My Afternoons with Margueritte
My Afternoons with Margueritte | |
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Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Jean Becker |
Produced by | Louis Becker Gérard Depardieu |
Screenplay by | Jean Becker Jean-Loup Dabadie |
Story by | Amélie Bérard Marie-Sabine Roger (book) |
Starring | Gérard Depardieu Gisèle Casadesus Claire Maurier Maurane François-Xavier Demaison |
Music by | Laurent Voulzy |
Cinematography | Arthur Cloquet |
Edited by | Jacques Witta |
Production
company |
ICE3
K.J.B. Production |
Distributed by | StudioCanal |
Release dates
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Running time
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82 minutes |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Budget | $8.3 million |
Box office | $14.2 million[1] |
My Afternoons with Margueritte (French: La Tête en friche) is a 2010 French film directed by Jean Becker, based on the book of the same name by Marie-Sabine Roger. It stars Gérard Depardieu, Gisèle Casadesus, Claire Maurier, Maurane, and François-Xavier Demaison. The film tells the story of an illiterate man who bonds with an older, well-read woman.[2]
Contents
Plot
Germain is a 45-year-old illiterate handyman who has not had much luck in his life so far. He was bullied at school, both by the teacher and the other pupils because he was a slow reader. His mother never gave him love and affection, and kept reminding him that he was clumsy and an unwanted child, the result of fling at the French national holiday. But he ks loyal, with a good heart, and still parks his trailer close to her house where he maintains his lovely vegetable garden. He earns some extra money by taking his vegetables to the weekly farmer's market, in the truck borrowed from the bar where he relaxes every day with his friends, joking and chatting. His girl friend Annette is a younger woman who drives the local bus, and very much in love with this sweet, simple and loving man.
One afternoon Germain meets Margueritte, a delicate 95-year-old lady who sits on the same bench to feed the 19 pigeons that he has observed so often that he knows them by sight and has given them names. She is highly educated, a scientist who has traveled the world with the World Health Organization and now spends her life reading in the genteel retirement home in this small town. They connect over a text from The Plague by Albert Camus, but because Germain is barely literate Margueritte starts to read the book aloud to him. Slowly he starts to appreciate the beauty of words and sentences and books because he is a good listener and he has a vivid imagination. The symbolism Camus uses in this philosophical novel leads Germain to expand his horizon, making him think as never before. The pair meet every day to continue their reading sessions. A friendship develops that is healing for both, enabling Germain to face the frustrations he silently carries with him. She continues to read to him, and eventually Margueritte gives him her old dictionary. In it he tries to find words that he's interested in, but because he can't spell he find the dictionary too frustrating and decides to return it when he has agreed to come over to Margueritte's retirement home for tea. She tells him that her eyesight is gradually fading due to macular degeneration, and that she will soon no longer be able to walk unassisted. Germain decides to reverse roles and try to read to her, but first he must improve his reading skills. With Annette's support he learns to read a story aloud to Margueritte. Shortly thereafter, Germain’s mother dies. Despite his mother's bad attitude toward him all his life, he is still distraught when he finds her dead. At the notary he discovers that his mother owns the house he has always thought she was renting, and a sizeable fortune she has worked hard to earn, intended to bequeat that to him but never telling him about that. Meanwhile, Annette announces her pregnancy to Germain, who has wondered about the wisdom to have children because he does not want then to grow up with a good-for-nother father, but Annette tells him not to worry: he can give love. When Margueritte suddenly leaves her retirement home because her nephew and niece can no longer supplement the costs, and is put into a downscale retirement home in Flanders, Belgium, she has left only her dictionary for Germain. Germain traces her down and brings her with him to his house. On the way home, Germain reads a poem he has written about what Margueritte has done for him:[3]
- It's not a typical love affair
- But "love" and "tenderness"
- Both are there
- Named after a daisy
- She lived amidst words
- Surrounded by adjectives
- In green fields of verbs
- Some force you to yield
- But she with soft art
- Passed through my hard shield
- And into my heart
- Not always are love stories
- Just made of love
- Sometimes
- Love is not named
- But it's love just the same...
- This is no typical love affair
- I met her on a bench in my local square
- She made a little stir, tiny like a bird
- With her gentle feathers
- She was surrounded by words
- Some as common as myself
- She gave me books, two or three
- Their pages have come alive for me
- Don't die now,
- You've still time, just wait
- It's not the hour, my little flower
- Give me some more of you
- More of the life in you
- Wait...
- Not always are love stories
- Just made of love
- Sometimes love is not named
- But it's love just the same.[4]
Cast
- Gérard Depardieu as Germain Chazes
- Gisèle Casadesus as Margueritte
- Claire Maurier as Jacqueline
- Maurane as Francine
- François-Xavier Demaison as Gardini
- Anne Le Guernec as Jacqueline
- Amandine Chauveau as Jacqueline
- Sophie Guillemin as Annette
- Florian Yven as Germain
- Patrick Bouchitey as Landremont
- Régis Laspalès as M. Bayle
- Jean-François Stévenin as Joseph
- Lyes Salem as Youssef
- Matthieu Dahan as Julien
- Bruno Ricci as Marco
- Mélanie Bernier as Stéphanie
References
- ↑ http://www.jpbox-office.com/fichfilm.php?id=11301
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ La tête en friche. (n.d.). Retrieved September 9, 2013, from Wikipedia website: fr:La Tête en friche[better source needed]
- ↑ 1900, C. J. (n.d.). 玛格丽特午后的小诗[A poem from My afternoons with Margueritte]. Retrieved December 19, 2013, from Douban website: http://www.douban.com/note/321962738/