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Movies / On DVD / Love Me If You Dare
Love Me If You Dare

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Love Me If You Dare (2004)

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Reviews Counted:77

Fresh:34

Rotten:43

Average Rating:5.2/10

Consensus: The romantic leads are too obnoxious and self-centered to generate interest or sympathy.

Rated: R [See Full Rating] for language and some sexuality

Runtime: 1 hr 33 mins

Genre: Dramas

Theatrical Release:May 21, 2004 Limited

Box Office: $449,282

Synopsis: When Yann Samuell began to write LOVE ME IF YOU DARE, he had only thing in mind: a love story, because, he says “I needed a love story.” What began quite simply, turned into an unforeseen... When Yann Samuell began to write LOVE ME IF YOU DARE, he had only thing in mind: a love story, because, he says “I needed a love story.” What began quite simply, turned into an unforeseen creative adventure. “The entire story of Sophie and Julien came to me quite suddenly all in one afternoon, though it had been building up for years,” Samuell explains. “All I knew in the beginning is that I wanted to make a movie about love, games and the search for a never-ending childhood – and that I wanted it to take place in a mythical setting where everything would be larger than life. I also had the idea of writing a romantic comedy with the structure of an ancient Greek tragedy, where the characters are prisoners of their destinies. So the story came to me all in that one day, but I then wrote 25 versions of the script over the next two years, adding more and more layers.” What emerged in the end is part ultra-modern cartoon fairy-tale, part bold psychological probe into the games we play in life and love. The tale starts, as many classic fairytales do, with two unhappy children. Julien is endlessly energetic and precociously brilliant, but unable to bear the impending heartbreak of his beloved mother’s death. Sophie is wildly imaginative, mischievous and determined to be different, yet in search of someone to accept and love her. When they meet one another, everything changes. They begin what seems to be a child’s momentary amusement. Every time they exchange a symbolic tin box (a gift to Julien from his mother), the one who takes the toy also has to take a dare. The pranks they force one another to play range from talking dirty in class to crashing a wedding buffet – cake included - but each one becomes a little bigger, a little more irreverent, a little riskier than the last. Soon, the game has become something far larger and more thrilling than the sad and disappointing world around them. Despite the constant trouble they get into, Julien and Sophie cannot stop the game’s mad, wild and often destructive rush. When Julien’s mother passes away, leaving him bereft, the game is the only thing that continues to matter. Even when they go off to college, the game continues, progressing into more difficult, bizarre and often crueler challenges, each and every new dare seemingly a way for Julien and Sophie to drive one another further away, to avoid admitting they are crazily in love with one another. The harder they compete with one another, the less they are able to communicate their emotions. When they finally reach adulthood – Julien growing more serious, Sophie even more of a libertine -- the uncompromising, child-like nature of the game comes into question. Now Julien and Sophie must choose between the game and their careers, between the game and their spouses-to-be, between the game and the conventions of everyday life. Yet . . . how can they resist? Just when they think it’s all over and life has become banal, the game is afoot again, and they realize they want it to go on and on, without end. It might have taken them a lifetime to say “I love you” but Julien and Sophie manage in their own inimitable style to capture the moment forever…or do they? For Yann Samuell, Julien and Sophie’s surreal game is the very essence of love, which can be at once playful and freeing, while also filled with lunacy and destruction. He also sees it as a story of two people searching for a kind of pure and primal freedom beyond the structures of banal, everyday existence. “I see the story as being about two people who dare to live a life different than what is expected of them, who don’t care what the world thinks is the correct way to behave,” he explains. “At first, I was a bit afraid that some might think I was condoning this kind of bad behavior. But it is a fantasy, a cartoon, a fairy tale, and I wanted to dare to tell this story because I think what arises from it most is a different view of the euphoria and joy to be found in life.” As a study of game-playing in all its facets – light and dark – the film is also a reflection of how the intense ecstasies and fantasies of childhood haunt us, tempt us and call to us in our adult lives, even as we face mature relationships and grown-up ambitions. “I had in mind the Nietzsche quote in which he says: ‘man’s maturity is to regain the seriousness he had as a child at play,’” says the director. “I adore childhood, but that being said, I don’t think there’s very much else we take more seriously in the world than sharing love. I don’t believe Sophie and Julien suffer from the ‘Peter Pan Syndrome,’ as Americans say. They don’t remain children forever. They take on their lives. It’s just that they try to keep the game alive throughout.” Does the game ultimately destroy or save its players? Samuell concludes his film on a surprising, poetic note – a literal concretizing of his character’s feelings as they are solidified in a moment of pure bliss -- that lends itself to multiple interpretations, from the romantic to the tragic. He explains the way he sees it: “Julien and Sophie’s story ends in a sort of grand finale in which love and death appear to be united. Do they really die? I don’t know! I think of the end as not so much a death as another stage, another test of their love. Their goal is to be together forever, and in some sense they find a happiness without end. But you can see this in different ways: if you want to see it as a tragedy, it is a tragedy, and if you want to see it as a happy ending, it is that, too.” -- © Paramount Classics [More]

