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Saint Laurent

  • 2014
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
6.8K
YOUR RATING
Saint Laurent (2014)
1967-1976: As one of historyÂ’s greatest fashion designers entered a decade of freedom, neither came out of it in one piece.
Play trailer1:44
9 Videos
99+ Photos
BiographyDramaRomance

Yves Saint Laurent's life from 1967 to 1976, during which time the famed fashion designer was at the peak of his career.Yves Saint Laurent's life from 1967 to 1976, during which time the famed fashion designer was at the peak of his career.Yves Saint Laurent's life from 1967 to 1976, during which time the famed fashion designer was at the peak of his career.

  • Director
    • Bertrand Bonello
  • Writers
    • Bertrand Bonello
    • Thomas Bidegain
  • Stars
    • Gaspard Ulliel
    • Jérémie Renier
    • Louis Garrel
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    6.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bertrand Bonello
    • Writers
      • Bertrand Bonello
      • Thomas Bidegain
    • Stars
      • Gaspard Ulliel
      • Jérémie Renier
      • Louis Garrel
    • 14User reviews
    • 90Critic reviews
    • 52Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 9 wins & 30 nominations total

    Videos9

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:44
    Official Trailer
    Lou Lou
    Clip 1:02
    Lou Lou
    Lou Lou
    Clip 1:02
    Lou Lou
    Fashion Show
    Clip 1:27
    Fashion Show
    Wealth Beauty Youth
    Clip 0:34
    Wealth Beauty Youth
    How Do You Feel
    Clip 0:50
    How Do You Feel
    Saint Laurent: Fashion Show (US)
    Clip 1:27
    Saint Laurent: Fashion Show (US)

    Photos243

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    + 239
    View Poster

    Top cast87

    Edit
    Gaspard Ulliel
    Gaspard Ulliel
    • Yves Saint Laurent
    Jérémie Renier
    Jérémie Renier
    • Pierre Bergé
    Louis Garrel
    Louis Garrel
    • Jacques de Bascher
    Léa Seydoux
    Léa Seydoux
    • Loulou de la Falaise
    Aymeline Valade
    Aymeline Valade
    • Betty Catroux
    Amira Casar
    Amira Casar
    • Anne-Marie Munoz
    Micha Lescot
    Micha Lescot
    • Monsieur Jean-Pierre
    Helmut Berger
    Helmut Berger
    • Yves Saint Laurent âgé
    Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
    Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
    • Mme Duzer - une cliente
    • (as Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi)
    Valérie Donzelli
    Valérie Donzelli
    • Tante Renée
    Jasmine Trinca
    Jasmine Trinca
    • Talitha Getty
    Dominique Sanda
    Dominique Sanda
    • Lucienne Saint Laurent
    Vittoria Scognamiglio
    • Directrice de l'atelier
    Brady Corbet
    Brady Corbet
    • David - hommes d'affaires Squibb
    Anaïs Couette
    • L'interprète
    Stuart Seide
    • Richard - homme d'affaires américain
    Patrick Sobelman
    Patrick Sobelman
    • Homme d'affaires
    Laurent Larivière
    • Director
      • Bertrand Bonello
    • Writers
      • Bertrand Bonello
      • Thomas Bidegain
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    6.16.7K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    3Monsieur_Valmont

    Yawn

    This was one of the most boring films I've ever seen, and that's coming from someone who is interested in haute couture and Yves Saint Laurent. Slow paced would be an understatement: it moved at snail's pace and created the impression that Yves led one of the dullest lives in the history of man.

    Most reviewers rate this biopic as being superior to the other one released in the same year, titled Yves Saint Laurent (which was endorsed by Pierre Berge with access to the YSL archives). However, while I wasn't enamoured of this latter version (it too was on the boring side), the characters were more fleshed out and believable, and more of the important people in YSL's life were included in that picture than this one.

    The three stars I gave this movie were all for Helmut Berger as the ageing Yves Saint Laurent. Having seen footage of YSL in the later stages of his life, Helmut's portrayal was eerily accurate.
    2cekadah

    Lavishly monotonous

    If you want to drown in a sea of poseurs and take two and one half hours to do it, then this flick is just your perfect rusty old skiff.

    Honestly two and one half hours of poseurs, poseurs, poseurs, poseurs. Poseurs smoking, smoking, smoking! Poseurs drinking, drinking, drinking. Poseurs on drugs, dope, drugs, dope, etc. Poseurs in elegant surroundings, fancy over decorated rooms. Poseurs in clothes that look like they were heisted from a mob bosses closet.

