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Widow of St. Pierre

Original title: La veuve de Saint-Pierre
  • 2000
  • R
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
5.8K
YOUR RATING
Widow of St. Pierre (2000)
Trailer
Play trailer2:15
1 Video
25 Photos
Period DramaDramaHistoryRomance

In a small French colony, a drunken man kills someone. While a guillotine is being shipped in, he changes, becoming a good and popular man.In a small French colony, a drunken man kills someone. While a guillotine is being shipped in, he changes, becoming a good and popular man.In a small French colony, a drunken man kills someone. While a guillotine is being shipped in, he changes, becoming a good and popular man.

  • Director
    • Patrice Leconte
  • Writers
    • Claude Faraldo
    • Patrice Leconte
  • Stars
    • Juliette Binoche
    • Daniel Auteuil
    • Emir Kusturica
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    5.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Patrice Leconte
    • Writers
      • Claude Faraldo
      • Patrice Leconte
    • Stars
      • Juliette Binoche
      • Daniel Auteuil
      • Emir Kusturica
    • 71User reviews
    • 58Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 9 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Widow of Saint-Pierre
    Trailer 2:15
    The Widow of Saint-Pierre

    Photos25

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    Top cast39

    Edit
    Juliette Binoche
    Juliette Binoche
    • Pauline (Madame La)
    Daniel Auteuil
    Daniel Auteuil
    • Jean (The Captain)
    Emir Kusturica
    Emir Kusturica
    • Ariel Neel Auguste
    Michel Duchaussoy
    Michel Duchaussoy
    • The Governor
    Philippe Magnan
    Philippe Magnan
    • President Venot
    Christian Charmetant
    Christian Charmetant
    • Supply and Secretariat Officer
    Philippe du Janerand
    Philippe du Janerand
    • Customs Officer
    Maurice Chevit
    • The Governor's Father
    Catherine Lascault
    • La Malvilain
    Ghyslain Tremblay
    Ghyslain Tremblay
    • Monsieur Chevassus
    Reynald Bouchard
    Reynald Bouchard
    • Louis Ollivier
    Marc Béland
    Marc Béland
    • Soldier Loïc
    Yves Jacques
    Yves Jacques
    • The Rear Admiral
    Dominique Quesnel
    Dominique Quesnel
    • The Proprietor
    Anne-Marie Philipe
    • The Governor's Wife
    Isabelle Spade
    • President Venot's Wife
    Arianne Mallet
    • Governor's Child
    Julián Gutiérrez
    • Governor's Son
    • Director
      • Patrice Leconte
    • Writers
      • Claude Faraldo
      • Patrice Leconte
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews71

    7.15.8K
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    Featured reviews

    dallas_viewer

    Worth renting, don't watch the dubbed version!

    This was a nice little film--not great, but nice--and on a grading scale, I'd give it a B or a B-.

    Two points to add to what's already been said.

    First, for those of you thinking of renting this movie (I rented it on DVD), DO NOT WATCH IT WITH THE ENGLISH DUBBING (available via the "Special Features - Audio" section of the DVD).

    The dubbing is horrible; voices sound dubbed, rather than seeming to come from the actors themselves. Worse, I guess in order to make the words seem to match more closely with the movements of the actors' lips, the English dialogue is (IMHO) significantly different from the French! I watched the movie with English dubbing first, then in French with English subtitles. There is actually one point in the movie where someone asks, "Why did so-and-so do that?" The answer is completely different depending on whether you are watching the English or French translation.

    The movie is best watched in French--hearing the actors' real voices works so much better than hearing the dubbed voices--with English subtitles, if you need the translation.

    Second point: I was disappointed that no backstory (with respect to Le Capitain and La Capitaine) was forthcoming. I thought that the unfolding tale hinted at some sort of secret, something in his (and maybe her) past, that would shed more light on their current actions. In short, I felt that the couple's motivations and character were not sufficiently explored. And if this was because the movie wasn't particularly *about* motivations and in-depth character study, then I actually think that I would have preferred more overtly expressive actors. Enigmatic looks (IMO, that's what they were) without explanation don't really work for me.

    Having said that, the movie was still a cut above your ordinary film, and worth the viewing.
    8claudio_carvalho

    Beautiful Story of Rehabilitation and Intolerance

    In 1849, in the Archipelago of Saint-Pierre et Miquelon, the drunken Ariel Neel Auguste (Emir Kusturica) and his partner Louis Ollivier (Reynald Bouchard) kill for a futile motive (to see if he is fat or just big) the fishing boat captain Coupard (Michel Daigle). Nell, who stabbed the victim, is sentenced to die with his head severed in the guillotine while Louis is sentenced to hard labor. During the transportation to the prison under the custody of Captain Jean (Daniel Auteuil), there is an accident and Louis dies. While spending his days in the cell waiting for the guillotine and the executioner, Neel is invited by the captain's wife Mrs. Pauline (Juliette Binoche) to help her in her garden and becomes her protégé. Later he has a process of rehabilitation helping the locals in minor works and becomes very popular in the island. When he saves the building Café du Nord and her owner from sinking in the sea, his popularity increases and nobody but the governor and politicians of the council wants his death. Neel marries Eleontine Jeanne-Marie, but sooner he is informed that the ship Marie Galante has just left Martinique bringing a guillotine. Now the Governor and politicians need to find an executioner in the population to execute the sentence.

