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Vénus beauté (institut)

  • 1999
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 45min
NOTE IMDb
6,3/10
4,5 k
MA NOTE
Vénus beauté (institut) (1999)
ComédieDrameRomance

Désabusée par un mariage raté, à l'approche de la cinquantaine Angèle consomme un peu n'importe comment des hommes qu'elle lève dans des bars ; chair triste, mal d'amour et mal de vivre, sur... Tout lireDésabusée par un mariage raté, à l'approche de la cinquantaine Angèle consomme un peu n'importe comment des hommes qu'elle lève dans des bars ; chair triste, mal d'amour et mal de vivre, surtout ne pas se laisser blesser encore, ne pas espérer de l'autre. [255]Désabusée par un mariage raté, à l'approche de la cinquantaine Angèle consomme un peu n'importe comment des hommes qu'elle lève dans des bars ; chair triste, mal d'amour et mal de vivre, surtout ne pas se laisser blesser encore, ne pas espérer de l'autre. [255]

  • Réalisation
    • Tonie Marshall
  • Scénario
    • Tonie Marshall
    • Jacques Audiard
    • Marion Vernoux
  • Casting principal
    • Nathalie Baye
    • Bulle Ogier
    • Samuel Le Bihan
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,3/10
    4,5 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Tonie Marshall
    • Scénario
      • Tonie Marshall
      • Jacques Audiard
      • Marion Vernoux
    • Casting principal
      • Nathalie Baye
      • Bulle Ogier
      • Samuel Le Bihan
    • 22avis d'utilisateurs
    • 39avis des critiques
    • 64Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 8 victoires et 3 nominations au total

    Photos17

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    Rôles principaux43

    Modifier
    Nathalie Baye
    Nathalie Baye
    • Angèle Piana
    Bulle Ogier
    Bulle Ogier
    • Madame Nadine, la patronne
    Samuel Le Bihan
    Samuel Le Bihan
    • Antoine DuMont
    Jacques Bonnaffé
    Jacques Bonnaffé
    • Jacques
    Mathilde Seigner
    Mathilde Seigner
    • Samantha
    Audrey Tautou
    Audrey Tautou
    • Marie
    Robert Hossein
    Robert Hossein
    • L'aviateur
    Marie Rivière
    Marie Rivière
    • La cliente aux bottines fourées
    Edith Scob
    Edith Scob
    • La cliente aux taches sur les mains
    Hélène Fillières
    Hélène Fillières
    • La fiancée d'Antoine
    • (as Hélène Filières)
    Brigitte Roüan
    • Madame Marianne
    Claire Nebout
    • La cliente exhibitioniste
    Micheline Presle
    Micheline Presle
    • Tante Maryse
    Emmanuelle Riva
    Emmanuelle Riva
    • Tante Lyda
    Elli Medeiros
    Elli Medeiros
    • Mlle Evelyne
    Claire Denis
    Claire Denis
    • La cliente asthmatique
    Liliane Rovère
    Liliane Rovère
    • La cliente épilation
    Gilbert Melki
    Gilbert Melki
    • L'amant de la gare
    • Réalisation
      • Tonie Marshall
    • Scénario
      • Tonie Marshall
      • Jacques Audiard
      • Marion Vernoux
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs22

    6,34.5K
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    10

    Avis à la une

    Rave-Reviewer

    French slice of professional life with a disappointing ending

    Angèle works in a Paris beauty salon with the ingénue-like Marie and cynical Samantha. Their boss is the supportive but businesslike Nadine (an extremely funny and perceptive performance by Ogier, one of Buñuel's bourgeois in Le Charme Discret… and the dominatrix of Schroeder's Maîtresse) who has years of experience in broken hearts and knows how to keep a professional distance. The film charts Angèle's own progress from embittered divorcée to feeling human being through her pursuit by the love-smitten sculptor, Antoine.

    We first see Angèle chatting up a total stranger in a railway buffet. This is what she does. She picks up men for casual sex because her faith in the possibility of love left her when her marriage failed (actually she shot her husband, though not fatally). It is ironic, therefore, that a strikingly similar crime of passion causes a turnaround, but… enough said for now.