    Poseurs whispering, whispering, whispering! There is dialog in this flick but the entire cast seemed reluctant to actually speak it in a normal vocal tone. More poseurs, male, female. Party poseurs! Parties in very artsy settings. More lavish rooms for this cast of poseurs to be photographed in. And somewhere squeezed into this sea of monotonous poseurs is a story, an actual plot line. But you will drown long before you become aware of it!
    5melissamarshall-38133

    An artsy mess

    YSL was an artsy mess, so I suppose it's fitting that this film is as well. It looks gorgeous and has a great time rubbernecking Yves's hedonistic ways, but it's also pretty mean-spirited. It doesn't attempt to understand Yves or what drove him or his creative process. He's just a rich, spoiled jerk in this film.

    Also, I enjoy a good nonlinear art film, but they are hard to pull off. This film is very hard to follow if you don't already know YSL's biography and work, and there are many long, pointless scenes that are supposed to be symbolic but don't really add up to much. It does have some fantastic performances and great set pieces, and if you like reveling in 1970s hedonism, you'll enjoy it on that level.

    Sometimes formulas and conventions are a good thing. The rival film to this one Yves St. Laurent may be far more conventional, but it is at least coherent and has genuine empathy for Yves and Pierre. Plus, it features the actual clothes Yves's designed.

    If you're a student of fashion, it's fun to compare the two films, but I think the more conventional one wins the day simply for being a more pleasant experience to watch.
    7lasttimeisaw

    Yves Saint Laurent Vs. Saint Laurent

    It is rather unusual that two French biographic films about the prêt-à-porter fashion icon Yves Saint Laurent (1936-2008) both came out in the same calendar year, YVES SAINT LAURENT opened in January 2014, directed by actor-turns-director Jalil Lespert, stars a rather unknown Pierre Niney as our protagonist and Guillaume Gallienne (the triple threat of 2014 CÉSAR AWARDS winner ME, MYSELF AND MUM 2013, 7/10) as his business partner and life companion Pierre Bergé. While Bertrand Bonello's more ambitious and high-profile SAINT LAURENT debuted in Cannes last year, with Gaspard Ulliel and Jérémie Renier take the central roles as Yves and Pierre.

    They are on a collision course in this year's CÉSAR AWARDS, SL leads with 10 nominations including BEST PICTURE and BEST DIRECTOR, and YSL has 7 nominations all in acting and technique branches, eventually SL ends up with a sole win for BEST COSTUME DESIGN and Niney trounces Ulliel for the much coveted BEST LEADING ACTOR honor (good-looking is also a stumbling block in winning recognitions from your peers, and it is a double-standard between male and female). The latter must have a strong heart to accept defeat to an peer actor who plays the same character in another movie, one sure thing is that he doesn't invest less for the role than Niney, and in my book, Ulliel overshadows Niney in emulating Yves' unique utterance and detailed mannerism, this could really hurt one's confidence and ego in this throat-cutting showbiz.

    The time-lines are overlapping, YSL is a less flamboyant and a more narrative-centered piece starts from the beginning of Yves' career, whereas SL mainly focuses on a decade from 1967 to 1976, the acme of his career, although it runs a 150-minutes compared with the former's moderate 106 minutes, with whimsical jumps of his childhood and senile stage (played by Helmut Berger).

    Basically YSL is presented as a recollection from Mr. Berge's perspective, so the large chunk of Yves' activities are under the stern observation of Pierre, who is a loyal watchdog of Yves' company and his private life. Niney embodies Yves with a disarming timidity, his disproportionally big nose against his sylphlike physique gives an impression of self- consciousness and he is wanting the confidence with which Saint Laurent should naturalistic-ally equip being a peacocking narcissist. Charlotte Le Bon plays Victoria Doutreleau, Yves' muse in his early career, and their following falling-out is a fascinating scoop which fails to be capitalized on (this part is entirely omitted in SL due to the time frame), so is the much hyped love affair between Yves and Jacques de Bascher (Lafitte), which is being treated like a cliché affair with broad brush. For the worse, Gallienne is another case of miscast, his superlative comedic bent has no room to exhibit, yet the film spends too much time on him - a more rigid and less interesting character loitering as an omnipresent voyeur spying on Yves, to an effect of slight annoyance, he doesn't possess an eye-grabbing charm to be a supporting scene-stealer, this is a compromise when you let the still-alive Pierre Bergé champion your film, he wants more spotlight and in reality, rarely one can do that from Yves Saint Laurent.

