Cafe de Flore (2012)

Cafe de Flore
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Strong sex scenes and themes

Director: Jean-Marc Vallee
Actors: Vanessa Paradis, Kevin Parent, Helene Florent, Evelyne Brochu, Marin Gerrier

A love story between a man and woman. And between a mother and her son. A mystical and fantastical odyssey on love. FRENCH LANGUAGE WITH ENGLISH SUBTITLES

DVD
Status: Normal
Run time: 120mins
Origin: FRANCE
Aspect Ratio: 16:9
Run to Paradis
by Richard Haridy,

Cafe de Flore is an audacious yet occasionally impenetrable romantic drama from French-Canadian director Jean-Marc Valée, best known for his 2005 debut C.R.A.Z.Y. With this, his third feature, Valée presents us with a challenging, bifurcated film that, while not always successful, is a remarkable attempt at something wholly original. Cafe de Flore tells two superficially unrelated stories: Antoine (Kevin Parent) is a DJ living in modern day Montreal with his two daughters and girlfriend Rose (Evelyne Brochu). Antoine is ostensibly happy yet struggling with his recent decision to leave his wife of 20 years, Carole (Hélène Florent), for the younger Rose. Meanwhile in 1960s Paris, we follow single mother Jacqueline (Vanessa Paradis) as she defiantly tries to raise her Down Syndrome son, Laur...

Cafe de Flore is an audacious yet occasionally impenetrable romantic drama from French-Canadian director Jean-Marc Valée, best known for his 2005 debut C.R.A.Z.Y. With this, his third feature, Valée presents us with a challenging, bifurcated film that, while not always successful, is a remarkable attempt at something wholly original.

Cafe de Flore tells two superficially unrelated stories: Antoine (Kevin Parent) is a DJ living in modern day Montreal with his two daughters and girlfriend Rose (Evelyne Brochu). Antoine is ostensibly happy yet struggling with his recent decision to leave his wife of 20 years, Carole (Hélène Florent), for the younger Rose. Meanwhile in 1960s Paris, we follow single mother Jacqueline (Vanessa Paradis) as she defiantly tries to raise her Down Syndrome son, Laurent (Marin Gerrier).

Valée drapes his film in an impressionistic blur that at times borders on pretension, like a contrived blend of Terrence Malick and Gaspar Noe, but as he slowly connects – thematically and spiritually – the two stories, Cafe de Flore becomes immensely fascinating. Props, colours, and musical motifs start to bleed between the two stories as the his bold conceit becomes clear. You may not ultimately agree with Valée's big spiritual pay off (it may be interpreted as a mere excuse for a middle-aged man to have an affair) but it's undeniably gripping, creative, and brash cinema.

Technically the movie is marvellous with an assuredly impeccable grasp of visual detail. Pierre Cottereau's photography is florid yet precise, peppering the frame with blink-and-you'll-miss-it details that greatly add to the half-remembered, elusive nature. Vanessa Paradis is also amazing, bringing true joy and sensitivity to her heart-breaking role as mother of the handicapped child.

Cafe de Flore will easily frustrate many viewers with its wilful obtuseness and its unearned, contrived climax, but Jean-Marc Valée has mostly succeeded in making a truly original and modern picture that incorporates music into its texture in truly sophisticated ways. Watching Cafe de Flore often feels like you're flicking through a stranger's photo album while playing a mystery mix-tape. It can be an alienating and hermetic experience at times but the boldness of the enterprise is impossible to ignore.

4/5

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Run to Paradis
by Richard Haridy,

Cafe de Flore is an audacious yet occasionally impenetrable romantic drama from French-Canadian director Jean-Marc Valée, best known for his 2005 debut C.R.A.Z.Y. With this, his third feature, Valée presents us with a challenging, bifurcated film that, while not always successful, is a remarkable attempt at something wholly original. Cafe de Flore tells two superficially unrelated stories: Antoine (Kevin Parent) is a DJ living in modern day Montreal with his two daughters and girlfriend Rose (Evelyne Brochu). Antoine is ostensibly happy yet struggling with his recent decision to leave his wife of 20 years, Carole (Hélène Florent), for the younger Rose. Meanwhile in 1960s Paris, we follow single mother Jacqueline (Vanessa Paradis) as she defiantly tries to raise her Down Syndrome son, Laur...

