The story of an unlikely friendship between a bear, Ernest, and a young mouse named Celestine.The story of an unlikely friendship between a bear, Ernest, and a young mouse named Celestine.The story of an unlikely friendship between a bear, Ernest, and a young mouse named Celestine.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 15 wins & 15 nominations total
Lambert Wilson
- Ernest
- (voice)
Pauline Brunner
- Célestine
- (voice)
Anne-Marie Loop
- La Grise
- (voice)
Patrice Melennec
- Georges
- (voice)
Brigitte Virtudes
- Lucienne
- (voice)
Léonard Louf
- Léon
- (voice)
Dominique Maurin
- Chef de clinique
- (voice)
- (as Dominique Collignon)
Perrette Pradier
- Infirmière en Chef
- (voice)
- (as Perette Pradier)
Yann Le Madic
- Avocat d'Ernest
- (voice)
Féodor Atkine
- Juge Grizzly
- (voice)
Pierre Baton
- Juge Rat
- (voice)
Vincent Grass
- Chef policier Ours
- (voice)
- (as Vincent Gras)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn the little bear's room that Celestine finds her way into towards the beginning of the movie, there is a poster for the director's previous film A Town Called Panic (2009).
- GoofsWhen the stolen van's camouflage paint job washes off and the van rolls back into town, it leaves a trail of paint that leads the police right to Ernest and Celestine's house. The rain, however, should have washed away the trail of paint, too, and left no way to follow it back.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Troldspejlet: Episode #50.13 (2014)
- SoundtracksErnest's Song
Music by Vincent Courtois
French lyrics by Thomas Fersen
English lyrics by Todd Edwards
Performed by Forest Whitaker
Featured review
Move over Pixar and Disney, your monopoly be damned. Although I do like some of the Pixar/Dinsey animated movies, it was always the French animated movies that I adored. It was always amusing and entertaining and often adhering to real life nuances than go all aboard with fantasy. From L'illusioniste to Persepolis, the craftsmanship and quality that goes into these movies are impeccable. Often manually animated than using CG, the smooth animation is just mesmerizing, furthermore the narrative and the characters rivets you to your seats. Although these movies might not garner as much attention as an over-rated Hollywood production, they've always been highly refined, immensely engrossing.
Based on the kids' book by Belgian author and illustrator Gabrielle Vincent, Ernest et Célestine is the sweet sweet story of Célestine an orphan mouse who befriends a poor Bear, Ernest. In a society where the two factions are prohibited The story isn't something to write home about but it has all the essential elements to entertain you till end. I saw the French version and it seems like there is also an English dubbed version voiced over by some AAA actors like Forest Whitaker, Paul Giamatti, William H. Macy. The movie is warmly visual and wouldn't be an issue for the young ones to get hold of whats happening on screen.
Its simplicity is what made me love it so much. You are drawn into the spellbinding art and animation and its almost like a water-colored fairytale book come to life in front of you. It works a bit like a Calvin and Hobbes comic strip sans the philosophical quandaries. Instead Ernest et Célestine digs subtly into the political and societal undertones. Having seen both Frozen and Ernest et Célestine, I couldn't even fathom why Frozen won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
In an industry where even animated movies are filled with shades of debauchery, you'd be a victim of a slew of questions from your young ones that you'd be too embarrassed to answer. Thankfully, Ernest et Célestine is a movie so innocent and pure at heart, that it can be watched with kids of all ages. Let them soak in the brilliant and colorful art direction and Ernest et Célestine's beautiful friendship. There's a lot that could be learnt from these two adorable critters.
Based on the kids' book by Belgian author and illustrator Gabrielle Vincent, Ernest et Célestine is the sweet sweet story of Célestine an orphan mouse who befriends a poor Bear, Ernest. In a society where the two factions are prohibited The story isn't something to write home about but it has all the essential elements to entertain you till end. I saw the French version and it seems like there is also an English dubbed version voiced over by some AAA actors like Forest Whitaker, Paul Giamatti, William H. Macy. The movie is warmly visual and wouldn't be an issue for the young ones to get hold of whats happening on screen.
Its simplicity is what made me love it so much. You are drawn into the spellbinding art and animation and its almost like a water-colored fairytale book come to life in front of you. It works a bit like a Calvin and Hobbes comic strip sans the philosophical quandaries. Instead Ernest et Célestine digs subtly into the political and societal undertones. Having seen both Frozen and Ernest et Célestine, I couldn't even fathom why Frozen won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
In an industry where even animated movies are filled with shades of debauchery, you'd be a victim of a slew of questions from your young ones that you'd be too embarrassed to answer. Thankfully, Ernest et Célestine is a movie so innocent and pure at heart, that it can be watched with kids of all ages. Let them soak in the brilliant and colorful art direction and Ernest et Célestine's beautiful friendship. There's a lot that could be learnt from these two adorable critters.
- sohansurag
- Apr 18, 2014
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Ernest y Celestine
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- €9,600,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $262,075
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $13,078
- Mar 2, 2014
- Gross worldwide
- $8,170,333
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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