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Bluebeard

Original title: Barbe bleue
  • 2009
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Bluebeard (2009)
Based on Charles Perrault's grisly fairytale, Bluebeard tells the story of young Marie-Catherine, child bride to an aristocratic ogre with a reputation for murdering his wives. Princess Marie-Catherine must employ all her cunning to outwit her husband and escape a potentially unpleasant fate.
Play trailer1:53
1 Video
42 Photos
DramaFantasyRomance

An adaptation of the classic tale of a wealthy aristocrat with a blue beard.An adaptation of the classic tale of a wealthy aristocrat with a blue beard.An adaptation of the classic tale of a wealthy aristocrat with a blue beard.

  • Director
    • Catherine Breillat
  • Writers
    • Charles Perrault
    • Catherine Breillat
  • Stars
    • Dominique Thomas
    • Lola Créton
    • Daphné Baiwir
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Catherine Breillat
    • Writers
      • Charles Perrault
      • Catherine Breillat
    • Stars
      • Dominique Thomas
      • Lola Créton
      • Daphné Baiwir
    • 23User reviews
    • 54Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Blue Beard
    Trailer 1:53
    Blue Beard

    Photos41

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Dominique Thomas
    Dominique Thomas
    • Barbe Bleue…
    Lola Créton
    Lola Créton
    • Marie-Catherine
    • (as Lola Creton)
    Daphné Baiwir
    Daphné Baiwir
    • Anne
    • (as Daphné Baïwir)
    Marilou Lopes-Benites
    • Catherine
    Lola Giovannetti
    • Marie-Anne
    Farida Khelfa
    • Mère supérieure
    Isabelle Lapouge
    • La mère
    Suzanne Foulquier
    • Soeur Barbe
    Laure Lapeyre
    • Ida
    Luc Bailly
    • Le minot
    Adrien Ledoux
    • L'émissaire de Barbe Bleue
    Jacques Triau
    • L'Evêque
    Jean Bourlot
    • Le cocher
    Rose-Line Fric
    • La couturière
    Christian Urbain
    • Le créancier
    Jean-Pierre Beaussoleil
    • L'huissier
    Martine Doutey
    • La dame riche
    Annick Orvain
    • La cuisinière
    • Director
      • Catherine Breillat
    • Writers
      • Charles Perrault
      • Catherine Breillat
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.31.6K
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    Featured reviews

    10howard.schumann

    Full of terror and untold beauty

    Infused with a sumptuous elegance, Catherine Breillat's eerie retelling of the Charles Perrault fairytale Bluebeard is very sensual and highly stylized while adhering to an almost literary interpretation of the story. Shown at the Vancouver Film Festival, the film operates on parallel levels, both involving two sisters. In the first story, two young sisters play in the attic of their home in France in the present time. Catherine, who according to Breillat's autobiographical material, represents the director, plays power games with her older but more withdrawn sister Marie-Anne by tormenting her with readings of the classic horror story "Bluebeard".

    While young Catherine is reading the story, the drama plays out on the screen in a setting that looks like the 16th century. Another pair of sisters Anne (Daphne Baiwir) and Marie-Catherine (Lola Créton) (note the similarity in names) receive sad news at a convent from a coldly unfeeling Mother Superior that their father was killed while trying to save a little girl. Without means to continue at their private school, the girls are unceremoniously thrown out. On the way home, they pass Bluebeard's Castle and comment on the local aristocrat who, rumor has it, married many wives who strangely disappeared.

    It is not long until the corpulent Bluebeard (Dominique Thomas) begins to court the young and attractive Marie-Catherine. Without money for a dowry, Marie-Catherine, undaunted by the whispers, agrees to marry the wealthy Bluebeard. The film then moves back and forth between the two stories, with the younger girls' reading and commenting on the fairytale providing comic relief for the heavy drama of male power and female sexual awareness unfolding at the castle. Marie-Catherine seems to have charmed Bluebeard who appears loving but whose intimidating frame towers over the slender virgin.

    Marie has, however, cannily set things up in her favor. She has chosen for herself a room so small that the hefty Bluebeard cannot enter but she can tiptoe down the hall and peek into the room where he is getting undressed. When he goes away on an unspecified trip, Marie-Catherine invites her sister Anne to the house and they have much fun but Marie is sad until her new husband returns home one month later. Before leaving on his second trip, however, he gives his wife a key to a mysterious room in the cellar with the impossible instruction not to open the door. Frightened of disobeying her husband but tantalized by the secret, Marie-Catherine unlocks the mystery chamber only to be confronted by her worst fears and the story plays out in Breillat's provocative and unpredictable fashion.

