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The Blue Room

Original title: La chambre bleue
  • 2014
  • R
  • 1h 16m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
The Blue Room (2014)
Trailer for The Blue Room w/ English subtitles
Play trailer1:33
2 Videos
16 Photos
CrimeDramaMysteryRomanceThriller

In their blue hotel room, a clandestine couple of two married lovers plan an impossible future, as death shutters their already frail tranquillity. Now, the noose tightens more and more arou... Read allIn their blue hotel room, a clandestine couple of two married lovers plan an impossible future, as death shutters their already frail tranquillity. Now, the noose tightens more and more around innocents and sinners; but, was there a crime?In their blue hotel room, a clandestine couple of two married lovers plan an impossible future, as death shutters their already frail tranquillity. Now, the noose tightens more and more around innocents and sinners; but, was there a crime?

  • Director
    • Mathieu Amalric
  • Writers
    • Stéphanie Cléau
    • Mathieu Amalric
    • Georges Simenon
  • Stars
    • Mathieu Amalric
    • Léa Drucker
    • Stéphanie Cléau
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    3.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mathieu Amalric
    • Writers
      • Stéphanie Cléau
      • Mathieu Amalric
      • Georges Simenon
    • Stars
      • Mathieu Amalric
      • Léa Drucker
      • Stéphanie Cléau
    • 26User reviews
    • 105Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 5 nominations total

    Videos2

    The Blue Room
    Trailer 1:33
    The Blue Room
    U.S. Trailer
    Trailer 1:33
    U.S. Trailer
    U.S. Trailer
    Trailer 1:33
    U.S. Trailer

    Photos15

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Mathieu Amalric
    Mathieu Amalric
    • Julien Gahyde
    Léa Drucker
    Léa Drucker
    • Delphine Gahyde
    Stéphanie Cléau
    Stéphanie Cléau
    • Esther Despierre
    Laurent Poitrenaux
    • Le juge d'instruction
    Serge Bozon
    • Le gendarme
    Blutch
    • Le psychologue
    Mona Jaffart
    • Suzanne Gahyde
    Véronique Alain
    • La mère de Nicolas
    Paul Kramer
    • L'avocat de Julien
    Alain Fraitag
    • L'avocat d'Esther
    Christelle Pichon
    • La greffière du juge
    Mustapha Abourachid
    Mustapha Abourachid
    • Le brigadier
    Olivier Mauvezin
    • Nicolas Despierre
    Alexandre Patoyt
    • Le postier
    Henri Cherel
    • L'hôtelier
    Tonio Chanca
    • Gendarme
    Jean-Yves Cresenville
    • Gendarme
    Nicolas Beliard
    • L'agriculteur en panne
    • Director
      • Mathieu Amalric
    • Writers
      • Stéphanie Cléau
      • Mathieu Amalric
      • Georges Simenon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    6.33.9K
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    Featured reviews

    Vincentiu

    cold

    not an ordinary adaptation. the spirit of many contemporary French films. Mathieu Amalric using same tools to build his character. a Simenon in different manner. a cold film about relationship and decisions, about guilty and events who has a strange touching manner to surprise the viewer not for evolution of events but for the attitudes of characters. a film of silence and guilty out of facts. because it preserves the Greek mark of destiny, the poetry of things, the emotions as a kind of fog. nothing clear, each detail as part of a sort of ambiguity and slow rhythm of events. a film with a specific target who could seems be boring for many. but useful with few drops of patience. and with a crumb of interest for Simenon universe.
    7The_late_Buddy_Ryan

    Too much backstory gets thrown out with the bathwater?

    Mathieu Amalric isn't one to shy away from a risky project—has anybody seen the film where he plays a shrink and Benicio Del Toro's a Blackfoot WWII vet with PTSD? Here he and his real-life partner, Stéphanie Cléau, co-star in a stripped-down 75' adaptation of a Simenon story of erotic obsession and justice gone awry. The fine performances and the film's time-shuffling structure help maintain a high level of suspense at least past the halfway mark, though it seems to me that Amalric and Cléau, who also wrote the script, might have thrown a little too much of Simenon's backstory out with the bathwater.