    "La Veuve de Saint-Pierre" is a beautiful dramatization of a story of rehabilitation and intolerance. I do not know whether this event is partially true or not – there are references in Internet to this story but in sites that I can not trust – but this movie is wonderful. The story and screenplay are engaging and very well written with powerful lines; the direction of Patrice Leconte and the performances are top- notch, with Juliette Binoche extremely beautiful and elegant as usual and showing a magnificent chemistry with Daniel Auteuil; the cinematography and costumes are wonderful. Based on my adjectives, it is unnecessary to say that I loved this movie. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "A Viúva de Saint-Pierre" ("The Widow of Saint-Pierre")
    Mankin

    Is this man too good to be true?

    Juliette Binoche plays the wife of a military officer in a remote island town in 1849 Newfoundland who becomes devoted to the cause of saving the life of a condemned murderer. I was torn between admiring `The Widow of Saint-Pierre' for not taking the obvious route of having the captain's wife fall in love with her protege and run off with him (e.g., `Mrs. Soffel"), and a feeling of letdown that it was avoiding opportunities for more vivid and realistic drama. That there is an attraction between the two is made clear, especially in the highly charged, yet muted eroticism of the reading lesson scene. This film was based on a true story, but I couldn't help wondering if the actual killer was as saintly and devoid of guile as he seems in this movie. Among other things, he resists his attraction to his benefactress, although she would probably be more than willing to sleep with him, saves the life of a village woman whose house has slipped its moorings, and passes up an excellent chance to escape because he doesn't want to get anybody in trouble. He impregnates another woman, although it appears to be true love, and he then does the decent thing and marries her. One could accept that a criminal could be redeemed, but here he's a little too good to be true, reinforcing my suspicion that the characterization was meant more to reinforce the filmakers' anti-capital punishment stance than as a reflection of his actual personality. Daniel Auteil as her husband is stuck playing a character whose emotions remain largely inscrutable. The film would have us believe that there is no jealousy or resentment in the husband as his wife dedicates her life to rehabilitating and saving the condemned man under his charge. Ultimately, the captain gives up his own life for both of them, but I kept waiting for a significant sign that he had some inner conflict about doing so. After all, he is a career military officer sworn to uphold the law as it is. Who knew that underneath he was a bleeding heart liberal! This film is interesting and absorbing up to a point, but ultimately, it's also bland and overly complacent dramatically.
    csm23

    "Perfect Love Casteth out Fear"

    The ancient Greeks, gifted with an abstract way of thinking that was always trying to come down to earth and clothe itself with the commonplace occurrences of everyday life, did not have one all-embracing term for love, a we do, but broke it down into four types: affection (storge), friendship (phileo), sex (eros) and charity (agapao). And probably not since the ancient Greeks has a love story come along which not only divides love into its four types, but also weaves them, with enormous skill, into a single story. The Widow of Saint-Pierre is a love story of the tragic Greek proportions. It's an enormously beautiful movie, a story that gains power with every viewing. And for that reason, it's one of the most remarkable videos I've seen in a very long time.

    We've all seen a plethora of films from Hollywood, which basically confine love, and the act of love, to eros. We all know the well-worn script. But what would it look like to view a film in which a relationship expresses all four types of love, and throbbing full force? I would be giving too much away if I were to tell you how these four types of love are rolled up so tightly into a single relationship, but that's exactly what we seen in the liaison between Jean, the Captain (Auteuil) and his wife, Pauline (Binoche). It's intensely interesting, because the performances are pitch-perfect. Even the cowardly bureaucrats, who feel threatened by the captain and his wife, are a picture of cowardly perfection. Their motives are all too human, all too real. But so is the unfathomable love they don't understand, and fear.

    One of the things I really appreciate about this film is the way it expresses all forms of love as having boundaries. Jean and Pauline are not clinging vines. What we see is a mature, healthy relationship, each partner respecting the unique characteristics of the other. What a contrast to the infantile clinging vine romances out of Hollywood!
    8=G=

    A beautifully austere film about character.

    As the best of French cinema does so adroitly, "The Window of Saint-Pierre" tells most of it's story laconically with knowing looks and subtle behaviors while the story it tells is a relentlessly plodding drama of unspoken words and the emotions they evoke. "Widow..." is more about integrity, honor, love, and other intangibles than it is about its relatively simple storyline and the characters involved. A beautifully crafted somber film, "Widow..." is recommended for mature audiences because a measure of maturation is required to appreciate all this austere film has to offer.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film was to be completely filmed on the island of Saint-Pierre, but when the snow failed to arrive, the production had to move further north to Newfoundland for certain sequences.
    • Goofs
      When Neel is told he's strong enough to "ramer jusqu'au chez les Anglais", the English subtitles say "row over to Canada" rather than "row over to the English". This introduces an error: both the geography and the dialogue in other scenes make it clear that Newfoundland is meant, but Newfoundland wasn't part of Canada until 1949.
    • Connections
      Featured in The 58th Annual Golden Globe Awards 2001 (2001)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 13, 2001 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Canada
    • Official site
      • Juliette Binoche: The Art of Being - Official Fansite
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • The Widow of Saint-Pierre
    • Filming locations
      • Fortress of Louisbourg, Louisbourg, Nova Scotia, Canada(as Saint-Pierre)
    • Production companies
      • Cinémaginaire Inc.
      • Epithète Films
      • France 2 Cinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • FRF 100,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,193,889
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $31,702
      • Mar 4, 2001
    • Gross worldwide
      • $7,193,889
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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