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Un aperçu de la vie du chanteur français Serge Gainsbourg, de son enfance à Paris occupée par les nazis dans les années 1940 à ses années d'écriture dans les années 1960 jusqu'à sa mort en 1... Tout lireUn aperçu de la vie du chanteur français Serge Gainsbourg, de son enfance à Paris occupée par les nazis dans les années 1940 à ses années d'écriture dans les années 1960 jusqu'à sa mort en 1991 à l'âge de 62 ans.Un aperçu de la vie du chanteur français Serge Gainsbourg, de son enfance à Paris occupée par les nazis dans les années 1940 à ses années d'écriture dans les années 1960 jusqu'à sa mort en 1991 à l'âge de 62 ans.
- Prix
- 7 victoires et 11 nominations au total
Dinara Drukarova
- Olga Ginsburg (la mère)
- (as Dinara Droukarova)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe project was originally envisioned with Serge Gainsbourg's real life daughter, actress Charlotte Gainsbourg to play him in keeping with the film's surreal and fairytale-esque tone. Six months into rehearsals and preparation Gainsbourg pulled out telling director Joann Sfar, it was proving too emotionally painful and he would have to make his "beautiful film" without her. Sfar had always approached the film with her in mind and was ready to abort the project when fate lead him to Eric Elmosnino.
- GaffesThe young Gainsbourg is shown drawing left-handed, but the adult Gainsbourg becomes right-handed.
- Citations
Serge Gainsbourg: [after a man tips him while he plays the piano] What are you fucking kidding me? I'm not a jukebox!
- Générique farfelu"Pour Lucy" i.e. this was Lucy Gordon 's last film.
- Autres versionsEngland is the first territory to release a new cut of the film, running 14 minutes shorter than the previous version and is Joann Sfar's preferred one. Changes include -
- Deletion of the scene where young Serge pleads in vain for his mother to buy him a gun to play with, even attempting to bribe her by saying he'll work harder on the piano. This precedes the scene where he steals the gun from the shop.
- Deletion of the scene where Serge and Boris Vian walk to his apartment and the two lie in the road in an effort to stop a cab. While they wait Serge reveals he has a double that follows him around to which Vian replies his is a werewolf. However two policemen soon cut the conversation short. (This precedes Serge arriving at Boris's apartment and explains a later scene where a drunken Serge lies in the road before having the police escort to his concert)
- Longer scene of the "Baby Pop" groupies, as Gainsbourg wakes up in bed with two naked women as his Mug joyously tosses bank statements at him revealing how rich he is from "Poupée de cire, poupée de son" alone! This is the original lead in to "Qui Est In Qui Est Out".
- The groupies and party to "Qui Est In Qui Est Out" is cut short, removing Serge narrating about "the mouth being the primary sexual organ". His narration reveals the girls in the room he has slept with and how he was with them. It reveals Gainsbourg's occasional cruel streak and precedes the angry neighbor banging on the door.
- After Gainsbourg recites La Marseillaise at the press conference, we then see young Serge repeating it and triumphantly raising his fist to the audience.
- Deletion of a short exchange in the nightclub when a reveller comments to Gainsbourg about him being parodied on a French TV show. The new version removes these lines either because the show is unknown outside of France or because it doesn't tie in as being the night Gainsbourg met his wife Bambou as that TV show wouldn't air until years later. Sfar has said this new version will be the one further released worldwide.
- ConnexionsFeatured in De wereld draait door: Episode #5.128 (2010)
Commentaire en vedette
The life story of Serge Gainsbourg had to be filmed, and as he's one of the famous Frenchmen who aren't in fact Belgian, it's only a surprise that it took so long. That his life spanned the Nazi occupation to the rise of Disco would stretch credibility if this were fiction, but as it's all more or less true the director, who is already an accomplished graphic artist, manages to lift it to the level of slightly absurd fiction. Mixing in animation, self-consciously stagey sets and a life-sized puppet as Gainsbourg's dreaded alter ego.
Even the sordid lowlife is given the big treatment, and the early days in the garret look unashamedly glamorous as they would if re-imagined for an opera set or a Salvador Dali dream sequence, as director Joann Sfar lays it on with a trowel.
The episodic nature of the story gives it a rather patchy feel though, and I couldn't help thinking that one or two episodes, especially the cute Hollywood-style musical scene with Brigitte Bardot, could have been shorter. Bardot was just one of the high-profile women Gainsbourg captured, and so was the muse of the existentialists, Juliette Greco.The casting is pretty uncanny with the possible exception of Greco, who was never that model-thin.
Gainsbourg has always been, at least outside France, more famous for being cool than for his music. But his reworking of La Marseillaise which so upset the rightwing patriots of the Seventies was nothing but excellent. I'll go back just to hear that Sly and Robbie riddim one more time.
Quite a substantial feast but it's worth building up an appetite in advance. And of course, you get Jane Birkin and... That Song.
Even the sordid lowlife is given the big treatment, and the early days in the garret look unashamedly glamorous as they would if re-imagined for an opera set or a Salvador Dali dream sequence, as director Joann Sfar lays it on with a trowel.
The episodic nature of the story gives it a rather patchy feel though, and I couldn't help thinking that one or two episodes, especially the cute Hollywood-style musical scene with Brigitte Bardot, could have been shorter. Bardot was just one of the high-profile women Gainsbourg captured, and so was the muse of the existentialists, Juliette Greco.The casting is pretty uncanny with the possible exception of Greco, who was never that model-thin.
Gainsbourg has always been, at least outside France, more famous for being cool than for his music. But his reworking of La Marseillaise which so upset the rightwing patriots of the Seventies was nothing but excellent. I'll go back just to hear that Sly and Robbie riddim one more time.
Quite a substantial feast but it's worth building up an appetite in advance. And of course, you get Jane Birkin and... That Song.
- cliffhanley_
- 20 oct. 2010
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life
- Lieux de tournage
- Rue de Verneuil, Paris 6, Paris, France(Gainsbourg's house)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 11 500 000 € (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 233 007 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 25 189 $ US
- 4 sept. 2011
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 12 220 456 $ US
- Durée2 heures 15 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Gainsbourg (Vie héroïque) (2010) officially released in Canada in English?
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