IMDb RATING
6.8/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
Jean-Marc Leblanc (Labrèche), a desperate civil servant, escapes reality as we know it by imagining himself as the hero in imaginary adventures.Jean-Marc Leblanc (Labrèche), a desperate civil servant, escapes reality as we know it by imagining himself as the hero in imaginary adventures.Jean-Marc Leblanc (Labrèche), a desperate civil servant, escapes reality as we know it by imagining himself as the hero in imaginary adventures.
- Awards
- 1 win & 10 nominations total
Kimberly St-Pierre King
- Coralie Cormier-Leblanc
- (as Kimberly St-Pierre-King)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
6.83.2K
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Featured reviews
Extremely entertaining black/dark comedy
Saw this recently at the Canadian film festival.
I was expecting to be let down by this film (as Arcand set the bar very high with his previous films. However I was pleasantly surprised and found this to be very, very entertaining.
With the opening shower scene and the fact that his wife is a real estate agent there are obvious comparisons to American Beauty.
Ulimately I think Arcand covers more ground in his film and you can't help but laugh at his very dark and also very accurate observations on modern life in a big city.
From ridiculous government bureaucracy to disconnection through mobile phones and MP3 players, speed dating and relationships in general Arcand is dead on.
I guess the only thing I didn't quite agree with was the notion of moving to the country house away from the city and it's craziness and everything will be just fine.
I guess it is ultimately sad that this is a pretty accurate depiction of modern society in many western countries right now. The level of disconnection among people is both sad and and frustrating.
But I loved the honesty in the film and found it extremely entertaining and much funnier than his other films.
I was expecting to be let down by this film (as Arcand set the bar very high with his previous films. However I was pleasantly surprised and found this to be very, very entertaining.
With the opening shower scene and the fact that his wife is a real estate agent there are obvious comparisons to American Beauty.
Ulimately I think Arcand covers more ground in his film and you can't help but laugh at his very dark and also very accurate observations on modern life in a big city.
From ridiculous government bureaucracy to disconnection through mobile phones and MP3 players, speed dating and relationships in general Arcand is dead on.
I guess the only thing I didn't quite agree with was the notion of moving to the country house away from the city and it's craziness and everything will be just fine.
I guess it is ultimately sad that this is a pretty accurate depiction of modern society in many western countries right now. The level of disconnection among people is both sad and and frustrating.
But I loved the honesty in the film and found it extremely entertaining and much funnier than his other films.
Denys Arcand hits the mark again
The main concept of this underseen Denys Arcand film is not original (downtrodden middle-aged public servant with a problematic family life finds refuge in his nighttime dreams and his even more vivid daytime fantasies), but it is well-employed by the Canadian writer-director and the result is a mature, incisive, intelligent, moving, and sometimes very funny film. As usual, Arcand feels free to deal with a different topic in almost every other scene, and the film embraces ideas as well as good old-fashioned slapstick. 17 years later, its views on our "connected" society and the bewildering government bureaucracy are more pertinent than ever. *** out of 4.
This movie exposes everything wrong in Quebec.
This is not a rip off of American Beauty, but a rip off of Montreal.
The government of Quebec must make this movie mandatory to every immigrant before coming to Quebec because everything in it is 100% true. Our hospitals are horrible and inadequate filled with incompetent doctors, the elderly are treated very badly in nursing homes, the government wastes money in everything but efficiency, less and less people are getting married and affairs are the norm, our laws are retarded and city itself is riddled with depression. sex and alcohol. Our suicidal rates are one the highest and if you don't day dream about an escape, your already dead inside.
The government of Quebec must make this movie mandatory to every immigrant before coming to Quebec because everything in it is 100% true. Our hospitals are horrible and inadequate filled with incompetent doctors, the elderly are treated very badly in nursing homes, the government wastes money in everything but efficiency, less and less people are getting married and affairs are the norm, our laws are retarded and city itself is riddled with depression. sex and alcohol. Our suicidal rates are one the highest and if you don't day dream about an escape, your already dead inside.
Funny and interesting
Very original plot. A very funny take on bureaucracy, political correctness and the nanny state gone overboard.
Takes itself too seriously towards the end, and ultimately the plot drifts, but some screamingly funny moments along the way.
Takes itself too seriously towards the end, and ultimately the plot drifts, but some screamingly funny moments along the way.
People who were coddled as kids won't like it, but everyone observant will see the critique of the PC and paternalistic trends in Quebec
This film is amazingly well done in its subtlety. The direct portrayal of ultra woke and paternalistic government bureaucracies that have hold in Canada is just painfully true. Moreover the less direct but even more pointed portrayal of resistance to it in the lead character's fantasy and alternate life is is just wonderfully subtle.
Did you know
- TriviaCanada's Official Submission to the Best Foreign Language Film Category of the 80th Annual Academy Awards (2008).
- ConnectionsFeatures L'odyssée d'Alice Tremblay (2002)
- SoundtracksDu Moment Qu'on Aime
(from "Zemire et Azor")
Music by André-Ernest-Modeste Grétry (uncredited) and French text by Jean François Marmontel (uncredited)
Performed by Rufus Wainwright
- How long is Days of Darkness?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,491,525
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $277,949
- Dec 9, 2007
- Gross worldwide
- $3,416,328
- Runtime
- 1h 44m(104 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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