Release Date Café de Flore Nov 2, 2012 Limited
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Actors For Café de Flore
Vanessa Paradis,Kevin Parent,Hélène Florent,Evelyne Brochu,Martin Gerrier,Alice Dubois,Evelyne De La Cheneliere,Michel Dumont,Linda Smith,Joanny Corbeil-Picher,Rosalie Fortier,Michel Laperrière,Caroline Bal,Nicolas Marie,Pascal Elso,Jerome Kircher,Claire Vernet,Manon Balthazard,??mile Vallée,Chanel FontaineGenres Café de Flore : Art House & International,Drama
Visitor Ranting & Critics For Café de Flore
User Ranting Café de Flore : 3.8User Percentage For Café de Flore : 76 %
User Count Like for Café de Flore : 3,532
All Critics Ranting For Café de Flore : 6.4
All Critics Count For Café de Flore : 51
All Critics Percentage For Café de Flore : 63 %
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Movie Overview For Café de Flore
Two stories of love and responsibility separated by four decades have a common link in this drama from writer and director Jean-Marc Vallee. In 2011, Antoine has a life most people would envy -- he's a successful club DJ living in Montreal with an international following, he has a beautiful girlfriend Rose, and is raising two healthy daughters. However, Rose is not Antoine's first love, and he's still infatuated with his ex-wife Carole, the mother of his children. Carole hopes he'll someday return to her, though despite his feelings there's little evidence to suggest he will. In 1969, Jacqueline is a single mother who is raising a seven-year-old son Laurent. Laurent was born with Down's Syndrome, and is not expected to live past 25; Jacqueline is determined to do whatever she can for her boy during the time he has, but as the stress of these demands take their toll, we learn that she and Carole share a special connection.TagLine Café de Flore
Trailer For Café de Flore
Review For Café de Flore
A forgettable film.Jeff Shannon-Seattle Times
It's terribly long and repetitive for so delicately dreamy a diptych, and at times the modern-day story feels like little more than a drawn-out apologia for the wandering male gaze.
Robert Abele-Los Angeles Times
Goes from intriguing to irritating.
Kyle Smith-New York Post
Feels less like a movie than like a cinematic jigsaw puzzle whose agitation undermines the very continuity it wants to portray.
Stephen Holden-New York Times
Decade-hopping metaphysical romance descends into overwrought histrionics.
Neil Young-Hollywood Reporter
This mushy, mystical French-Canadian melodrama tries to make parallel a pair of love stories: one between preteens with Down syndrome in 1969 Paris, and the second between a Quebecois DJ and his new amour some 40 years later.
Brian Miller-Village Voice
Café de Flore very much floored me and its enigmatic charm continued to weasel its way into my mind long after it was over.
Glenn Dunks-Trespass
An intriguingly unconventional drama that revels in dreamy interludes, stream-of-consciousness montages and weighty drama - but that never lives up to its stylistic promise.
Mike Scott-Times-Picayune
The cumulative effect is more tedious than profound.
Todd Jorgenson-Cinemalogue.com
As abstract as the film is in theory, it is brought together with the conclusiveness of finishing a puzzle with no missing pieces.
Gabrielle Lipton-Paste Magazine
Affectionate, sexy, thought-provoking, devastating, beautiful, bittersweet, life-affirming... Cafe de Flore is all that, and more. See it, listen to it, believe it.
Staci Layne Wilson-StaciWilson.com
Jean-Marc Vallée deploys a pretty sweeping arsenal of clichés in shoving his camera through the characters' streams of consciousness.
Steve Macfarlane-Slant Magazine
A moving drama about how love is refined through troubles in the lives of a devoted mother in 1969 Paris and a middle-aged man in 2011 Montreal.
Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat-Spirituality and Practice
Acting and soundtrack are spot-on but the frequent jump-cuts and lack of a compelling comparison between families work against the film's success.
Harvey S. Karten-Compuserve
An overlong film that half works.
Jim Schembri-3AW
A well-acted, visually arresting and artfully structured romantic endeavour.
Liam Maguren-Flicks.co.nz
Think of a fusion of The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, Crash, The Lovely Bones and The Tree of Life.
Graham Young-Birmingham Post
Haunting and heartbreaking, director Jean-Marc Vallée's romantic drama is an electrifying multilayered experience.
Alan Jones-Radio Times
The double-barrelled plot demonstrates great imagination. It's a shame that it amounts to so little.
Donald Clarke-Irish Times
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