Amélie
Amélie is a 2001 French romantic comedy film directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet. Written by Jeunet with Guillaume Laurant, the film is a whimsical depiction of contemporary Parisian life, set in Montmartre. It tells the story of a shy waitress, played by Audrey Tautou, who decides to change the lives of those around her for the better while struggling with her own isolation. The film was a co-production between companies in France and Germany. Taking in over $33 million in a limited theatrical release, it is to date the highest-grossing French-language film released in the United States, and one of the biggest international successes for a French movie.
The film received critical acclaim and was a major box office success. Amélie won Best Film at the European Film Awards; it also won four César Awards in 2002, two BAFTA Awards, and was nominated for five Academy Awards.
Plot
Amélie Poulain is born in June 1974 and brought up by eccentric parents who – incorrectly believing that she has a heart defect – decide to home-school her. To cope with her loneliness, Amélie develops an active imagination and a mischievous personality. When Amélie is six, her mother, Amandine, is killed when a suicidal Canadian tourist jumps from the roof of Notre-Dame de Paris and lands on her. As a result, her father Raphaël withdraws more and more from society. Amélie leaves home at the age of 18 and becomes a waitress at the Café des 2 Moulins in Montmartre, which is staffed and frequented by a collection of eccentrics. She is single and lets her imagination roam freely, finding contentment in simple pleasures like dipping her hand into grain sacks and cracking crème brûlée with a spoon.On 31 August 1997, startled by the news of the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, Amélie drops a plastic perfume-stopper, which dislodges a wall tile and accidentally reveals an old metal box of childhood memorabilia hidden by a boy who lived in her apartment decades earlier. Amélie resolves to track down the boy and return the box to him. She promises herself that if it makes him happy, she will devote her life to bringing happiness to others.
After asking the apartment's concierge and several old tenants about the boy's identity, Amélie meets her reclusive neighbour, Raymond Dufayel, an artist with brittle bone disease who repaints Renoir's Luncheon of the Boating Party every year. He recalls the boy's name as "Bretodeau". Amélie quickly finds the man, Dominique Bretodeau, and surreptitiously gives him the box. Moved to tears by the discovery and the memories it holds, Bretodeau resolves to reconcile with his estranged daughter and the grandson he has never met. Amélie happily embarks on her new mission.
Amélie secretly executes complex schemes that affect the lives of those around her. She escorts a blind man to the Métro station, giving him a rich description of the street scenes he passes. She persuades her father to follow his dream of touring the world by stealing his garden gnome and having a flight attendant friend airmail pictures of it posing with landmarks from all over the world. She starts a romance between her hypochondriacal co-worker Georgette and Joseph, one of the customers in the bar. She convinces Madeleine Wallace, the concierge of her block of flats, that the husband who abandoned her had sent her a final conciliatory love letter just before his accidental death years before. She gaslights Collignon, the nasty greengrocer. Mentally exhausted, Collignon no longer abuses his meek but good-natured assistant Lucien. A delighted Lucien takes charge at the grocery stand.
Mr. Dufayel, having observed Amélie, begins a conversation with her about his painting. Although he has copied the same painting 20 times, he has never quite captured the look of the girl drinking a glass of water. They discuss the meaning of this character, and over several conversations, Amélie begins projecting her loneliness onto the image. Dufayel recognizes this and uses the girl in the painting to push Amélie to examine her attraction to a quirky young man, Nino Quincampoix, who collects the discarded photographs of strangers from passport photo booths. When Amélie bumps into Nino a second time, she realizes she is falling in love with him. He accidentally drops a photo album in the street. Amélie retrieves it.
Amélie plays a cat-and-mouse game with Nino around Paris before returning his treasured album anonymously. After arranging a meeting at the 2 Moulins, Amélie panics and tries to deny her identity. Her co-worker, Gina, concerned for Amélie's well-being, screens Nino for her; Joseph's comment about this misleads Amélie to believe she has lost Nino to Gina. It takes Dufayel's insight to give her the courage to pursue Nino, resulting in a romantic night together and the beginning of a relationship. Amélie finally finds happiness for herself.