    What delights most of all in this film is Nathalie Baye's performance. Having had to make do for much of her career with Adjani-type roles such as those in Le Retour de Martin Guerre or La Balance, she has matured to the point where at last she is being offered more interesting work. She invests Angèle with the vulnerability that we have glimpsed in the past, but which carries before it a prickly resilience necessary for survival.

    Another great pleasure is the portrait of the beauty salon milieu, which lays bare -rather than covers up - human foibles with typical Gallic frankness. This is not the ersatz world of Cher in Mermaids, nor does it adopt the feminist critique that beauty products are emblems of women's self-enslavement to men. Instead it allows both humour and melancholy to let individual cases speak for themselves. The salon is a self-contained world, with its naggingly distinctive door jingle, where different solutions to the single woman's predicament are offered by employee and customer alike. Nadine tells Angèle: 'When you're not a girl any more, you'd better decide not to be a girl any more.' Samantha is promiscuous but, unlike Angèle, allows her disappointments to affect her professional life, which brings her into conflict with Nadine. But significantly when she tells Nadine where to go, while we may sympathise more with Samantha, Nadine is not made to look petty by comparison (it is possible to imagine how an American film would handle this scene very differently). Marie has a liaison with an injured pilot (Sixties matinée idol Robert Hossein) many years her senior, something Angèle finds it hard to understand until she is turned on by witnessing their nocturnal tryst. Meanwhile Angèle's provincial aunts (Micheline Presle, the director's mother and star of Boule de Suif and Le Diable au Corps, and Emmanuelle Riva, most famously of Resnais's Hiroshima Mon Amour - both too briefly glimpsed here) co-exist in a domestic routine which is comparatively idyllic but envy Angèle's independence and ability to live it up in the big city. No one is happy.

    Clearly the sculptor, with his undemanding love, is the key for Angèle (and many another single female, no doubt!) but just how the film makes the transition from her morose rebuttals to melting acceptance is one aspect in which you may feel it betrays its Mike Leigh-style realism by opting for an ending which is too whimsical. We hope this does not spoil the many other qualities of Marshall's film.

    By the same director: If you enjoy Vénus Beauté you would certainly like Tonie Marshall's earlier feature, Pas très catholique.
    9BermudezLievano

    Very interesting

    Venus Beauté Institut is clearly one of the best films of the year in France, and not due to the fact it won the César as best film; it truly is a good film, contrary to what many people think. For starters the film has an excellent screenplay, and everything fits in quite nicely. It was very well directed by Tonie Marshall, in a simple, efficient and clear way (if you're looking for flashy directing look elsewhere). The story is also quite simple, but anyone (including men) can relate to it, for it deals with the most common human emotions: love, loneliness, friendship, sorrow, and happiness; and what's truly inspiring is the simple and humorous way these emotions have been conveyed. As for the acting, I can only say one thing: what an incredible cast. Nathalie Baye was superb as the lonely Angèle, and the entire supporting cast is excellent: the socialite and oppressive Madame Nadine (Bulle Ogier), the sweet and naive Marie (Audrey Tautou), the troubled Samanthe (Mathilde Seigner), and the breathtaking Madame Buisse (Claire Nadeau). Also, this is not the typical art house French film that many people detest, it is a very simple human statement, wonderfully taken to the screen.

    I recommend it.
    7senortuffy

    Woman losing her youth finds love.

    This story revolves around the employees of a beauty shop in Paris. It's not quite an ensemble piece because there is a main character.

    Nathalie Baye plays a 40-year-old woman, Angèle, who is going from one fling to another. Angèle doesn't believe in love anymore. She thinks it only brings pain and that love is a form of slavery. She's a very attractive woman but looks sad all the time and her friends notice.

    Audrey Tautou plays Marie, another worker at the salon, and she's a plain country girl who starts having an affair with a much older man. Mathilde Seigner plays Samantha, who is tough on the outside and has lots of boyfriends, but is hurting inside (she tries to kill herself on Christmas Eve).

    But Angèle is the focus of this film. We see her sitting with a man in a train station cafe at the beginning of the film, confident that he's enamored with her, but he brushes her aside, saying it was just an affair, and walks away. Then Madame Nadine, the beauty shop owner, tells her she needs to fix her appearance and apply more makeup, which only adds to her depression.

