Emmanuelle Beart Movie:

La Buche



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Emmanuelle Beart Movie:
La Buche



Movie
La Buche
La Buche
List Price: $14.98Label: Fox Lorber

Salesrank: 43746

Released: May 21, 2002
Our Price: $16.97
Used Price: $6.74
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Color
  • Dolby
  • DVD
  • Letterboxed
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Sabine Azéma
  • Emmanuelle Béart
  • Charlotte Gainsbourg
  • Claude Rich
  • Françoise Fabian
  • Editorial Review:
    Acclaimed screenwriter Danièle Thompson (Cousin, Cousine) makes her directorial debut with this smart comedy about a dysfunctional family thrown together at Christmastime. weblinks, ROM recipe, interview with Director, subtitle control

    La Buche Reviews:
    La Bûche: Finding Holiday Cheer in Family Dysfunction. 4 Star Review
    2008-11-07 - La Bûche (Season's Beatings) is a charming 1999 French comedy by director and screenwriter Danièle Thompson. Thompson is known for her films, Cousin, cousine, Jet Lag, and Avenue Montaigne. Her directorial debut, La Bûche stars Sabine Azéma, Emmanuelle Béart, and Charlotte Gainsbourg, who play three grown daughters who conspire to reunite their divorced parents, who haven't spoken to each other for fifteen years. Set over four eventful days before Christmas, the film is a witty mix of holiday nostalgia and family dysfunction. The eldest daughter, Louba (Azéma) lives with their father Stanislas (Claude Rich), sings bohemian songs at a Russian restaurant, and is having an affair with a married man, Gilbert (Jean-Pierre Darroussin). She unexpectedly discovers she is pregnant at age 42. Sonia (Béart) is financially successful, bourgeois, tightly-wound woman in the midst of a divorce. Milla (Gainsbourg), the youngest, is acerbic and lonesome. They associate Christmas with their parents' divorce. The film features a musical score by Michel Legrand, and earned Charlotte Gainsbourg a César Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role.

    G. Merritt

    A French 'Hannah & Her Sisters' 3 Star Review
    2008-03-05 - This little known but charming movie is an ensemble piece and very French in its eccentric characters, twists, turns and coincidences. We see sibling rivalry and friction, but the story tells us that we may not know the people most close to us and that life can be constantly surprising. Another surprise is to see these accomplished actresses play against type.

    Terrbile 1 Star Review
    2007-07-09 - This movie is about cheating husbands and wives. It's a great holiday film (sarcasm). My time is more important than to spend it watching losers on film. Can I give it zero stars?

    "Three Sisters" celebrate Christmas in Paris or Anton Chekhov would've smiled: 4 Star Review
    2007-03-17 -
    Three sisters, the Parisians with the sweet Russian names, Sonya, Lyuba and Milla and their parents who have been divorced for 25 years but still have a lot to say to each other are in the center of this charming, clever, funny, touching and poignant dramedy that takes place one year in Paris from December 20 till Christmas Eve. It will start with the funeral and it will end with the Christmas party in which all members of this dysfunctional family participate but many events will happen before the party, important decisions will be taken, life-changing revelations will occur and all of it with the background of incredible Paris decorated for Christmas and the sound of beloved Christmas songs and some unforgettable Russian and Jewish songs. Danièle Thompson directed a marvelous movie for which she and her son Christian (who also stars) wrote a script. Three beautiful and talented actresses play the sisters. Sabine Azéma is Lyuba, the older of the three (the songs that she performes in a Russian cabaret almost reduce me to tears), Emmanuelle Béart is Sonya, the only one of the sisters who seems to have found happiness in her picture perfect family life but there is more than meets the eye. Charlotte Gainsbourg (the daughter of Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin, a very talented young actress whom I like in everything I've seen her) is Milla, the youngest sister, a brilliant computer programmer, the rebel and the loner who spends all her time at work.

    9/10



    My favorite holiday movie for modern times! 5 Star Review
    2005-02-01 - The first time I watched "La Buche," was a few days before Christmas in 2000, when I was not able to visit the family for Christmas. I saw it with a French friend who was not able to go home either. It is an absolutely delightul French movie about the pressures associated with the holiday season, with thought -provoking characters. Much of it will make you laugh, but I hestitate to define it as a comedy, because the term implies a simplicity which the film exceeds by including many dramatic aspects of life; chief of these are questions of identity, what makes us happy in life, and who are family and what are they for.


    The core of the plot is members of a family spending the Christmas together, who have not shared a Christams celeration in many years. La Buche refers to a type of Christmas cake often eaten in France during Christmas. For the unititiated, the French please excuse my description, it resembles a large Liitle Debbie Swiss roll. The characters of the film, like family life, are full of unexpected surprises.

    Yvette, mother of the family is grieving from the loss of her second husband, and the film opens at a funeral. Her deceased husband was a musician, as was her first husband. The person may have died but it seems that the jealousy lives on. The father of the family, Stanislas, is the mother's first husband. He usually spends the Christmas alone with his favorite daughter, Milla, believing that it should not be an stessful time for him because he is Jewish, trying unsuccesfully each year to avoid the pressure associated with the holiday and its memories of its painful past, such as when he left his life in Russia behind as an child immigrant with no possesions. This year he takes a different approach to Christmas, due to a near death experience, the recent widowhood of Yvette, and determination to make amends for mistakes from his past.

    Neither parent was a perfect spouse, but the children (who are grown adults) have varying perceptions of who is the better person. There are three daughters: Milla views her mother with contempt, Sonia faults the father, and Louba seems equally devoted to both.

    Sonia and Milla seem the epitome of success; one with an apparently ideal marriage and family, one with a thriving career. The other daughter, Louba, appears to be the least ambitous and successful in life. But what really constitutes ideas like ambition, success, and happiness? How should these values to be qualified? What guarantees do we have for stability in life in our pursuit or implementation of such qualities? Apparently, one of Stanislas' most cherished Christmas meories was when as a poor child he received one simple toy, and the gift of a safe place to spend the night.

    In addition to the traditional family, there is Joseph a boarder to whom Stanislas rents his former music studio, and who has a young child from a preivous marriage and despearately wants to spend Christmas with her. Joseph rushes Stanislas to the hospital and saves his life; a service which makes the daughters curous to learn more about him and his life.

    To delve too much into explaining the characers of the film, gives away much of the film's surprises that make it so enjoyable. In true form to good characterization, no one is exactly whom they first appear to be, and learning who they really are is the best part of the viewing experience.

    There is much stress during the holiday season to pretend that life is working out according to plans and that you are happy, because it is a time for celebration. Even those who are not formally religious experience this pressure during the holiday season.

    This movie examines that phenomena and makes you feel that you are not an anomaly for feeling tension associated with encountering family during that time fo the year. By the end of the film, you feel it is okay to admit the problems that pretension of perfection exerts on your life, even if it is Christmas. In fact, the film teaches that the ability to share your imperfections and sorrows, as well as your hidden aspirations is part of what constitutes a family, and exercising this ability cements your familial relations for the better. Despite the gravity of the charaters' problems and conflicts, this is ultimately a great feel-good film, that can be enjoyed at any time of the year.











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