    Bluebeard's setting immerses the audience in a world that is far removed from today's realities, yet teenage newcomer Lola Créton gives Marie-Catherine a playful confidence and pride to go along with her natural purity and innocence in a way that speaks to today's feminist sensibilities. Going backwards and forwards in time also highlights the universal qualities inherent in the Gothic fairy tales that, even when they are decidedly dark as in this case, have a lot to teach us about confronting our fears, lessons often hidden by the pandering of Walt Disney animation. Resonant with wit and sexual tension, Catherine Breillat has, in Bluebeard reestablished the reality of the world of children both full of terror and untold beauty and, in the process, has created a minor masterpiece.
    6lastliberal

    Many interpretations

    I felt like I was attending a Riannesance Faire with all the costumes and dancing and people eating without utensils. It was a beautiful movie in that regard.

    I wonder at the significance of Bluebeard's clothing. He wore a robe at one time that had IHS on the back, and another time, he seemed to be wearing a stole over his clothing like a priest saying Mass. A disparagement at the patriarchal Catholic Church?

    But, that aside, the film which is really two stories in one, is a feminist telling of the Bluebeard story. In both stories, we see a highly patriarchal society, where women are an afterthought. The rules of men must be obeyed.

    It is left up to the viewer to determine if things resolved themselves satisfactorily. A bow to Salome in one story, and wish fulfillment in sibling rivalry in another.

    It is not your usual Catherine Breillat film. A PG rating would probably be stretching it, only for the blood.
    2absentpresence

    very bad

    I was curious about a new adaptation of this classic story. After all, there is nothing like a good old story to sustain a movie. As i watched, i was more and more surprised. I kept wondering how can a film maker do such a bad job and let it out for the public to see... I tried to give it a chance, hoping that it will improve, but i was too optimistic. I wouldn't want to criticize something to the point of convincing others to avoid it, but in this case it felt like a civic duty. To put it briefly, bad scenario, awful dialogues, unremarkable camera work, unbelievably bad cinema; a pittiful adaptation. I'm sorry to say such bad stuff about other people's work. I'm sure they didn't want to do a bad job, but sometimes that's how things go. Wish them better luck next time. OK now. Time to forget this disappointment. Don't waste time on this one.
    adi-cat

    Boy... what a bore!

    I can't tell you how disappointed and bored I was while watching this movie.

    I kept hoping with all my heart that it will pick up its feet at some point and start delivering some feeling, magic, action or whatever. But alas, that was all in vain.

    It keeps the same slooooooow pace from start to end, the actors keep showing the same inexpressive faces and delivering the same emotionless dialogs.

    That is when they bother to speak. In the rest of the time they keep staring in some more or less distant point for quite long periods (I suppose it's meant to show us how deep they feel or think).

    I don't know how the book ends... but the end of the movie looked pretty fuzzy and stupid to me.

    You're never told why Blue Beard did all those horrible things or how did the little girl managed to escape.

    The only good things in this movie were the costumes and locations, I guess.

    All in all, if you expect some bit of fairy-tale, of magic, of fantasy or anything at all which would glue you to the chair in front of the screen, I think you'll be pretty disappointed.
    5briggsgarland

    Decent film but pales in comparison to Breillat's other work

    When I think of Catherine Breillat, I think of Fat Girl, Romance and Anatomy of Hell. Films that delve deep into the complex issues surrounding gender with an unabashedly confident auteur at the helm. Films that had an almost bland style but contained strong performances and incendiary ideas.

    Barbe Bleue is a decent film, has some nice visuals (coupled with some really sloppy cinematography) and is pretty good for a made-for-TV movie. Viewers familiar with Breillat's other work, however, will definitely be disappointed.

    Long story short, don't see this film. If you're looking for a French period piece, see Queen Margot or Cyrano de Bergerac. If you're a Breillat fan hoping this will be a return to form, you will unfortunately be quite disappointed.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Fantasy
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Goofs
      When Marie-Catherine is saying her goodbyes to her father's corpse, you can clearly see his chest rising and falling with each breath.
    • Connections
      Version of Bluebeard (1901)
    • Soundtracks
      Kyrié Eleïsson
      Performed by the Limousin Youth Choir with the direction of Annette Petit

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 1, 2010 (South Korea)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official site
      • Flach film (France)
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Blue Beard
    • Filming locations
      • Limousin, France
    • Production companies
      • Flach Film
      • CB Films
      • ARTE
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,400,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $33,490
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $8,370
      • Mar 28, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $38,696
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 20m(80 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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