    Along comes Antoine, a much younger man, who saw the spat at the train station and who follows Angèle back to where she works. He approaches her and professes his love for her, really his obsession for her. Angèle isn't interested in a relationship and Antoine isn't interested in casual sex, so things don't look good for the pair. But as the story progresses, she opens up to him and by the end they're both in love with each other.

    I would have liked the film more than I did if the character of Antoine had been different. He's got a good physique and is much younger than Angèle, so I can see why she'd be attracted to him, and she's a good-looking woman, so I can see him being attracted to her, but as two people, I didn't really see the chemistry between them. Antoine seemed a bit too immature to make this romance seem true. But he is open and tender, and Angèle is vulnerable and needs some extra care, so maybe that's the key.

    Anyway, the characters were all interesting and the acting well-done. There was a tender poignancy in the relationships between the people in the beauty shop and their customers, as well as some pretty funny scenes, and the film explores some adult themes about the nature of love and relationships, so I would definitely recommend this one even if it might have been better.
    7claudio_carvalho

    When a Middle Age Woman Finds Love Again

    In Paris, Angèle (Nathalie Baye) is a beautician working in the beauty parlor 'Venus Beauty Institute', owned by Natalie (Bulle Ogier). Her colleagues are Samantha (Mathilde Seigner) and Marie (Audrey Tautou) and they have a good relationship in the salon. Angèle has an emotional problem with men and she does not believe in love anymore. Her affairs happen by chance with strangers and she seems to have the gift of choosing wrong guys for one night stand. Angèle meets Antoine (Samuel Le Bihan), a sculptor who has a crush with her, but the bitter and heartbroken Angèle has problems to believe on his love. I liked this romance about a heartbroken middle age woman finding love again. First, because of the great performance of the beautiful Nathalie Baye, who was fifty-one years old in 1999. The gorgeous Audrey 'Amélie Poulain' Tautou and Mathilde Seigner are collyrium for the eyes of the male viewers, being another attraction. The story has some ups and downs, with some shallow situations, like the exhibitionist client who walks naked in the beauty shop, but the balance is very positive. The story ends like a fairy tale and is enjoyable. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): 'Instituto de Beleza Venus' ('Venus Beauty Institute')
    8sharkfinsoup

    Good Bittersweet Movie

    This movie has some fine acting. It is driven by character rather than plot. Nathalie Baye, as Angèle, plays a 40ish beautician in Paris. She has had a traumatic childhood and has been burned in love so she limits herself to one-night stands where she is in the driver's seat. Then a man obsessively falls for her and she has to decide whether to open up to love, or at least the possibility of it. This does not play out quite the way it would if this were a Hollywood high concept movie.

    There are many minor characters, affectionately drawn. Some pieces of Angèle's past never quite get explained or resolved, which some people might complain about, but, hey, life is a lot like that.

    This film is set in Paris, right before and right after Christmas. (I also saw "La Buche" at the same theater, also set in Paris at Christmas, also very good)

    The jazzy score is particularly nice.

    This is not exactly an upbeat Christmas movie, but it's well worth seeing.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Remains as of 2020 the only film directed by a woman to have won a César Award for Best Director (the French equivalent of an Oscar).
    • Gaffes
      Hélène Fillières is correctly credited in the opening titles but mistakenly listed in the end credits as "Hélène Filières"
    • Citations

      Angele: When you smile I find you handsome.

      Jacques: That's because you know my soul.

    • Crédits fous
      Hélène Fillières is correctly credited in the opening titles but mistakenly listed in the end credits as "Hélène Filières"
    • Connexions
      Followed by Vénus & Apollon (2005)
    • Bandes originales
      Nuit de Noël
      Written by l'abbé Zurfluh

      Performed by Camille Maurane (baritone), Marie-Claire Alain (organ) with Les Petits Chanteurs de Saint Laurent

      (Edition Erato Disques S.A.)

    Meilleurs choix

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    FAQ

    • How long is Venus Beauty Institute?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 3 février 1999 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
    • Sites officiels
      • Agat Films & Cie (France)
      • Pyramide Distribution (France)
    • Langue
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Vénus institut
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Rue de Patay, Paris 13, Paris, France(beauty salon standing at the east corner with Rue de Domrémy)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Agat Films & Cie
      • Arte France Cinéma
      • Tabo Tabo Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 2 850 000 € (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 465 080 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 32 150 $US
      • 29 oct. 2000
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 495 870 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 45 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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