IMDb RATING
6.3/10
694
YOUR RATING
The story of gaining the West with dedication of the people that built it. All framed up in a photograph of a couple's legacy.The story of gaining the West with dedication of the people that built it. All framed up in a photograph of a couple's legacy.The story of gaining the West with dedication of the people that built it. All framed up in a photograph of a couple's legacy.
Geneviève Bujold
- Jeanne Leroy née Perriere
- (as Genevieve Bujold)
Richard Farnsworth
- Stagecoach Driver
- (as Dick Farnsworth)
Jean-François Rémi
- Jeanne's Father
- (as Jean-Francois Remi)
William S. Bartman
- Telegrapher
- (as William Bartman)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
6.3694
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Featured reviews
10yashimo
Wonderful
I am studying sound design and this movie blew me away. Watched it late night only because of the excellent James C. The most striking thing is when ever there is a violent scene, the director choose to fade out and loose all natural sound and simply play a simple but striking piece of piano. It distances you from the horror of the violence, it seemed to me to be as if I was being sheltered from the full effect. Powerful and poetic this was a revisionist western way ahead of its peers and only to be matched by Clint Eastwood's High plains drifter and Beguiled.
Cannot wait to see it with sound!
Became aware of this film a week ago, in a karaoke bar in - of all places - Tombstone, AZ. The movie was up on the widescreen TV, but the sound was turned off. Even so, the visuals had me focusing on the movie more than listening to the live music! First I'm seeing a war in Europe, then I'm seeing the American land races, back and forth, and well-known faces of James Caan, Genevieve Bujold, and dear old Richard Farnsworth. Even without sound, the tenderness of some scenes came through! Had to find out more about this film! So I jotted a few notes and looked it up by actors/together, and now that I have read more good reviews than bad, I will be putting it at the top of our rental list!
Things Always Work Out In A Lelouch Film, Don't They?
Photographer Francis Huster convinces Genevieve Bujold to abandon their native Paris and make a new life in the American west. They get married on the wagon train and settle in a small but growing city; he is shot because of his incessant picture taking. Meanwhile, veterinarian James Caan has a nagging wife, who wants they to move from their ranch. She dies in childbirth.
Director Claude Lelouch is the most unabashedly romantic director since Frank Borzage. As a result, you keep wondering when Caan and Mlle Bujold are going to stop mourning and start living again. There's no sign of the ineluctable workings of fate here, just the chance of a rebirth in the New World, with Caan at his most masculine, and Mlle Bujold indescribably cute.
Veteran cinematographer Stanley Cortez has his last credit here, capturing, along with Jacques Lefrancois, Lelouch's wide-eyed view of the beauties and weirdnesses of the Old West.
Director Claude Lelouch is the most unabashedly romantic director since Frank Borzage. As a result, you keep wondering when Caan and Mlle Bujold are going to stop mourning and start living again. There's no sign of the ineluctable workings of fate here, just the chance of a rebirth in the New World, with Caan at his most masculine, and Mlle Bujold indescribably cute.
Veteran cinematographer Stanley Cortez has his last credit here, capturing, along with Jacques Lefrancois, Lelouch's wide-eyed view of the beauties and weirdnesses of the Old West.
For lovers of slow-burn 1970s Westerns and romance movies.
After years of searching, when I finally got a copy I was almost nervous that I wouldn't like it, but I was not disappointed. OK - it's flawed: some scenes run on too long, there is a lack of overall refinement, Beethoven's 5th pops up in some odd places (why would you, when you have Frances Lai making the soundtrack?) but even these flaws somehow add to its overall unique, slightly odd flavour. The tone is of elegiac 1970s Westerns but it's more of a historical romantic drama than that. Westerns-wise, it feels somewhere between Heartland and Heaven's Gate with a touch of The Grey Fox (there is even a small but pleasing turn from Richard Farnsworth). However, you can tell it is European - and not American - made. It's not quite as artistic as some people make it out to be, it's more naturalistic, casual even, with some scenes and dialogue occurring in the unvarnished manner of Mike Leigh films. I loved seeing the American west from the French perspective and how the movie showed the immigrant experience. Respect is given to working class struggles in a way that you'd expect from such European cinema. I loved too how the story built, watching their two lives in separate countries (and cultures) gradually circle inwards towards their inevitable meeting. Through all the hardships of that era and in life in general, love blooms in a relatable way. And just when you'd decided this was a romance drama after all, it finally reminds you that 'this IS a Western' with an ending scene that satisfies as much as any decent revenge Western. In all - a quiet epic.
French love story set in the Old West.
This is not a western, this is a dramatic love story set in the Old West. If you think Sergio Leone's "Once Upon A Time In The West" is slow and artsy you won't enjoy this film because it is even slower and more artistic. Good performances by Caan and Bujold can't help speed the pace of this drawn out love story. The only action takes place in the first 20 minutes of the film. The rest is pure love story which is okay but we've seen it all before in Lelouch's "A Man and a Woman."
Did you know
- TriviaThe director operated the camera
- GoofsAfter David treats one of the bad guys at their camp, another one warns him about not saying where he really was. The voice doesn't match what this bad guy said.
- Quotes
David Williams: I guess if you're gonna spend your life with yourself, you might as well to learn to be good company.
- Alternate versionsNBC edited 33 minutes from this film for its 1982 network television premiere.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Sneak Previews: Take 2: Great Performances that Oscar Ignored (1980)
- How long is Another Man, Another Chance?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Ein anderer Mann - eine andere Frau
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 2h 16m(136 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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