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Alceste à bicyclette

  • 2013
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
Fabrice Luchini and Lambert Wilson in Alceste à bicyclette (2013)
Trailer for Cycling with Moliere
Play trailer1:53
2 Videos
11 Photos
ComedyDrama

Two actors. One play. Can the differences between the two egocentric men be put aside for the sake of friendship and theatre?Two actors. One play. Can the differences between the two egocentric men be put aside for the sake of friendship and theatre?Two actors. One play. Can the differences between the two egocentric men be put aside for the sake of friendship and theatre?

  • Director
    • Philippe Le Guay
  • Writers
    • Fabrice Luchini
    • Philippe Le Guay
    • Emmanuel Carrère
  • Stars
    • Fabrice Luchini
    • Lambert Wilson
    • Maya Sansa
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    3.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Philippe Le Guay
    • Writers
      • Fabrice Luchini
      • Philippe Le Guay
      • Emmanuel Carrère
    • Stars
      • Fabrice Luchini
      • Lambert Wilson
      • Maya Sansa
    • 24User reviews
    • 66Critic reviews
    • 61Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos2

    Cycling with Moliere
    Trailer 1:53
    Cycling with Moliere
    Bicycling with Moliere
    Trailer 1:51
    Bicycling with Moliere
    Bicycling with Moliere
    Trailer 1:51
    Bicycling with Moliere

    Photos10

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    View Poster
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    + 5
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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Fabrice Luchini
    Fabrice Luchini
    • Serge Tanneur
    Lambert Wilson
    Lambert Wilson
    • Gauthier Valence
    Maya Sansa
    Maya Sansa
    • Francesca
    Camille Japy
    Camille Japy
    • Christine
    Ged Marlon
    Ged Marlon
    • Christophe Meynard - l'agent immobilier
    Stéphan Wojtowicz
    Stéphan Wojtowicz
    • Le chauffeur de taxi
    Annie Mercier
    • Tamara - l'agent artistique
    Christine Murillo
    • Madame Françon
    Josiane Stoléru
    • Raphaëlle La Puisaye
    Laurie Bordesoules
    Laurie Bordesoules
    • Zoé
    Édith Le Merdy
    Édith Le Merdy
    • Madame Bichet - l'hôtelière
    Patrick Bonnel
    • Roussel
    Philippe du Janerand
    Philippe du Janerand
    • Le directeur du théâtre
    Jean-Charles Delaume
    • Philinte sur scène
    Jean-Marc Rousseau
    • Le plombier
    Joël Pyrene
    • Le chirurgien dans la série télé
    • (as Joël Pyrène)
    Catherine Rouzeau
    • L'infirmière dans la série télé
    Freddy Nail
    • Le camionneur
    • Director
      • Philippe Le Guay
    • Writers
      • Fabrice Luchini
      • Philippe Le Guay
      • Emmanuel Carrère
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    6.63.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8nicholasruddick

    You Don't Have to Know Molière to Enjoy This Film

    This is an intelligent film, a rather sour, grown-up comedy that captures something of the misanthropic theme of the Molière play that has a large role in it. But you really don't need to be familiar with "The Misanthrope" (1666) to enjoy this film. It does help, however, if you love good acting, are a bit of a francophile, and are prone to occasional bouts of contempt for your fellow human beings.

    Once you begin to note the key differences in the temperaments of these two old friends, the scope of the film expands. It's about the continued relevance of classic drama thanks to unchanging human nature. It's about the art of acting itself, the struggle to nail one's character through a peculiar mixture of repetition and imagination. It's about the problem of casting roles, about why actors, however experienced and ambitious they might be, just cannot play certain parts credibly. It's about how popular entertainers are rewarded handsomely for allowing their audience to avoid confronting the flaws in human nature. And it's about the line between success and failure in life and in love, and how, Hollywood notwithstanding, having real talent and genuine feeling is no guarantee of a happy outcome.