    The plodding inquiry that begins even before we know a crime has been committed certainly explains Julien's (MA's character's) air of glum fatalism through the second half of the film, but the script's intense focus on the two lovers doesn't prepare us for the final courtroom scene, in which a character we've barely seen before steps into the spotlight. (I'm planning to watch again to test the hypothesis, suggested by some online reviewers, that the crime the protags are charged with was committed by someone else…)

    The courtroom scene has a nightmarish quality, like one of Hitchcock's "wrong man" films; the trial itself seems like an open-mic session where gossipy townsfolk step up to air their gripes about the defendants—one witness dismisses Julien's stylish modernist house as a "crappy little shack." There's certainly a disconnect between Simenon's view of blind, blundering justice and our own no doubt idealized police procedurals and courtroom dramas; I agree with other reviewers that Julien would have excellent grounds for appeal on the basis of blatant judicial bias and ineffective counsel.
    8perica-43151

    Toxic femininity, French way, meets Gallic judicial incompetence in this realistic and stylistic piece

    This is a story from which one can see how desperately poor French justice system is. Their policemen are notori ous, but potential for injustice is even worse. In a small French village provincial town, a couple unsuccessfully tries to hide their affair. A family man is caught into adultery in a leg-web by cold and predatory female lover who had a crush on him since high school, but because of the rigid class system he never approached her. She contorts a way to get him between her spread legs (expl icitly shown several times), and replace her unloved but well off dying husband. She is married into pharmacy, and when a husband dies it is unclear if foul play is at play. But her mother in law has no doubts and decides to avenge her offspring by poisoning his son wife lover's family via convenient fact that they get plum jam from her. Weather the depiction of the obnoxiously unjust and plain stup id court and investigation system of France is realistic (and yes, it is that horrible, if not even more so, especially if you are a minority, and police is even worse), this is a stylistic attempt to say something about passion and such things. But toxic femininity - French way, wins the day, and a confused male victim, who is not manly enough to counter the horrible forces of female venom in all its editions, gets destroyed. His leggy lover, guilty or not (point a bit moot) fares better, as in her feminine mind she won them a life together as lifetime jailbirds if not lovebirds. Horrible - if only for a system, that convicts based on close to zero evidence, maximum prejudice and Gallic investigative incompetence, is an insult to intelligence - but in France, incompetence and arrogance go hand in hand together with a solid web of sensationalistic tabloid press and trial by ordeal level of judicial primi tivism. In addition, French provincialism has not changed much from the time of "The Raven", brilliant portrayal of true French mentality that remains unchanged at least from their glorious Vichy days circa 1943.
    6aaskillz69

    Solid picture that's unfortunately was going to go unseen

    "Life is different from when you live it to when you look back at it"

    -Julien

    I first heard of this picture when it was selected to be a part of the Cannes Film Festival. I was curious to see what the buzz would be since the film was directed by Mathieu Amalric, a French actor I very much admire and I found to be very underrated. This was not his first shot at directing since I believe this is actually his fourth or third picture. The buzz that eventually came was good and I was interested to see it since it had been recently released in theaters near me.

    The Blue Room is Directed by Mathieu Amalric and it stars Mathieu Amalric, Léa Drucker and Stéphanie Cléau. "A man and a woman, secretly in love, alone in a room. They desire each other, want each other, and even bite each other. In the afterglow, they share a few sweet nothings. At least the man seemed to believe they were nothing. Now under investigation by the police and the courts, what is he accused of?"

    I was interested, curious to see what this film was all about, still I had my expectations low, which opened room for surprise. I got to say that the film was indeed a little surprise, it didn't at all disappoint. It's a modest, even if tidy little picture that's unexpectedly inventive in its film-making and narrative/storytelling choices.

    This is one of those films that the grand majority wont see, even major film buffs, and I do think that that is a shame, because although far from being a knockout, it is still worth your watch. This small, tight tiny 75 minute picture is an adaptation of a novel by Georges Simenon, a novel of the same name. Simenon would probably be impressed with the run-time since the man could write novels in only a few weeks.

    It's small film, that never really aspires to be anything bigger, I did think that I lacked a little bit of ambition and when the film ends we don't feel totally fulfilled mainly also because we don't see much of the point in this story. "So what" is probably going to be the reaction of many going out of the theater, and others will undeniably be thrown out by an unconventional way of storytelling, which made things a bit confusing at times but all the more engaging, fresh and exciting as an whole. It's a film that will probably disappoint bigger audiences (those who even get to see it), since it's a film with a high level of ambiguity and it has disorienting story-telling, you will leave with little answers, or no answers at all. The film focuses on the ambiguity and interpretation of memory, actions and intentions.

