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IMDbPro

L'oeil du cyclone

Original title: The Eye of the Storm
  • 2011
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Judy Davis, Charlotte Rampling, and Geoffrey Rush in L'oeil du cyclone (2011)
Trailer for The Eye of the Storm
Play trailer2:11
10 Videos
9 Photos
Drama

Elizabeth Hunter controls all in her life - society, her staff, her children; but the once great beauty will now determine her most defiant act as she chooses her time to die.Elizabeth Hunter controls all in her life - society, her staff, her children; but the once great beauty will now determine her most defiant act as she chooses her time to die.Elizabeth Hunter controls all in her life - society, her staff, her children; but the once great beauty will now determine her most defiant act as she chooses her time to die.

  • Director
    • Fred Schepisi
  • Writers
    • Judy Morris
    • Patrick White
  • Stars
    • Charlotte Rampling
    • Maria Theodorakis
    • Geoffrey Rush
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    1.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Fred Schepisi
    • Writers
      • Judy Morris
      • Patrick White
    • Stars
      • Charlotte Rampling
      • Maria Theodorakis
      • Geoffrey Rush
    • 12User reviews
    • 42Critic reviews
    • 55Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 8 wins & 26 nominations total

    Videos10

    The Eye of the Storm
    Trailer 2:11
    The Eye of the Storm
    The Eye Of The Storm: Princess
    Clip 0:34
    The Eye Of The Storm: Princess
    The Eye Of The Storm: Princess
    Clip 0:34
    The Eye Of The Storm: Princess
    The Eye Of The Storm: Beautiful Dress
    Clip 1:17
    The Eye Of The Storm: Beautiful Dress
    The Eye Of The Storm: Could You Love Me, Flora?
    Clip 0:48
    The Eye Of The Storm: Could You Love Me, Flora?
    The Eye Of The Storm: The Tingle Tangle
    Clip 1:06
    The Eye Of The Storm: The Tingle Tangle
    The Eye Of The Storm: Aftermath
    Clip 0:50
    The Eye Of The Storm: Aftermath

    Photos8

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    Top cast40

    Edit
    Charlotte Rampling
    Charlotte Rampling
    • Elizabeth Hunter
    Maria Theodorakis
    • Mary DeSantis
    Geoffrey Rush
    Geoffrey Rush
    • Basil Hunter
    Jamie Timony
    Jamie Timony
    • Onslow Porter
    Judy Davis
    Judy Davis
    • Dorothy de Lascabanes
    Bob Marcs
    • Queens Club Porter
    Alexandra Schepisi
    Alexandra Schepisi
    • Flora Manhood
    John Gaden
    • Arnold Wyburd
    Helen Morse
    Helen Morse
    • Lotte
    Robyn Nevin
    Robyn Nevin
    • Lal
    Jane Menelaus
    • Maggie
    Bille Brown
    • Dudley
    Heather Mitchell
    Heather Mitchell
    • June
    Simon Stone
    Simon Stone
    • Peter
    Nikki Shiels
    Nikki Shiels
    • Janie
    Louise Siversen
    • Carol
    Colin Friels
    Colin Friels
    • Athol Shreve
    May Lloyd
    • Lurline Skinner
    • Director
      • Fred Schepisi
    • Writers
      • Judy Morris
      • Patrick White
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.01.7K
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    Featured reviews

    6euroGary

    Rampling's the best thing about it

    'The Eye of the Storm' has Geoffrey Rush and Judy Davis returning from overseas to visit their ailing mother (unprobably played by Charlotte Rampling) who lives in a big house where the staff are there for her entertainment as much as to care for her. I've mixed feelings about this; I like a good drama, but some parts of it are decidedly iffy (for instance, a flashback featuring Rampling and Davis has the latter looking older than the woman playing her mother!) Rush probably over-eggs the pudding in his role as an old thesp, but Davis is good as the dissatisfied wife of a French prince (? I thought they didn't have those anymore). Rampling is superb: I don't usually rate her as an actress - her performances are almost always so studied she can never convince me she's not acting - but here she really sinks her teeth into the role of an old woman who knows her children's main interest in her is when she's going to die.
    brimon28

