A Very Long Engagement

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The film is set in France near the end of World War I in the deadly trenches of the Somme, in the gilded Parisien halls of power, and in the modest home of an indomitable provincial girl. It tells the story of this young woman's relentless, moving and sometimes comic search for her fiancé, who has disappeared. He is one of five French soldiers believed to have been court-martialed under mysterious circumstances and pushed out of an allied trench into an almost-certain death in no-man's land. (official distributor synopsis)

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Marigold 

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English I like the special atmosphere of the rotting decadence of the trenches of the First World War and the visual rendering by J. P. Jeunet is one of the best... excellent camera work, clear management of mass scenes and nice color filters. The battle sequence are just filler for the detective-love mosaic, which is again drawn only by the cute Audrey Tautou, who always uses her big eyes and smile. I was very satisfied with the chosen tone, which is relatively close to the bitter-unserious melodrama from Amelie, but in this film with enhanced undertones of the drama. The overlong engagements offer a rather interesting story, essentially tolerable main character and excellent visual processing, which only confirms the selected abilities of Jeunet's creative vision. I can't say that a melodramatic trip to the depths of war would get to me so deeply, but it slipped softly under over my skin...meaning that it stroked me pleasantly. I like it. ()

gudaulin 

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English Jeunet is one of my longtime favorite directors, as his directing style based on playfulness and visuality suits me, and I generously disregard the unfinished storytelling. However, A Very Long Engagement does not require such generosity. Besides Amelie, this is his most audience-friendly film. Even here, Jeunet's fans can expect the usual colorful filters, playful scenes, detours, and quirks. However, they are subordinate to their purpose, namely to highlight the anti-war focus of the film about the search for a groom lost in the whirlwind of trench warfare. It is evident that the film was made by an acclaimed director who no longer has to laboriously gather resources for the realization of his ideas or convince stars to participate in his project. Jeunet's faithful collaborators appear again, such as the indispensable Pinon or Rufus, but also international star Jodie Foster, and they all act flawlessly. Audrey Tautou, whom Jeunet tested out in Amelie, delivers the second most remarkable performance of her career as a girl searching for her loved one. Jeunet knows how to shoot action scenes his way, so they differ from other filmmakers who shoot war films. I have to give the film the highest rating, especially for the field hospital destruction scene, when Jeunet manages to gradually increase tension second by second as the airstrike bomb slowly penetrates the roof. Overall impression: 90%. ()

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POMO 

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English In terms of imagery, A Very Long Engagement is beautiful screenwriting chaos with excessive camera filters, fantastically beautiful sets and the extreme contrast between the cruelty of war and the tenderness of love. Its powerful, interesting scenes are offset by superficial kitschiness and music-video-style masturbation. A few passages had me on the edge of my seat (the airship), a few caressed my soul (the blowing-out of matches) and one shot transported me to the clouds (circling around the lighthouse in the opposite direction of the girls running around it). But I gave up watching the storyline after the first half hour. The director’s hectic storytelling, quick editing and constantly moving camera seem very contradictory in such a tranquil genre. Not to mention the later uncovering of connections with initially unclear and needlessly confusing scenes. After all, this isn’t supposed to be a sophisticated movie, for god’s sake! But I still liked it very much for its life energy and positivity. ()

Kaka 

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English It is all too evident how Jean-Pierre Jeunet strives to elevate the content to the level of the form, but he does not succeed. He alternates between a gray-black camera filter, which adds rawness to the war scenes, and a yellowish one, but unlike the war scenes, which I would compare to Saving Private Ryan, the romance did not impress me at all. Also the story is unnecessarily convoluted and often muddled. ()

Othello 

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English A Very Long Engagement battles with a script that is maddeningly overstretched and doesn't build much, as the heroine keeps running into newer and newer dead ends, and any further clues to her quest of bringing her closer to the fate of her lover come to her in rather unexpected leaps and bounds. There is also a struggle with the source material quite evident here in how the plot sometimes blurs into something that may have been important in the book, but that adds an extra unnecessary layer in a film that already has such a complicated structure. The obsessive-compulsive disorder of the protagonist in particular took the brunt of it here. The script's limitations, on the other hand, held promise for me in terms of how Jeunet handles them, or rather, how he chooses to visually mask them. And I was not disappointed this time either. After his international success with Amélie, the director was pretty flush with cash, which is evident in virtually every scene. Jeunet isn't suggesting big events here, but he has the means to show them; and yet it's up to him what he considers 'big events'. So, while we're winking wistfully at a wartime showdown with dozens of extras, perfect sets, and special effects, our chins drop when we get to, say, the post-war marketplace scene, the treatment of which already borders on the manic grandeur of Heaven's Gate, and the camera handles it all in a single take that goes from panning to a facial close-up over the course of a five-minute bit of dialogue. It manages to salvage even the relatively futile dialogue by setting it in a surprising setting, cracking jokes in its blackest moments, and functionally linking the entire rather flimsy structure of the tragic story with running jokes. If you're familiar with Jeunet's previous films, recall the director's mindset from those. It's present throughout Engagement as well, but it's not as aggressive; however, if you get on his wavelength from the beginning of the film, it will make more sense. ()

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