    Thus to say SL has more liberty in his character building, Yves is the one-and-the-only protagonist, everyone around him are bells-and-whistles, Renier's Bergé is barely given any chewy scenes to perform and as stylish as Seydoux's Loulou de la Falaise and Valade's Betty Catroux (whose only chance to stun the audience is in her introduction oner, the killing charm of a supermodel), Bonello scarcely offers them lines to utter, they are perfect ornaments around Yves, and reflects his aesthetics and discernment. More as a recount of Yves' emotional flow than an orthodox chronicle, Bonello dares to throw the narrative into disarray with symbolic projections (buddha, snakes and mirrors) and overlong takes to set the atmosphere arousing, risks losing the correlations among characters in order to concoct a sumptuous feast of haute couture in its most paradigm-shifting moments (frankly speaking YSL is too shabby and drab by comparison) and a dysfunctional psyche of a trend-setter who owns-it-all and still cannot find satisfaction inside albeit all the extravagance he is endowed and channels. It is a flawed film no doubt, the last half-hour is too erratic to concentrate, but one should appreciate the intention at the first place, plus Gaspard Ulliel brings about his boldest performance ever, not to mention the nudity out of the closet bravura, if only the story would be edited and collaged in a more sequential manner, he excellent radiates with vulnerability, condescendence, bewilderment, allurement and pride which all can be conducted to a person at the position where Yves Saint Laurent is.

    Louis Garrel's Jacques is permitted with more exploration into his perverse sexual activity and Garrel maximally magnifies his enigmatic attraction with nonchalant superciliousness, explains well why he can be the inamorato of both Yves and Karl Lagerfeld, a spoiled product of that period. Also in SL, Bonello's classic music background has been put into good use to also gratify viewer's pretentious ears. Anyhow, the two films have their own merits and shortcomings, for an artistic cinephile, the appeal of SAINT LAURENT is a too big enticement, and if you prefer a healing love story between two men, which actually happened in real life, YVES SAINT LAURENT may be more promising for that!
    Gordon-11

    Poor story telling

    This film tells the story of the lost and hedonistic lifestyle of the young fashion genius Yves Saint Laurent, and his life in the later years.

    The film starts off interesting, as it starts the story from Yves already having success in the fashion world. While there's some mention of his work, the emphasis of the plot is on Yves' partying, drugs and alcohol. The very handsome actor playing Saint Laurent helps to keep viewers interested, but unfortunately the interest is not sustained because I find the last hour of the film disjointed, unfocused and frankly aimless. The film cuts from his youth to his older days continuously for no good reason, and scenes are not connected to tell a cohesive story. Subplots are poorly explained and not followed through. For example, we don't know what the outcome is after the long first business meeting with the Americans. Then, the brief coverage of "opium" isn't followed up. What Pierre says to Jacques is an annoying mystery as well. Then the film cuts from the fashion show to various stages of his life in a random manner, that I became completely confused. I was waiting for the film to end, but it just wouldn't end. I was disappointed by this film.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This was one of two films about Yves Saint-Laurent to be released in 2014 and to be nominated for Best Actor award at the 2015 Césars. The other was Yves Saint Laurent (2014), whose star Pierre Niney ended up winning the award.
    • Goofs
      The translator in the boardroom scene mistranslated the sales numbers: in French she's told the sales increased from 1.3m up to 2.6m, but she translates it to English as 1.6m up to 2.3m.
    • Quotes

      Loulou de la Falaise: This is style. Fashion passes like a train.

    • Crazy credits
      The actors are listed without the names of the characters they're playing.
    • Connections
      Featured in Vecherniy Urgant: Gaspard Ulliel (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      Ave Maria
      Composed by Franz Schubert

      Performed by Ingrid Kertesi and Camerata Budapest

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Saint Laurent?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 24, 2014 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Belgium
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook [France]
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Languages
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Святий Лоран. Страсті великого кутюр'є
    • Filming locations
      • InterContinental Hotel, Paris, France
    • Production companies
      • Mandarin Films
      • EuropaCorp
      • Orange Studio
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $429,477
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $36,000
      • May 10, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,202,241
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 30m(150 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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