Cast
- Audrey Tautou as Amélie Poulain
- * Flora Guiet as young Amélie
- Mathieu Kassovitz as Nino Quincampoix
- * Amaury Babault as young Nino
- Rufus as Raphaël Poulain, Amélie's father
- Serge Merlin as Raymond Dufayel, "The Glass Man"
- Lorella Cravotta as Amandine Poulain, Amélie's mother
- Clotilde Mollet as Gina, a fellow waitress
- Claire Maurier as Suzanne, the owner of Café des Deux Moulins
- Isabelle Nanty as Georgette, the resident hypochondriac
- Dominique Pinon as Joseph
- Artus de Penguern as Hipolito, the writer
- Yolande Moreau as Madeleine Wallace
- Urbain Cancelier as Collignon, the grocer
- Jamel Debbouze as Lucien, the grocer's assistant
- Maurice Bénichou as Dominique Bretodeau
- * Kevin Fernandes as young Dominique
- Michel Robin as Mr. Collignon
- Andrée Damant as Mrs. Collignon
- Claude Perron as Eva, Nino's colleague
- Armelle as Philomène, air hostess
- Ticky Holgado as Man in a photo
- Fabienne Chaudat as The woman in a coma
Production
The movie was filmed mainly in Paris. The Café des 2 Moulins where Amélie works is a real place.
The filmmakers made use of computer-generated imagery, and a digital intermediate. The studio scenes were filmed in the Coloneum Studio in Cologne. The film shares many of the themes in its plot with the second half of the 1994 film Chungking Express.
Release
The film was released in France, Belgium, and French-speaking western Switzerland in April 2001, with subsequent screenings at various film festivals followed by releases around the world. It received limited releases in North America, the United Kingdom, and Australasia later in 2001.Cannes Film Festival selector Gilles Jacob described Amélie as "uninteresting", and therefore it was not screened at the festival, although the version he viewed was an early cut without music. The absence of Amélie at the festival caused something of a controversy because of the warm welcome by the French media and audience in contrast with the reaction of the selector. David Martin-Jones, in an article in Senses of Cinema, stated that the film " its national identity on its sleeve" and that this attracted both audiences of mainstream movies and those of arthouse ones.
Reception
Critical response
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an 89% approval rating, based on 178 reviews, with an average rating of 8.1/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "The feel-good Amélie is a lively, fanciful charmer, showcasing Audrey Tautou as its delightful heroine". On Metacritic, the film has a score of 69 out of 100, based on 31 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".Alan Morrison from Empire Online gave Amélie five stars and called it "one of the year's best, with crossover potential along the lines of Cyrano De Bergerac and Il Postino. Given its quirky heart, it might well surpass them all". Blogger Sarmad Iqbal from International Policy Digest commented in his review that “What makes this film special is indeed the innocence of the leading protagonist intertwined with her frequent retreats from it.”
Paul Tatara of CNN praised Amélies playful nature. In his review, he wrote, "Its whimsical, free-ranging nature is often enchanting; the first hour, in particular, is brimming with amiable, sardonic laughs".
The film was attacked by critic Serge Kaganski of Les Inrockuptibles for an unrealistic and picturesque vision of a bygone French society with few ethnic minorities. Jeunet dismissed the criticism by pointing out that the photo collection contains pictures of people from numerous ethnic backgrounds, and that Jamel Debbouze, who plays Lucien, is of Moroccan descent.