Cafe de Flore is an audacious yet occasionally impenetrable romantic drama from French-Canadian director Jean-Marc Valée, best known for his 2005 debut C.R.A.Z.Y. With this, his third feature, Valée presents us with a challenging, bifurcated film that, while not always successful, is a remarkable attempt at something wholly original.

Cafe de Flore tells two superficially unrelated stories: Antoine (Kevin Parent) is a DJ living in modern day Montreal with his two daughters and girlfriend Rose (Evelyne Brochu). Antoine is ostensibly happy yet struggling with his recent decision to leave his wife of 20 years, Carole (Hélène Florent), for the younger Rose. Meanwhile in 1960s Paris, we follow single mother Jacqueline (Vanessa Paradis) as she defiantly tries to raise her Down Syndrome son, Laurent (Marin Gerrier).

Valée drapes his film in an impressionistic blur that at times borders on pretension, like a contrived blend of Terrence Malick and Gaspar Noe, but as he slowly connects – thematically and spiritually – the two stories, Cafe de Flore becomes immensely fascinating. Props, colours, and musical motifs start to bleed between the two stories as the his bold conceit becomes clear. You may not ultimately agree with Valée's big spiritual pay off (it may be interpreted as a mere excuse for a middle-aged man to have an affair) but it's undeniably gripping, creative, and brash cinema.

Technically the movie is marvellous with an assuredly impeccable grasp of visual detail. Pierre Cottereau's photography is florid yet precise, peppering the frame with blink-and-you'll-miss-it details that greatly add to the half-remembered, elusive nature. Vanessa Paradis is also amazing, bringing true joy and sensitivity to her heart-breaking role as mother of the handicapped child.

Cafe de Flore will easily frustrate many viewers with its wilful obtuseness and its unearned, contrived climax, but Jean-Marc Valée has mostly succeeded in making a truly original and modern picture that incorporates music into its texture in truly sophisticated ways. Watching Cafe de Flore often feels like you're flicking through a stranger's photo album while playing a mystery mix-tape. It can be an alienating and hermetic experience at times but the boldness of the enterprise is impossible to ignore.

4/5

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Member Reviews (14)

14 Member Reviews
says
Deep and particularly well acted and produced
Posted Sunday, 10 March 2013 See my other reviews
Jan
says
Fascinating story, great acting!
Posted Wednesday, 6 March 2013 See my other reviews
Tulla
says
Thought provoking, well crafted, evocative, well worth watching
Posted Tuesday, 26 February 2013 See my other reviews
Kevin Virgen
says
Needed a magnifying glass to see the sub titles . Cleary the worst movie i've seen in along time & it kept on stalling. Bin it.
Posted Tuesday, 19 February 2013 See my other reviews
Jane chapman
says
Intriguing movie with unexpected denouement and themes.
Posted Wednesday, 13 February 2013 See my other reviews
hb_douglas
says
A bit too hard going for me.
Posted Friday, 1 February 2013 See my other reviews
RachG
says
Such a hauntingly beautiful movie... Quite intense well worth the view
Posted Saturday, 26 January 2013 See my other reviews
paul o
says
The acting,the directing and production were really good.Worth a watch.
Posted Saturday, 19 January 2013 See my other reviews
says
Intriguing film. Well acted and original. Definitely worth seeing.
Posted Monday, 31 December 2012 See my other reviews
says
I thought this was boring. I didn't watch it till the end.
Posted Friday, 21 December 2012 See my other reviews
says
The 1960's sections are some of the best mother and son acting ever brought to screen. A stunning film which takes the viewer into the matters of family,love and hope. It won't please everyone but our family loved it. The themes will stay with you long after the credits roll. Another brave film from the french cinema.
Posted Saturday, 1 December 2012 See my other reviews
di
says
enjoyed the movie, well acted.
Posted Wednesday, 21 November 2012 See my other reviews
gerd
says
A quite ridiculous movie. Separately, the two stories being told are interesting and have innovative and emotionally intense scenes. But trying to link them with bright lights and spiritual mumbo-jumbo is just absurd.
Posted Sunday, 14 October 2012 See my other reviews
Phil
says
A 2 hours of total boredom made in France.
Posted Friday, 14 September 2012 See my other reviews