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A Very Long Engagement

Original title: Un long dimanche de fiançailles
  • 2004
  • R
  • 2h 13m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
77K
YOUR RATING
Audrey Tautou and Gaspard Ulliel in A Very Long Engagement (2004)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Play trailer2:10
1 Video
99+ Photos
Period DramaRomantic EpicWar EpicDramaMysteryRomanceWar

Tells the story of a young woman's relentless search for her fiancé, who has disappeared from the trenches of the Somme during World War One.Tells the story of a young woman's relentless search for her fiancé, who has disappeared from the trenches of the Somme during World War One.Tells the story of a young woman's relentless search for her fiancé, who has disappeared from the trenches of the Somme during World War One.

  • Director
    • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
  • Writers
    • Sébastien Japrisot
    • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
    • Guillaume Laurant
  • Stars
    • Audrey Tautou
    • Gaspard Ulliel
    • Jodie Foster
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    77K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
    • Writers
      • Sébastien Japrisot
      • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
      • Guillaume Laurant
    • Stars
      • Audrey Tautou
      • Gaspard Ulliel
      • Jodie Foster
    • 261User reviews
    • 164Critic reviews
    • 76Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 17 wins & 35 nominations total

    Videos1

    A Very Long Engagement
    Trailer 2:10
    A Very Long Engagement

    Photos157

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    Top cast80

    Edit
    Audrey Tautou
    Audrey Tautou
    • Mathilde
    Gaspard Ulliel
    Gaspard Ulliel
    • Manech
    Jodie Foster
    Jodie Foster
    • Elodie Gordes
    Dominique Pinon
    Dominique Pinon
    • Sylvain
    Chantal Neuwirth
    Chantal Neuwirth
    • Bénédicte
    André Dussollier
    André Dussollier
    • Pierre-Marie Rouvières
    Ticky Holgado
    Ticky Holgado
    • Germain Pire
    Marion Cotillard
    Marion Cotillard
    • Tina Lombardi
    Dominique Bettenfeld
    Dominique Bettenfeld
    • Ange Bassignano
    Jean-Pierre Darroussin
    Jean-Pierre Darroussin
    • Benjamin Gordes
    • (as Jean Pierre Darroussin)
    Clovis Cornillac
    Clovis Cornillac
    • Benoît Notre-Dame
    Jean-Pierre Becker
    Jean-Pierre Becker
    • Esperanza
    • (as Jean Pierre Becker)
    Denis Lavant
    Denis Lavant
    • Six-Soux
    Jérôme Kircher
    Jérôme Kircher
    • Bastoche
    Albert Dupontel
    Albert Dupontel
    • Célestin Poux
    Jean-Paul Rouve
    Jean-Paul Rouve
    • Le facteur
    • (as Jean Paul Rouve)
    Elina Löwensohn
    Elina Löwensohn
    • La femme allemande
    • (as Elina Lowensohn)
    Julie Depardieu
    Julie Depardieu
    • Véronique Passavant
    • Director
      • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
    • Writers
      • Sébastien Japrisot
      • Jean-Pierre Jeunet
      • Guillaume Laurant
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews261

    7.677K
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    Featured reviews

    8sam_perera

    Best movie this year

    I had the pleasure of seeing this movie on a special preview last night and I was enthralled at its story line and cinematic experience. I wasn't a great fan of Amelie and hence was not expecting any particular out-of-body experience in viewing this. But I was wrong. It is a wonderful piece of story telling – somewhat difficult to follow if you do have a short memory span for character names – and flashbacks. Yet at the end, it seamlessly closes the web in a beautifully written script that has been well acted and filmed. It is particularly gory in the WWI battle scenes but probably accurate in depiction whilst the locations where the film was shot seem out of this world (hoped they were not computer generated). Quaint towns, fields, beaches and houses lend a beautiful touch to the story of a love that will not die whilst Audrey Tautou delivers a spellbinding performance in a child-like heroine with a will of steel. A special mention must be given to Bruno Delbonnel's camera work which simply is amazing. Can't wait for the DVD.
    DigitalKarma911

    Pleasant, visually satisfying.