    How to make an absorbing movie

    Patrick White earned a Nobel Prize for literature. Having read only one of his novels and found it 'heavy', I was keen to see what someone could do to The Eye of the Storm. Given the director was Fred Schepisi, I knew it would be 'different'. First find a screenwriter. Judy Morris is an accomplished actor. I expected to see an 'actor's' film, with great lines and self-evident visuals. Yes, Judy Morris can write, and rather more clearly than Patrick White. Look for her in one of the scenes! Next find a cast. "Storm' has brilliant people. To nominate just one, Helen Morse proves that she can sing and dance, skills that I'd not seen before. Rush and Rampling carry the action, with Alexandra, Schepisi's daughter, a clever foil. Judy Davis has a face that seems to accommodate any role.

    No, I won't be reading this novel. What we see here is a great motion picture. We've become accustomed to Australian films depicting poverty, isolation, and mayhem. This has an air of opulence and connectedness.
    Philby-3

    A solid adaptation of Oz classic

    Patrick White put Australia on the literary map by winning the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1973, but his rich dense style did not make for a best-selling author. This film, an adaptation of White's novel, marks the first time anyone has succeeded in filming a White novel, though he wrote the screenplay for a curious piece directed by Jim Sharman, "The Night the Prowler" in 1977. Director Fred Schepisi said at the preview I attended that it was a challenge to film the allegedly unfilmable; if it had been easy it would have not been worth doing. Yet despite the style White was rather a theatrical author, and Judy Morris's screenplay accurately reflects White's mordant wit. His characters are acting their way through life and there is drama in almost every scene.

    Old Mrs Elizabeth Hunter, widow of a wealthy grazier, is nearing the end of her days in some splendour in her Centennial Park, Sydney, mansion, and her two children have been summoned to her bedside. Her son Basil, once a leading actor on the London stage whose career is now in decline and her daughter Dorothy, the ex-wife of a minor French aristocrat, are motivated more by their possible inheritance than affection for the old lady. In fact Elizabeth inspires more affection in her nurses, solicitor and housekeeper than she does in her children. Dorothy in particular has cause to hate her mother, yet it is she who gets closer to her as the film progresses.

    Schepisi manages to blend in the dark humour of the situation with the downbeat storyline. The cinemaphotograhy is gorgeous and the cutting, often without the usual establishment shots, wonderfully done, given the extensive use made of flashbacks – you instantly realise where the characters are. The book's interior monologues often appear as a single image in a single screen. The casting is such as Geoffrey Rush mentioned at the preview that he could not refuse – the very best of the Australian acting profession, though the pivotal role of Elizabeth Hunter is played with great panache by Charlotte Rampling. Rush plays Basil as a man who takes himself seriously, but can't persuade anyone else to. Judy Davis simmers as the disillusioned Dorothy , and John Gaden as Wyburd the family solicitor with a skeleton or to in his own cupboard is pitch perfect. Flora the day nurse, played by Schepsi's daughter Alexandra, is vividly realised, and there are good performances in minor roles also, including Helen Morse, unrecognisable, as Lotte the tragic housekeeper, and Colin Friels as a Labor politician on the make rather reminiscent of one Robert James Lee Hawke. The only odd casting decision is casting Melbourne locations as Sydney. Mrs Hunter's mansion is definitely not in Sydney and only a couple of brief scenes are shot in Centennial Park.