    I left with the theater with little answers and I did get the feeling of "So What" when the credits start to roll but still I got to say that I did enjoy myself. Amalric beautifully constructs and puts together this film, honoring its source material. We are kept in two different times and spaces during the film, first inside Julien's head and his memories, or at least his perception and we also get to see things from the future, where he is in jail and being questioned about his love affair with an old friend from high- school who is now his lover. What did the man do? Are we seeing the memories of a murder? Is he guilty of whatever he is being charged with? Those questions keep going through our heads as we soon start to find more and more meandering pieces of this jigsaw who's eventually left undone.

    The acting is also excellent. Mathieu Amalric leads his own cast and he's as always fantastic. Is this the face of a killer? Is he innocent? Great display of talent once again, he doesn't either give easy answers in the directing or in the acting, effective and powerful though. We believe for every second his on screen, that that guy is really there and we believe in his existence. The supporting cast is also very good, nothing too showy but they do their jobs. Amalric is really the man to be applauded, he directs, acts and adapts the source material, all with little or no flaws at all. I applaud is boldness and creativity when it came to storytelling and putting the film together in the editing room. It is successful as a modest suspense picture and as a drama, it fails a bit because it feels a bit too tame, small and it ultimately doesn't leave a big mark on you, even though I wont forget it soon.

    Rating:B-
    7paul-allaer

    "Imagine what our days could be like..."

    The Blue Room" (2014 release from France; 76 min.) brings the story of a man and a woman. As the movie opens, we hear the moans and whispers of a couple making love. Turns out to be Julie and Delphine. Pretty soon we come to understand that they are married, but not to each other. Delphine whispers to Julien: "Imagine what our days could be like, if we ran away". Little does she know what is to come... Just a few minutes into the movie, we then jump to the present day, where Julien is being interrogated at the police station, but we don't know why. To tell you more of the movie's plot would surely spoil your viewing experience, you'll just have to see for yourself how it all plays out.

    Couple of comments: first, this movie is based on the book of the same name by famed Belgian crime writer Georges Simeon (he died some 25 years ago). This prolific author has written dozens and dozens of crime novels, and many have been made into a movie. (I grew up in Belgium in the 70s, and he had the reputation of a giant.) Second, this movie is very much a labor of love for French actor Mathieu Amalric, who not only plays the lead role of Julien, but also directed the movie. Third, as the movie started out, I thought that this might be a "Fatal Attraction"-type movie, but as it turns out this is very much a police and court drama. A huge chunk of the movie plays out in the interrogations at the police station, even though it is interwoven with plenty of flashbacks as to what exactly happened. For those of you not familiar with the continental European criminal justice system, you will be in for a few extra surprises, as the differences with the American criminal justice system are profound. Also noteworthy is the very unusual screen ratio (almost but not quite 1:1). Last but not least, there is an outstanding orchestral score to the movie, composed by Gregoire Hetzel, and I only wish it was used more extensively in the movie (there are long sections where no score is used).

    "The Blue Room" opened without any pre-release hype or fanfare at my local art-house theater here in Cincinnati in late October/early November (it only played a week). The early evening screening where I saw this at was not well attended (less than 10 people) but frankly I was surprised there were even that many people for this. Bottom line: I thought that "The Blue Room" was a nice change of pace from the crime dramas that we are used to in the US. If you like French movies with lots of talking and not much 'action' per se, I'd readily recommend you check this out.

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    Related interests

    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      First and, as of 2023, only film appearance for Mona Jaffart.
    • Alternate versions
      Remake of the Spanish-language film "The Blue Room" (original title: La habitación azul), 2002.
    • Connections
      References Pacific Rim (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Chaconne - Partita for Violin No.2 (BWV 1004)
      Written by Johann Sebastian Bach (as Bach)

      Transcribed for piano by Ferruccio Busoni (as Busoni)

      Performed by Itamar Golan

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 17, 2014 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Official site
      • Official site (United States)
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • El cuarto azul
    • Filming locations
      • Les Sables-d'Olonne, Vendée, France(vacations by the sea)
    • Production companies
      • Alfama Films
      • ARTE
      • Arte France Cinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $254,666
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $21,809
      • Oct 5, 2014
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,232,900
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 16m(76 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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