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Changing Times (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:41
Fresh:26
Rotten:15
Average Rating:6.6/10
Consensus: A restless mix of cultural and emotional turmoil provides the backdrop for this exhilarating and uncomfortable story about the consistancy of long lost love.
Theatrical Release:Jul 14, 2006 Limited
Box Office: $178,065
Synopsis: Antoine (Gérard Depardieu) has arrived in Tangiers from Europe. He is a French engineer assigned to oversee the construction of a major media center, the future home of a television network that... Antoine (Gérard Depardieu) has arrived in Tangiers from Europe. He is a French engineer assigned to oversee the construction of a major media center, the future home of a television network that will rival Al Jazeera in the Arab world. While this is a monumental undertaking, the real reason that Antoine took the assignment is to re-establish contact with his first love, Cécile (Catherine Deneuve), who he has quietly and faithfully loved for over thirty years. He instructs his local assistant, Nabilla, to anonymously send Cécile roses every day. Cécile now lives in Tangiers with her husband Nathan (Gilbert Melki), a Moroccan doctor from Casablanca several years her junior, and she hosts an evening radio show, introducing love songs and reading romantic dedications. Their son, Sami (Malik Zidi), arrives from Paris with his partner, Nadia (Lubna Azabal), and her 9-year-old son, Said. Nadia, who is originally from Morocco, hopes to stay with her twin sister, Aicha (also Lubna Azabal), but when Aicha fails to show at the airport, she reluctantly agrees to stay at Cécile’s house. Less than thrilled to have unexpected guests for an undetermined stay, Cécile steals herself against struggles familiar and new. Antoine spies Cécile at a supermarket, and admires her from afar. When she suddenly walks toward him, he runs for the exit, not noticing the intervening glass wall. Nose bloodied and humiliated before his lost love, he is aided by an attentive and unsuspecting Nathan. When they finally speak at the hospital, Cécile reminisces with Antoine and half-heartedly promises to have him over for dinner. Determined to make Cécile fall in love with him all over again, Antoine approaches Nabilla for information on the native magic spells, and she reluctantly gives him an instructional video to watch. To Cécile’s surprise and displeasure, Antoine appears at her doorstep one afternoon. He socializes with Nathan, who then volunteers Cécile’s services to help Antoine find a house for his extended stay. Before leaving, Antoine enters their bedroom and surreptitiously slips an old photo between the struts of Cécile’s bed. A few days later, while driving Antoine to see a seaside villa, her car breaks down. They decide to walk the rest of the way, during which they finally discuss their relationship and the past. Meanwhile, Sami has rekindled an affair with his Moroccan boyfriend Bilal (Nadem Rachati), now working as a groundskeeper on a lavish estate. Nadia stays at home with Said and grows despondent over Aicha’s refusal to see her. Aicha, who works long hours at McDonald’s to support her family and is a devout Muslim, fears the consequences of re-connecting with her westernized sister. Antoine runs into Nathan in a casino, and they discuss his romantic feelings for Cécile. Unthreatened, Nathan talks about Cécile’s previous marriage and of his own extra-marital affairs. Completely discouraged, Antoine backs off from his pursuit. Anxious to have the project completed, he visits the construction site during a slow Sunday and absent-mindedly examines some excavation work. A horrible mudslide starts and he is, in effect, buried alive. Antoine falls into a coma, and Cécile becomes his daily visitor at the hospital. Day by day she hopes for the best... -- © Koch Lorber Films [More]
Starring: Catherine Deneuve, Gerard Depardieu, Gilbert Melki, Malik Zidi
Starring: Catherine Deneuve, Gerard Depardieu, Gilbert Melki, Malik Zidi, Lubna Azabal, Tanya Lopert, Nabila Baraka
Director: André Téchiné
Director: André Téchiné
Story: André Téchiné, Pascal Bonitzer
Screenwriter: Laurent Guyot, Andrucha Waddington
Studio: Koch Lorber Films
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Reviews for Changing Times
Here, the times are changing and so is the plot. In fact, you can expect a mood swing every five minutes, in a story so muddled even the strong cast, including Gerard Depardieu and Catherine Deneuve, can't save it.
An interesting film experience, as much because of its chaotic narrative as in spite of it.
Téchiné...is back in form with this engrossing tale of the inconvenient passions that bubble beneath the surface among people who have accepted bourgeois compromise.
French director Andre Techine sketches a family with the usual flaws, but takes the unusual step of not fixing them.
Techine is so intrigued by the dramatic differences between the sisters that you might not even notice they are the same actress.
Hardly at their charismatic best, the two unquestionably international stars, however, are the raison d'etre for the film.
There's a greater range of emotional complexity in a single close-up from Changing Times than there is in all of Caché.
The two icons [Deneuve and Depardieu] remain an extraordinary combination.
This willfully slippery movie seems to make the case both for mixing it up and sticking to your own kind. Which is all of a piece with the sensibility of this wonderfully ambiguous filmmaker, a visionary of our changing times.
Frenchman Techine proves again that he's a master of crafting seemingly ordinary events into a unique and exilarating world, and he's greatly helped by his superlative actors, Gerard Depardieu and Catherine Deneuve (in her fourth film with him).
The movie is burdened by several other, far-less compelling subplots that compete for our attention.
A strange and oddly touching tale about a man's yearning to reconnect with his first love of 30 years ago.
Considering the possibilities for passion, the pic comes across as arid as the Moroccan desert.
The ending is both shamelessly clichéd and -- for Cecile -- out of character.
Techine would have been better off ditching the supporting characters altogether and focusing on the relationship between Antoine and Cecile.
[Techine is] intelligent and intuitive, getting up close to his characters and snatching glimpses of their souls with only the tiniest effort.
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