Awards and nominations
Award | Category | Recipient | Result |
Academy Awards | Best Foreign Language Film | Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |
Academy Awards | Best Original Screenplay | Guillaume Laurant and Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |
Academy Awards | Best Cinematography | Bruno Delbonnel | |
Academy Awards | Best Art Direction | Aline Bonetto and Marie-Laure Valla | |
Academy Awards | Best Sound | Vincent Arnardi, Guillaume Leriche, Jean Umansky | |
British Academy Film Awards | Best Film | ||
British Academy Film Awards | Best Direction | Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |
British Academy Film Awards | Best Actress in a Leading Role | Audrey Tautou | |
British Academy Film Awards | Best Original Screenplay | Guillaume Laurant and Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |
British Academy Film Awards | Best Cinematography | Bruno Delbonnel | |
British Academy Film Awards | Best Production Design | Aline Bonetto | |
British Academy Film Awards | Best Editing | Hervé Schneid | |
British Academy Film Awards | Best Film Music | Yann Tiersen | |
British Academy Film Awards | Best Film Not in the English Language | ||
César Awards | Best Film | ||
César Awards | Best Director | Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |
César Awards | Best Actress | Audrey Tautou | |
César Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Jamel Debbouze | |
César Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Rufus | |
César Awards | Best Supporting Actress | Isabelle Nanty | |
César Awards | Best Writing | Guillaume Laurant and Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |
César Awards | Best Cinematography | Bruno Delbonnel | |
César Awards | Best Production Design | Aline Bonetto | |
César Awards | Best Costume Design | Madeline Fontaine | |
César Awards | Best Editing | Hervé Schneid | |
César Awards | Best Music | Yann Tiersen | |
European Film Awards | Best Film | Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |
European Film Awards | Best Director | Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |
European Film Awards | Best Actress | Audrey Tautou | |
European Film Awards | Best Cinematography | Bruno Delbonnel | |
French Syndicate of Cinema Critics | Best French Film | ||
Golden Globe Awards | Best Foreign Language Film | Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |
Karlovy Vary International Film Festival | Crystal Globe | Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |
Toronto International Film Festival | People's Choice Award |
The film was selected by The New York Times as one of "The Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made". The film placed No. 2 in Empire magazine's "The 100 Best Films of World Cinema". Paste magazine ranked it second on its list of the 50 Best Movies of the Decade. In August of that same year, BBC Magazine conducted a poll on the 21st century's 100 greatest films so far, with Amélie ranking at number 87.
Entertainment Weekly named the film poster one of the best on its list of the top 25 film posters in the past 25 years. It also named Amélie setting up a wild goose chase for her beloved Nino all through Paris as No. 9 on its list of top 25 Romantic Gestures. In 2010, an online public poll by the American Cinematographer – the house journal of the American Society of Cinematographers – named Amélie the best shot film of the decade.
Amelie is rated 37 among the 50 Greatest Romantic Comedies of All Time by RollingStone Magazine Amelie is included among the Seven Binge Worthy French Films to Get Through Self-Isolation by Sarmad Iqbal of International Policy Digest
Soundtrack
The soundtrack to Amélie was composed by Yann Tiersen.Musical adaptation
On 23 August 2013, composer Dan Messe, one of the founders and members of the band Hem, confirmed speculation that he would be writing the score for a musical adaptation of Amélie, collaborating with Craig Lucas and Nathan Tysen. Messe also confirmed he would be composing all original music for the show and not using the Yann Tiersen score. The musical adaptation premiered at the Berkeley Repertory Theater in August 2015. It opened on Broadway in March 2017 and closed in May 2017. The production started its pre-Broadway engagement at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles in December 2016, with Phillipa Soo in the title role.Jeunet distanced himself from the musical, saying he only sold the rights to raise funds for children's charity "".
Home media
The film has no overall worldwide distributor, but Blu-ray Discs have been released in Canada and Australia. The first release occurred in Canada in September 2008 by TVA Films. This version did not contain any English subtitles and received criticisms regarding picture quality. In November 2009, an Australian release occurred. This time the version contained English subtitles and features no region coding. Momentum Pictures released a Blu-ray in the UK on 17 October 2011. The film is also available in HD on iTunes and other digital download services.Legacy
For the 2007 television show Pushing Daisies, a "quirky fairy tale", American Broadcasting Company sought an Amélie feel, with the same chords of "whimsy and spirit and magic". Pushing Daisies creator Bryan Fuller said Amélie is his favorite film. "All the things I love are represented in that movie", he said. "It's a movie that will make me cry based on kindness as opposed to sadness". The New York Times review of Pushing Daisies reported "the Amélie influence on Pushing Daisies is everywhere".A species of frog was named Cochranella amelie. The scientist who named it said: "his new species of glass frog is for Amélie, protagonist of the extraordinary movie Le Fabuleux Destin d'Amélie Poulain; a film where little details play an important role in the achievement of joie de vivre; like the important role that glass frogs and all amphibians and reptiles play in the health of our planet". The species was described in the scientific journal Zootaxa in an article entitled "An enigmatic new species of Glassfrog from the Amazonian Andean slopes of Ecuador".