    Dazzling, never before have I seen such a visually pleasing picture. Jeunet has mastered the film medium giving 'A Very Long Engagement' a unique and fairy tale like visual style. Though rushed, the fantasy romance that Jeunet paints through flashbacks is inspiring. The graphic World War I trenches, provide an excellent contrast to the simple but charming mystery that Mathilde embarks on through the film.

    Although Jeunet relies heavily on Audrey Tautou's performance, it is ultimately his one of a kind visual style that emotionally ties the viewer. This said, the latter portion of 'Long Engagement' feels very rushed and isn't treated to the same elegance that so well defines the first half. There are moments in the film where the visuals far overshadow the emotional intensity intended for the scene. This is perhaps 'Long Engagements' only fault, as it becomes unbalanced. The stylized and even cartoonish artistic direction that Jeunet leans to, although brilliant seems I'll fit for this wartime drama. Even so, 'A Very Long Engagement' comes off genuine and it's mix of fantasy romance and war will let you leave the theater fulfilled.
    7Asa_Nisi_Masa2

    Jeunet, beware of stereotyping yourself! But very well done nonetheless...

    If I were to judge this movie solely on its entertainment value, I would have awarded it a 9 out of 10. Instead, I will blend entertainment with art, whatever that may mean, or with its artistic integrity – my usual method of evaluation for movies. I'm actually one of those people who found Amèlie delightful on first viewing, and more than a little irritating on second viewing two years later. And I must say that overall, I preferred Un Long Dimanche de Fiançailles.

    Right from the opening shot of a broken Christ statue dangling off a cross that's been blown to bits in a muddy WWI trench, you are reminded of how well director Jean-Pierre Jeunet has understood the importance of masterful cinematography. Immediate, attention-grabbing snappy editing is also a speciality of his. A collection of memorable stills, beautiful enough to be made into pictures to hang on your living-room wall, are the carriers of a compelling story with a universally accessible poetry, both visual and verbal (which alas, is too often spelt out by a persistently meddling voice-over – a narrator, just like in Amèlie – just in case you weren't paying attention to ALL the little quirks, jokes and poetry). A feast of visual humour we can trace right back to Delicatessen and a collection of interwoven, snappy little stories from endearing or comic minor players, could render the movie Disneyish (The way Les Choristes was) had Jeunet failed to also blend into the cake mix two helpings of darkness to one of sex: he does exactly the same thing in both Amèlie and Delicatessen. The resulting movie is one that most adults the world over will respond to, a fairytale for grown-ups (also considering the devastating WWI setting, it's even more grown-up than both Delicatessen, which IMO was too cartoonish, and Amèlie, too artificial and pleased with itself - like a small, furry creature such as a squirrel prancing around and being well aware of its own cuteness). But as good movie as Dimanche is, I don't consider it an "art" movie at all – rather, a very accomplished and entertaining mainstream European movie.

    Most of all, I loved the scenes in the trenches. This movie is an excellent example of how computer generated sequences SHOULD be used to enhance a feature! The CGI does its job without calling attention upon itself. The muddy, dusty, blood and gut-stained, grey-brown desperation and folly of the WWI battlefields felt authentic and never idealised, yet was visually stunning and also very entertaining to watch. The zeppelin in the improvised hospital scene was also amazing – a tense, original and, as they say, memorable "cinema moment". I was also fond of some comic interludes: Mathilde imagining herself as the romantic heroine in her own erotic dream filmed as a silent movie, the postman and his pesky bicycle, Private Investigator Germain Pire (played by the late Ticky Holgado) and his antics, for instance in the Corsican brothel, etc. I also thought the flavour and FEEL of the epoch was beautifully evoked: I'm a sucker for thorough research in costuming and setting, so I cannot help responding positively when that aspect of a historic movie is accomplished.

