Saint Amour
Saint Amour
| 02 March 2016 (USA)
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Every year, Bruno makes a tour of all the wine stands, without setting foot outside the Show’s premises and without ever finishing his wine trail. This year, his father suggests they finish it together, but a real wine trail, across the French countryside. Accompanied by Mike, a young, quirky taxi driver, they set off in the direction of France’s major wine regions. Together, they are going to discover not only the wine trails, but also the road that leads back to Love.

Reviews
Ehirerapp

Waste of time

Blucher

One of the worst movies I've ever seen

Baseshment

I like movies that are aware of what they are selling... without [any] greater aspirations than to make people laugh and that's it.

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SteinMo

What a freaking movie. So many twists and turns. Absolutely intense from start to finish.

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LKazan

An appealing cast, yet not Gérard Depardieu at his best; who could blame him for delivering here the impression that he is bored? Vincent Lacoste is given such an insignificant role that we might as well have done without him. Andréa Ferréol shows up in a pleasant sequence, yet so very shortly. Solène Rigot, soon forgotten, gives a glimpse that she is really worth a much better part. Benoît Poelvoorde's eccentric and yet very human figure is the only one to stand up (so to speak) throughout a poor script leaving such a feeling of bad taste and totally missed opportunities: the theme of father and son, the problems facing the agricultural world – such a basic aspect of public health –, not to mention the wine-producing tradition as a deep part of French culture...

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Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)

"Saint Amour" is a French/Belgian co-production from this year that resulted in a French-language film. This 100-minute movie was written and directed by Benoît Delépine and Gustave Kervern. The former is a prolific filmmaker and has worked in the industry for decades while the latter is more of a professional actor, but also not a rookie at all when it comes to movie-making. The two stars here are of course Gérard Depardieu and Benoît Poelvoorde, two of France's most known and most successful actors for a while now. They are joined by Vincent Lacoste, but sadly I must say he really just felt like a filler for the most part and his story-lines about his virginity, his girlfriend/wife etc. added very little to the story in terms of memorable content. So maybe he just was in it for the sake of making this longer than 100 minutes. But it's not a problem of the actor, more a problem of the script in general as there were many other weaknesses too and I would also refer this to the general plot idea. No matter how much the two big stars were trying, the references about the father-son relationship were never really as touching or well done as I hoped they would be. That's why I would say that the film was only partially successful from a dramatic perspective. I liked the parts with Depardieu's character's late wife (voiced by Yolande Moreau). They may have been slightly generic, but I thought nonetheless that Depardieu did what he had to do to make the material work. Poelvoorde is decent too and these two definitely elevate the weak material, but not to an extent where I would say this was a great (or even good) film. Sadly, the film, after a solid start, turns into a journey of sexual experiences for everybody involved and none of it felt really realistic or that it made sense at all at times, like the foursome relationship at the very end in the attempts to get the woman pregnant. This actually reminded me of a pretty bad Gottschalk comedy from several decades earlier. And I never understood why father and son were suddenly so close with the driver. It did not feel authentic to me. Only because they were having sex with the same woman? Anyway, pay attention to the filmmakers' clumsy attempts of making the women not look like whores throughout the entire movie as really all their ambitions are about getting to bed with our "heroes". Completely aside from that, the part about alcoholism also felt pretty incomplete. But maybe it was this film's general idea, to deliver a portrayal of how things were at that very point and not to offer solutions, but then they should have picked another ending. Final note: Solène Rigot is as bright and shining as she always is and I am convinced she will turn into one of French cinema's big stars in the coming years. As for her film here, I sadly cannot give a thumbs-up. It's really only worth checking out for the biggest Depardieu/Poelvoorde fans.

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Bunuelisto

So many beautiful metaphors despite having a French manufacture (really realist, dirty), just the Directors signature in fact.Three generations, kind of lying to themselves on love, meet on road-trip with wine as a way to approach each other, The trio (Depardieu, Poelvoorde, Lacoste) turns out to go back to roads they have already know in acting sometimes. Nevertheless the alchemy between each other seems to be natural and joyful.The farmer tragedy encounters the new urban generation with both the same issue.But a hint: you will get out with a radiant smile

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Cinefill1

-Saint-Amour is a 2016 French-Belgian comedy-drama film directed by Benoît Delépine and Gustave de Kervern.--Plot:-The story of a father and a son, farmers, whose relationships are conflictual. In an attempt to forge a new complicity, they go on the wine trail, with a Parisian taxi, crossed at the exit of the Agricultural Fair.--Cast:• Gérard Depardieu as Jean • Benoît Poelvoorde as Bruno • Céline Sallette as Venus • Vincent Lacoste as Mike • Chiara Mastroianni • Ana Girardot • Andréa Ferréol • Michel Houellebecq • Izïa Higelin • Yolande Moreau as Jean's Wife • Gustave Kervern as The Uncle • Ovidie as The realtor • Solène Rigot • Xavier Mathieu • Yvonne Gradelet

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