    It has been opined that "The Eye of the Storm" is Patrick White in drag, and it is true that there are some obvious personal aspects to the story - there is a lot of White's mother in Mrs Hunter. Set as it is in the early 1970s in the declining old money grazier milieu, this film could be written off as a period piece. Yet Schepisi has managed to capture both the theme and atmosphere of the novel. The difficulties of dying have rarely been so well depicted on film. This may not be a box office smash, but it will appeal to anyone who likes a solid piece of film-making.
    billybob49

    As dull as a hot afternoon in a 1960's English Class

    I can't see anyone under 50 even being remotely interested in this "Patrick White In Drag" type film (to quote another IMDb user). The 2 hours reminded me of those hours spent in non air- conditioned portable classrooms (for me, in the late 60's) wading through arcane English literature classes wherein Patrick White was regarded as "worthy"...or "significant".

    "Storm" has all the features we have come to expect from "quality" Australian film-making - a great cast, polished direction, impeccable production values etc etc ... but it's as dull and disconnected as the world White writes about. Who really gives a stuff about an imploding grazing family presided over by a a dying monster ... nominally set in the 1970s, but really (as in most of White's writing) set in the 1930s?

    On a $15m budget ... it probably needs a world wide gross of $100m to break even. Ye Gods - who green-lit this? How much Government funding went into it? (Its $1.6m domestic gross should just about pay for the Prints and Advertising" budget & little more).

    We have a bustling new generation - make that two generations - of film-makers pushing the envelope and making "Animal Kingdom", "Daybreakers", "Red Dog" etc who seem to be at least aware of their audience and their responsibility for getting a return for their investors. Film-making is an expensive business ... and "Storm" is just a sad old melodrama, outdated, over-priced and isolated from the real world, doomed to fail financially. I can understand why audiences congratulate themselves for having sat through it ("splendid and intelligent" - another IMDb post), but it's just an Anglo middle class statement from people who are longing for the days of "Careful He Might Hear You" or "The Devil's Playground".

    At least the English Class in those old portables only lasted 50 minutes...
    drednm

    Lush and Beautiful Film

    THE EYE OF THE STORM is the story of a dying matriarch and her estranged adult children, both of whom have been big disappointments to her. The "kiddies," as she calls them, come home to Sydney on word that their mother is dying. But the bittersweet reunion only stirs up old resentments and disappointments on all sides. Flashbacks fill in the story of the mother as she sinks into dementia.

    Superb acting by Charlotte Rampling as the unchanging mother who lavishes her attention (and gifts) on her nurses and housekeeper while dismissing her own children as greedy moochers. Judy Davis plays the uptight Dorothy, a divorced woman who married a prince but retained only the title after her marriage crumbled. Geoffrey Rush plays Basil, the unsuccessful actor whose time for stardom has passed. They both wrangle with the unflinching mother and her lawyer and battle the house staff who treat them as enemies.

    It's a battle of wills (pun intended) as the children fight the mother, who at the last moment tries to change her will to disinherit her own children after she learns of their plan to put her in a home.

    The three stars are nothing short of superb. Helen Morse plays Lotte the housekeeper, who entertains the old woman with bits from her old German cabaret act. Alexandra Schepisi plays the nurse with designs on Basil. John Gaden plays the lawyer. Colin Friels plays the sleazy politician.

    The location cinematography is gorgeous. Directed by Fred Schepisi, based on a novel by Patrick White.

    A long and engrossing film, well worth finding and savoring.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In real life Charlotte Rampling is only five years older than her screen son Geoffrey Rush and only nine years older than her daughter Judy Davis.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Basil Hunter: [voice-over] If it were writ upon a page, it could revolve around this day, the day my mother came to believe that being of a certain class entitles you die whenever you damn well please. Don't we wish...

    • Connections
      Featured in Q+A with Geoffrey Rush and Fred Schepisi (2012)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 18, 2013 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Australia
    • Official sites
      • Fred Schepisi Official Site
      • Official Facebook
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • German
    • Also known as
      • The Eye of the Storm
    • Filming locations
      • Botanical Gardens, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
    • Production company
      • Paper Bark Films Pty. Ltd.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • A$15,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $83,566
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $25,785
      • Sep 9, 2012
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,104,689
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 54 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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