    But I was reminded of Amèlie's contrived little quirks one time too many when the German woman in the Paris bistrot (trying to discreetly attract Mathilde's attention to give her some clues), erases the writing on the "Today's specialities" blackboard by leaving just three M's. Or when we were told and shown the way Mathilde's parents had died when she was only a very small child. This was a quirky, comedy death just like Amèlie's mother being killing by a suicidal nun jumping off the top of a church spire. Also, the vengeful prostitute Tina Lombardi's deadly contraptions, used to murder the Army officials responsible for killing her beloved pimp on the battlefield, were also a tad too cutesy and contrived, and made me try to imagine a James Bond movie directed by Jeunet! Though this may be the fault of the novel that Un Long Dimanche is based upon, I also found the "mystery" part a little too convoluted and again, contrived. The pieces of the jig-saw fall into place a little too neatly for a situation as complicated as the search for Manech turned out to be! Regarding the central couple, Mathilde and Manech, whose young love for one another we are supposed to believe in and warm to in order to find the story moving at all, I thought Jeunet did a good job of remaining just this side of cloying and sentimental. Again, some of the poetic images were heavy-handed (did we really need to hear the "heart beating in the hand" line so often?), but on the whole, efficient and sweet. Though Manech was a little too much of a wet blanket for my taste (perhaps the role needed a slightly more charismatic actor than Gaspard Ulliel?), I did nonetheless feel concern for him throughout most of the movie. I was also impressed with the Jodie Foster subplot and was more than a little impressed with her linguistic skills: among English-speaking actors, so far I only knew of Kristin Scott Thomas being such a convincing performer in the French language.

    Since Un Long Dimanche is a little too much of a ruffian to be a truly honest work of art, I will therefore knock a few points off the 9 I would have given it just for sheer entertainment value, and leave it with a more than dignified 7.5 out of 10 instead!
    9pax-et-forza

    Passion, sweetness, poetry

    An epic love story on a World War I background. Far from Amelie, the team Jeunet/Tautou demonstrates his talent, showing with poetry love and war, beauty and horror, sweetness and violence. Mathilde and Manech, played by the stunning Audrey Tautou and the new French heart-throb Gaspard Ulliel, are the ideal lovers, determinate, passionate, separated by destiny, hoping...because hope is the message, the only one of a film where love is giving and giving again. If you loved Cold Mountain you will adore "A very long engagement". If don't know yet what it is to hold someone's heart in your hand, to feel the beatings of somebody's heart like the Morse alphabet, this movie will explain it to you, and you never will be the same anymore.
    10gort-8

    Jaw Droppingly Wonderful

    This is one of those times that a rating system breaks down. I gave this film a "10" only because there were no "20's" available.

    This film, in its own way, seems to be able to fire on those same diverse cylinders that William Shakespeare so often did. It's a light and airy comedy. It's the bitterest of tragedies. It's a beautiful romance. It's an unfolding mystery. At it's heart it is a film of war. War, in all its boiling chaos, touches on all those experiences and more.

    When I left the theater I was both elated and depressed. My elation came from having just had such a pure cinematic experience. My depression came from glancing at the marquee and reminding myself that I'll have to survive on the sort of cinema half-life provided by the pablum that normally makes it to the screen. Every now and again it's great to be reminded just how good a movie can be.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When casting Jodie Foster, Jean-Pierre Jeunet met her in Paris at the café which was used to shoot the scenes in Amélie (2001) which is near where he lives. Some tourists were at the café, knowing it was featured in the film, asked Jeunet and Foster to move out of the way (not recognizing them) so that they could take a photograph of the café.
    • Goofs
      In the film there is an important storyline about an albatross. However, throughout the film in all footage depicting the albatross a gannet is shown. Though a gannet is also a large seabird, it looks nothing like an albatross.
    • Quotes

      Ange Bassignano: [writes] "Revenge is pointless. Try to be happy and don't ruin your life for me."

    • Connections
      Edited from Winged Migration (2001)
    • Soundtracks
      Ça ne Vaut pas l'Amour
      Music by François Perpignan

      Lyrics by Alexandre Trébitsch

      Performed by Esther Lekain

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 14, 2005 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • United States
    • Languages
      • French
      • German
      • Corsican
    • Also known as
      • Cuộc Đính Hôn Lâu Dài
    • Filming locations
      • Héaux de Bréhat, Côtes-d'Armor, France(lighthouse exteriors)
    • Production companies
      • 2003 Productions
      • Warner Bros.
      • Tapioca Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $56,600,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $6,524,389
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $101,749
      • Nov 28, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $69,424,389
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 13 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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