    The setting on the windswept Atlantic island (Ile de Ré) is used to great effect as a way of concentrating the concealed hostility between the two main characters. And there is a lovely homage to a scene in François Truffaut's most famous film that should please film buffs. This is a literate film and one which Truffaut himself would surely have admired.
    6jakob13

    Misanthrope in spite of himself

    Philippe Le Guay has cut his film to fit the talent of Fabrice Luchini in his 2014 Bicycling with Moliere. Luchini is hardly a household name in the US, but he is a welcome, much appreciated and feted actor in Europe from the Atlantic to the Urals. His distinctive voice is not unknown in Africa, Latin America and Asia. To give the American English speakers an idea of his talent, Luchini measures, as a classical and cinema actor, up to John Gielgud. Serge Tanneur (Luchini), after a long career in theatre, withdraws to splendid solitude in an island off the French coast. Gauthier Valence (Lambert Wilson) comes to the island to woo his friend Serge back to the stage in Moliére's Le Misanthrope, a play that Tanneur has often played during his 30-year career.

    Valence suggests that Tanneur play as against type the role of Philint, and he takes the plum role of Alceste, the Misanthrope.

    Serge at first rebuffs his friends, but Valance, a star in a successful soap opera, offers a tempting off of alternating roles, a novel idea that would guarantee the play's box-office success.

    And so the stage is set as the two friends personify the modern Alceste (Luchini) and Philint (Wilson) in their personal relationship.

    And so, Serge puts Valance through his paces whilst bicycling through the high- and byways of the island.

    Like Philint, Valence cares for Alceste, his acerbic friend Tanneur. As the film rolls on, it is obvious to everyone but Valence, he is not up to the central role of Le Misanthrope. Still Serge walks him through his paces, correcting his pronunciation to fit the Alexandrine metre the play is written, as well as its complexities of the play. And yet, Valence muddles the script.

    In a closing scene, we see Luchini wearing the 16-century dress of Alceste peddling towards a cocktail party to confront Philinth whom he feels has betrayed him.

    And he parts company with Valance by refusing to play no role but that of Alceste., thereby underscoring he is a modern Alceste who not only in a vein of irony and bitter-comic relief pointing out flaws in the human character, but also shuts out any reconciliation, not a resolution to the weaknesses of man.

    As the camera zooms in on Luchini sitting alone of a beach, he recites with a touch of pathos,

    "My hate is general, I detest all men; Some because they are wicked and do evil, Others because they tolerate the wicked, Refusing them the active vigorous scorn Which vice should stimulate in virtuous minds."
    7Serenus_Zeitblom

    French movie - it assumes that you know Molière

    Hence, the original title is 'Alceste on the bike', everyone with some French education is supposed to have seen and/or read the Misanthrope and get the allusion. Btw. Watching it in the original is fine, with the genuine voices of two actors brillant enough to play actors.

    Once more, get a copy of Molière's Misanthrope first, or you will not get the finework of the script, intertwining modern times with the theatre piece played. The roles of the misanthropic, disdainfully bitter Alceste and his friend Philinte oscillate, do they? A successful TV actor meets his better (?), I won't say more but: read Molière first, not afterwards.

    Is it better to be right or happy or within the in-group or ... find your own answer.
    8dimitris-maglaras

    A Gem: Tribute to Molière's Misanthrope, Great Acting Performances, Comedy Of Manners Morphing Into Psychological Drama.

    A once great actor, Serge Tanneur (Fabrice Luchini), has retired from the limelight, in the process becoming a misanthrope not unlike Molière's famous character. For the past three years he has lived in solitude on the Île de Ré, spending his time cycling through the windswept landscape. He rejects society so much that he refuses to connect his septic tank to the main sewage pipe network. As a result, his house stinks. (Later, after the movie has been watched, this is revealed to have been a harbinger of the tragedy to come, but at this point of the movie it is comedic.) Fellow actor Gauthier Valence (Lambert Wilson), whose career is flying high, is planning a production of Molière's play Le Misanthrope and wants to offer Serge, first the second role, then, after Serge's insistence that he would only play the title role, the title role in rotation.

