IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,2/10
2569
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Henri ist ein Schriftsteller mittleren Alters in der Krise. Gerade zu einem Zeitpunkt, als er sein Leben bewertet, schleicht sich ein riesiger grauer Hund, unhöflich und stinkend, in Henris ... Alles lesenHenri ist ein Schriftsteller mittleren Alters in der Krise. Gerade zu einem Zeitpunkt, als er sein Leben bewertet, schleicht sich ein riesiger grauer Hund, unhöflich und stinkend, in Henris Haus ein.Henri ist ein Schriftsteller mittleren Alters in der Krise. Gerade zu einem Zeitpunkt, als er sein Leben bewertet, schleicht sich ein riesiger grauer Hund, unhöflich und stinkend, in Henris Haus ein.
Eric Ruf
- Professeur Mazard
- (as Eric Ruf de la Comédie Française)
Lola Marois-Bigard
- Marie-Lise
- (as Lola Marois)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Excellent film. Completely different from what I expected. Maybe hit too close to home. I was thinking comedy. It had very funny moments, but the overall film, was real life. Family. Expectations. Disappointments. Love.
I enjoyed this movie, but I do think it is geared toward middle age or older adults. There are some light hearted moments and a few moments that made me laugh a little. The scenes with the dog were good. I wouldn't truly call it a comedy and the drama wasn't too heavy(it didn't make me cry, cringe or cheer). I can see how some viewers found it boring, but I could understand where all the characters were coming from, and I also enjoyed a lot of the dialogue which made me enjoy the movie.
If you like french movies, you will like this one.
It has a smart and funny dialog, mainly by the actor/director Yvan Attal.
His wife (in the movie and in real life), actress Charlotte Gainsbourg, is a bit overly dramatic at the beginning but plays well the rest of the movie.
The story in not plausible (a dog that settle at their home and likes to hump guys), but it did not bother me.
The story is not original - a writer that has a writer's block and writes about his current situation; still, it interesting, how each chapter is about one of their kids or other family issues the writer experiences.
The movie is a bit too long, feels a bit slow in the middle, but then, gets back on track.
Good acting; good cinematography; good direction = an enjoyable movie.
The first part deftly blends comedy with drama;director/actor Attal uses a classic comic situation for something it was not meant for: the (very big) dog settles down in a bourgeois house and the family cannot get rid of this burdensome animal ; but dad ,a writer who has been suffering from cramp for years , is fed up with his depressed wife (Charlotte Gainsbourg) and his restless offspring : three boys and a girl ;the dog becomes his true mate ,he calls him "Stupid" (in the title ,it's really a proper noun).There's a lot of humor ,as this dog has a tendency to sexually assault the male persons;although Attal uses and abuses the voice over to tell us how he feels nostagic for his days in Rome ,where he was able to let his inspiration flow, but it was before he was a family man,the movie survives the intellectual intentions .
With a few exceptions,the second part is preachy,edifying ,sophomoric and dull ,as tedious as Miss Gainsbourg's lecture on Musset' "Lorenzaccio" ; the story becomes predictable , implausible (the essays ), and " you -shall- be- a- man ,my son " in the grand tradition of Kipling; all the lines between the born again writer and his editor have been heard at least a hundred times or more by the average viewer: it's the last line , thanks one more time to this good old dog ,which saves it from the pure cliché .It's also the presence of the pet which saves the improbable scene between the professor and the writer .The story drags on and on , with a little help from the music ,a lovely variation on Lennon/McCartney's "and I love her"in the last sequences,nicely filmed .
Dedicated to director Claude Berri.
With a few exceptions,the second part is preachy,edifying ,sophomoric and dull ,as tedious as Miss Gainsbourg's lecture on Musset' "Lorenzaccio" ; the story becomes predictable , implausible (the essays ), and " you -shall- be- a- man ,my son " in the grand tradition of Kipling; all the lines between the born again writer and his editor have been heard at least a hundred times or more by the average viewer: it's the last line , thanks one more time to this good old dog ,which saves it from the pure cliché .It's also the presence of the pet which saves the improbable scene between the professor and the writer .The story drags on and on , with a little help from the music ,a lovely variation on Lennon/McCartney's "and I love her"in the last sequences,nicely filmed .
Dedicated to director Claude Berri.
Yvan Attal did a good job with this one, both as the director and as an actor. Charlotte Gainsbourg made me realize I'm getting old. Having known her since being the little daughter of Serge Gainsbourg to a mature good actress, many years passed by since then. Mon Chien Stupide (or My Dog Stupid for the English title) is a good dramady, easy to watch, and entertaining enough, certainly for this genre. Melancholy, difficult parenthood, existential life answers and questions, and a dog, those are the ingredients. The acting was good and that from the whole cast, even the big Mastiff. Good cinematography too, a movie with nothing really bad to write about. Don't expect anything fast paced though, it's mostly conversations between family members, the daily family arguments, but it's sometimes emotional and recognizable. Worth a watch.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe dog is a Neapolitan mastiff.
- VerbindungenFeatures Denen ist nichts heilig (1937)
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Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 9.800.000 € (geschätzt)
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 4.050.605 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 46 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.39 : 1
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