• Rick Burin

    ★★★★★ Watched by Rick Burin 29 Dec, 2012

    Jeunet’s follow-up to the incomparable Amélie is a transcendent romance, a complex mystery (with no shortage of whimsy) and a chilling evocation of the horror and futility of war, as Mathilde (Audrey Tautou) searches for her fiancé, one of five soldiers sentenced to death for desertion at Bingo Crépuscule three years earlier. It’s an extraordinarily successful melding of apparently incompatible moods and genres, full of vividly-drawn supporting characters (Marion Cotillard’s vengeful prostitute, Jodie Foster’s selfless wife) and featuring one of…

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  • Jehanzeb Jehangiri

    ★★★★½ Added by Jehanzeb Jehangiri

    Brilliant, Awesome and toching.
    The movie has everything love, tragedy and redemption. Shot in the scenic france and the dreadful days of world war II. The movie is both moving and emotional.
    The story is the strong point which is helped by the talented talents of Audey Tatau. She shines like a star and her brightness engulfs the film beautifully.
    I would recommend this movie to everyone specially the ones who need to find hope.

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  • anne_f_

    ★★★★ Watched by anne_f_ 22 May, 2008

    Un long dimanche de fiançailles
    "Mathilde refuses to believe that her soldier fiancé died after being sent to die in No Mans' Land as punishment for self-mutilation during WW1, and sets out on an obsessive search for him. The film makes very effective use of flashbacks to tell the story, and has an extremely powerful depiction of the utter barbarity of trench warfare."

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  • Jonathan Arnold

    ★★★½ Watched by Jonathan Arnold 31 Dec, 2005

    A Very Long Engagement is the 2004 film from the Amelie crew, including director Jean-Pierre Jeunet and actress Audrey Tautou. It concerns a young fiance's search for answers after word gets back her lover has been lost at the front. It elegantly captures the ugliness of World War One's trench warfare, yet is curiously uninvolving after the mystery is solved.

    As the movie opens, we see four men being marched along a trench, ankle deep in water as the rain…

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  • cbowns

    ★★★★½ Added by cbowns

    A complex and winding plot that's a challenge to follow, great actors and actresses, and a sweet story that's not overdone. I really liked this.

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  • Beatrice Folque

    ★★★ Watched by Beatrice Folque 18 May, 2013

    Well , it's a bit confusing . there are lots of names and characters but it's still a beautiful film

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  • Shomanjo

    ★★★ Watched by Shomanjo 30 Mar, 2013

    An interesting take on a post WW1 "Widow" looking for her husband to be, whom she believes to still be alive, but in hiding. Through tracking all throughout Paris, she manages to locate and converse with war survivors and friends of, whom help her to piece together her fiancee's last days in the field. Surprisingly well shot, with beautiful shots of France, incredibly realistic war scenes, and a great soundtrack. Also, a surprise guest appearance by Jodie Foster, who seems…

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  • saraboggio

    ★★★ Added by saraboggio

    Jodie Foster. Look for her.

    A cute love story.

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  • Rake

    ★★★★★ Added by Rake

    Flawless piece of cinema. Should be the benchmark by which all film are measured. Just ridiculously brilliant.

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  • Rachel

    ★★★★ Watched by Rachel 14 Dec, 2012

    A very long movie, but beautiful nonetheless. Couldn't stop thinking about it for days afterwards.

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  • sferay

    ★★ Watched by sferay 22 Dec, 2012

    Trop bavard, trop long, trop de clichés...
    Une belle palette d'acteurs, mais qui récitent des dialogues beaucoup trop littéraires. Je ne recommande pas spécialement.

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  • Ben Trout

    ★★★ Watched by Ben Trout 25 Jul, 2005

    If you'd never seen Amelie, the argument could be made that these two films are interchangeable; I probably wouldn't support the argument, though. Though it was comforting to read, somewhere, that even Jeunet got confused by the whole thing as he was making it, A Very Long Engagement aptly overstays its own welcome, cramming three movies' worth of information into just one (but not as deftly as Amelie did, unfortunately). Working better if you interpret it as something along the…

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