Starring: Marion Cotillard, Guillaume Canet, Thibault Verhaeghe, Josephine Lebas-Joly

Starring: Marion Cotillard, Guillaume Canet, Thibault Verhaeghe, Josephine Lebas-Joly, Gerard Watkins, Emmanuelle Gronvold

Director: Yann Samuell

Director: Yann Samuell
Screenwriter: Jacky Cukier, Yann Samuell
Producer: Christophe Rossignon
Composer: Philippe Rombi
Studio: Paramount Pictures

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Release:

Oct 19, 2004

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Reviews for Love Me If You Dare

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1 - 20 (sorted by source)
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A concoction that contains nothing recognizable from the lives of real people and no recognizable truth.

Full Review Source: AboutFilm.com | comment Comment
05/01/04
Carlo Cavagna
Carlo Cavagna
AboutFilm.com

Melds the magic of childhood memories with the pain of unrequited love.

Full Review Source: Arizona Republic | comment Comment
06/17/04
Bill Muller
Bill Muller
Arizona Republic
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

There's an outlaw fascination in watching two people for whom going too far is never far enough.

Full Review Source: Atlanta Journal-Constitution | comment Comment
06/10/04
Eleanor Ringel Gillespie
Eleanor Ringel Gillespie
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Austin Chronicle | comment Comment
06/13/04
Kimberly Jones
Kimberly Jones
Austin Chronicle

Provides an enjoyable ride, even if style wins out over substance.

Full Review Source: BBC | comment Comment
06/15/04
Tom Dawson
Tom Dawson
BBC

Someday, when Samuell finds something to say, he may make a great movie. For now, he's only playing games.

Full Review Source: Boston Globe | comment Comment
05/28/04
Ty Burr
Ty Burr
Boston Globe
N/R

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Boston Phoenix | comment Comment
03/02/05
Boston Phoenix

Gag me with a croque monsieur.

Full Review Source: Boulder Weekly | comment Comment
06/25/04
Thomas Delapa
Thomas Delapa
Boulder Weekly

The director's flights of cinematic fancy sometimes seem, like each of the lovers' antics, to be amusing primarily to himself.

Full Review Source: Boxoffice Magazine | comment Comment
05/23/04
Kim Williamson
Kim Williamson
Boxoffice Magazine

Strangely frustrating, because Julien and Sophie choose misery and obsession as a lifestyle, and push far beyond reason.

Full Review Source: Chicago Sun-Times | comment Comment
05/28/04
Roger Ebert
Roger Ebert
Chicago Sun-Times
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

It's a pitch-black, Grimm Brothers-style fable that enchants, frustrates and ultimately dares you to love it. Even if you don't, you'll be riveted.

Full Review Source: Chicago Tribune | comment Comment
05/27/04
Robert K. Elder
Robert K. Elder
Chicago Tribune

Much of the style strains too hard to be cute, but true romantics may shed copious tears of sympathy and empathy.

Full Review Source: Christian Science Monitor | comment Comment
05/20/04
David Sterritt
David Sterritt
Christian Science Monitor

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Cinema Signals | comment Comment
05/29/04
Jules Brenner
Jules Brenner
Cinema Signals
N/R

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Combustible Celluloid | comment Comment
05/26/06
Jeffrey M. Anderson
Jeffrey M. Anderson
Combustible Celluloid

Gives new ammo for those who say 'I don't play games.'

Full Review Source: Compuserve | comment Comment
05/09/04
Harvey S. Karten
Harvey S. Karten
Compuserve

The elegantly photographed, unconventional French romance was apparently intended as a valentine to individual liberation. If so, rarely has the line between individual liberation and selfish irresponsibility seemed so blurry.

Full Review Source: Dallas Morning News | comment Comment
06/03/04
Philip Wuntch
Philip Wuntch
Dallas Morning News
Top Critic Icon Top Critic
N/R

Click to read the article

Full Review Source: Deseret News, Salt Lake City | comment Comment
07/03/04
Deseret News, Salt Lake City

The problem is, the characters eventually start to seem like a couple of idiots.

Full Review Source: Detroit News | comment Comment
06/04/04
Tom Long
Tom Long
Detroit News

The forced wackiness and whiplash-inducing camera moves owe everything to Amélie but share none of that film's bittersweet joy or charm.

Full Review Source: E! Online | comment Comment
05/21/04
E! Online

Samuell's naivety and inexperience lead to this being an uncomfortable, if intriguing, mess.

Full Review Source: Empire Magazine | comment Comment
08/19/04
Nick Dawson
Nick Dawson
Empire Magazine
 
 
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