    Instead of committing, Serge suggests they rehearse together for the week, and Gauthier changes his plans and withdraws from his appointments and obligations for the better part of the week. Almost secluded, the two rehearse the play rotating the title role among them. It is never clear whether Serge will accept, or whether he has really become a misanthrope who relishes at exposing other peoples' real or just made up weaknesses. The scenes where they rehearse together are magnificent ---high quality theater-in-a-movie---, the scenery is superb. The viewer is captivated, and begins to relax enjoying the star actors' theatrical performances. The film is replete with satire to the emptiness of modernity, for example when the young beautiful girl who is currently a rising porn actress (with her family's and boyfriend's approval) is revealed to have real Molière actress potential. For the greater part, it looks and feels like a cultivated bitter-sweet comedy of manners, not unlike Molière's original. But gradually then suddenly, the comedy of manners morphs into a full-blown psychological drama, as Serge is revealed to be less of Molière's charming character and more of a modern-day psychotic intent on destructing the conventions and indeed the basic human empathy that together hold the social fabric. Gauthier is also revealed to have faults, as do all of us (quote Molière), but, unlike Serge and like Molière's character, he gradually acknowledges them (if he had not already done from the beginning), and this makes him human and in the end likable. It helps that the actor's real person naturally emits a subtle melancholic charm.

    Alceste à bicyclette pays tribute to France's greatest playwright. It pays tribute to the beauty of 17th century French language (the fact that at this writing there are no French subtitles available is a tribute to the inability of France's cultural bureaucracy to direct a trifle of funds where they might have the greatest effect). And it is a great movie in its own right. It may be acknowledged to have been a piece célèbre of a new cinematic genre, namely a comedy of manners gradually morphing into a psychological drama. Superb scenario. Magnificent performances by Fabrice Luchini and Lambert Wilson: this is a movie based not on special effects but on theatrical acting (content and notion being conveyed by diction) and cinematic acting (content and notion being conveyed by subtle facial expressions). One gets a feeling why the Comédie Française has maintained such a hold on European high culture for so long a time. Blessed be France's cinematic industry for churning out gems like that year after year.
    7don2507

    A Charming, Literate French Film with "The Misanthrope" as the Backdrop

    A popular TV actor with presumed artistic aspirations, the character of Gauthier Valence, travels to an island off the west coast of France to solicit a former acting companion, the reclusive, ill-tempered character of Serge Tanneur, to join him in a stage production of Moliere's The Misanthrope. Tanneur is retired, and says he hates acting and actors, but eventually agrees to at least rehearse with Valence for four days. Based on a daily coin flip, they will alternate the roles of Alceste (the "Misanthrope" who detests the hypocrisies of social life and rebukes men's dishonesty toward each other) and Philinte (who argues for a necessary role in social life of courtesies and half-truths). One might simplify things by labeling Alceste as the idealist and Philinte as the realist. At the end of the brief rehearsals Tanneur will decide whether he will participate in the production, and if he does the two actors have agreed (are they companions? rivals?) to rotate the parts on a daily basis.

    To me, the fascinating part of this film was how the two characters submerged / transformed their interaction and emerging rivalry into the two characters of Moliere's play and the echoed interaction of the play's characters onto their own relationship. As they rehearsed, it seemed like Moliere's lines were reflecting aspects of their own interrelationship, which to me was clever screen writing. We also see during these stimulating two-person readings, a subtle evolution of their acting relationship from one of apparent agreement and collaboration to one of ego tests and indirect humiliations. Does the play come off? I believe you can enjoy this film without being familiar with The Misanthrope. I hadn't seen it performed in 30 years, and yet I could appreciate the juxtaposition of Moliere's play and the interaction of these two actors.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      French visa # 131952 delivered on 12-12-2012.
    • Soundtracks
      Il Mondo
      Lyrics by Gianni Meccia, Jimmy Fontana and Italo Greco

      Music by Carlos Pes

      RCA Italiana (1965)

      Performed by Jimmy Fontana

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 16, 2013 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Languages
      • French
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Bicycling with Molière
    • Filming locations
      • Ars-en-Ré, Ile de Ré, Charente-Maritime, France
    • Production companies
      • Les Films des Tournelles
      • Pathé
      • Appaloosa Développement
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $59,874
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $3,896
      • Apr 27, 2014
    • Gross worldwide
      • $11,123,929
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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