a commentary on the vagaries of showbiz heroism.

    "Sic transit gloria mundi."
    8johnslegers

    The lost son returns

    There once was a naive young men from the slums of Brussels full of hope and passionate with love seeking his way in life and making his dreams come true by becoming a Hollywood movie star. Boy oh boy, did things turn out to be different from what he expected. After once being type-casted as a martial arts B-movie star, he became easily outdated and in time just food for ridicule. After being walked all over by numerous people he trusted, including the women he loved, and after allowing one of these women to get him introduced to an illegal and addictive substance, he continued to do downhill.

    The rise from a simple Belgian boy to Hollywood movie star and the subsequent fall from grace turned the once naive young man into a wise old man. Having seen much of the world and lived both a life of poverty and pain as well as a life of luxury and hedonism, this man has seen it all and done it all. And now he's back with a vengeance.

    Of course, the man I'm talking about is Jean-Claude van Damme. Disappointed about the rats and vultures that populate Hollywood, he decided to go back to his roots, pay respects to his homeland and hope he's still welcome there to attempt a new career in movies. And boy oh boy, his first attempt seems promising.

    Jean-Claude van Damme showed the world he can actually act and he made sure that everyone watching this film understands why he was involved. His disgust towards the media and the Hollywood movie industry just radiate from this film, but not in arrogance but rather in all modesty and with regret, clinging on to the values and principles once taught to him by his parents and his Karate teacher when he was still a little boy living in Brussels. As a fellow Belgian, I pay respect to this man and hope his second movie career will be better than his first.

    Bonne chance, Jean-Claude.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the opening intro scene, Jean-Claude Van Damme's comment about not being able to film in one shot was his own ad-lib, partly in response to Mabrouk El Mechri actually wanting to shoot the scene in one shot.
    • Goofs
      Police chief Bruges tells Van Damme the decision to act was GIGN's move, not his. GIGN (Groupe d'Intervention de la Gendarmerie Nationale - French SWAT) exists in France but not in Belgium where the movie story takes place. In Belgium, police's tactical unit is called ESI (Escadron Special d'Intervention).
    • Quotes

      JCVD: This movie is for me. There we are, you and me. Why did you do that? Or why did I do that? You made my dream come true. I asked for it. I promised you something in return and I haven't delivered yet. You win, I lose. Unless... the path you've set for me is full of hurdles where the answer comes before the question. Yeah, I do that. Now I know why. It's the cure, from what I've seen here. It all makes sense. It makes sense to those who understand. So... America, poverty, stealing to eat... stalking producers, actors, 'movie stars', going to clubs hoping to see a star, with my pictures, karate magazines. It's all I had. I didn't speak English. But I did 20 years of karate. 'Cause before I wasn't like that.

      [points to flexed bicep]

      JCVD: This... this is me today. I used to be small and scrawny. And I took up karate. Hence the Dojo, hence respect, thou shall believe people who say, "Oss!" It's Samurai code. It's honor, no lies. So this guy in the US, it's not the same thing. No one says "Oss" to you. Sometimes people in show business say, "We're gonna fuck em". I believed in people, in the Dojo. I was blessed and had a lot of 'wives'. I always believed in love. It's hard for a woman with three kids to say, "Which one do I love more?" A mother... If you have 5, 6, 7, or 10 wives in a lifetime, they've all got something special, but no one cares about that in the so-called media. What about drugs? When you got it all, you travel the world. When you've been in all the hotels, you're the prima donna of the penthouse. And in all hotels the world over, traveling, you want something more. And because of a woman... well, because of love, I tried something and I got hooked. Van-Damme, the beast, the tiger in a cage, the "Bloodsport" man got hooked. I was wasted mentally and physically. To the point that I got out of it. I got out of it. But... it's all there. It's all there. It was really tough. I saw people worse off than me. I went from poor to rich and thought, why aren't we all like me, why all the privileges? I'm just a regular guy. It makes me sick to see people... who don't have what I've got. Knowing that they have qualities, too. Much more than I do! It's not my fault if I was cut out to be a star. I asked for it. I asked for it, really believed in it. When you're 13, you believe in your dream. Well it came true for me. But I still ask myself today what I've done on this Earth. Nothing! I've done nothing! And I might just die in this post office, hoping to start all over here in Belgium, in my country, where my roots are. Start all over with my parents and get my health back, pick up again. So I really hope... nobody's gonna pull a trigger in this post office... It's so stupid to kill people. They're so beautiful! So, today, I pray to God. I truly believe it's not a movie. It's real life. Real life. I've seen so many things. I was born in Belgium, but I'm a citizen of the world. I've travelled a lot. It's hard for me to judge people and it's hard for them... not to judge me. Easier to blame me. Yeah, something like that.

    • Crazy credits
      The Gaumont logo has an animated Jean-Claude Van Damme appear in the logo and deliver roundhouse kicks to the boy and the sunflower.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Bolt/JCVD/Slumdog Millionaire/Quantum of Solace (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Hard Times
      Written by Curtis Mayfield

      Performed by Baby Huey & The Baby Sitters

      © Warner-Tamerlane Publishing

      With Permission from Warner Chappell Music France

      (p) 1971 Rhino Entertainment Co. for the United States and WEA International for the world outside of the U.S.

      Courtesy of Warner Music France, A Warner Music Group Company

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 4, 2008 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Belgium
      • Luxembourg
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Asmik Ace Entertainment (Japan)
      • Atlantic Film (Sweden)
    • Languages
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Kod adı - JCVD
    • Filming locations
      • Brussels, Brussels-Capital, Belgium
    • Production companies
      • Gaumont
      • Samsa Film
      • Artémis Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €10,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $470,691
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $20,119
      • Nov 9, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,342,211
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 37 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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