4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- Part 3 has to be seen with Part 1 and Part 2, 29 February 2004
Author:
noralee from Queens, NY
"On the Run (Cavale)" is the first third of an engrossing experiment in
story telling that crosses "Rashomon" with a television miniseries to show
us an ensemble of intersecting characters over a couple of days to gradually
reveal the complicated truth about each.
Writer/director Lucas Belvaux uses a clever technique to communicate just
how differently the characters perceive the same situations-- they are
literally in different movies and, a la "Rules of the Game," everyone has
their reasons.
"On the Run"is a tense, fast-paced escaped con on-the-run Raoul
Walsh-feeling film, with the auteur himself playing a Humphrey Bogart-type
who can be cruel or kind; "An Amazing Couple (Un couple épatant)" is an
Ernest Lubitch-inspired laugh-out-loud comedy of mistaken communication; and
"After the Life (Après la vie)" is a Sidney Lumet-feeling gritty, conflicted
cop melodrama with seamy and tender moments.
"Time Code" experimented turning the two-dimensions of film into three with
multiple digital video screens. This trilogy is more effective in showing
us what happens as characters leave the frame. Belvaux goes beyond the
techniques used in the cancelled TV series "Boomtown" or the films of
Alejandro González Iñárritu in "Amores Perros" and "21 Grams" with their
stream-of-consciousness flashbacks character by character.
I don't see how I can deal with each film separately. Theoretically, one
can see the three movies alone or independently out of order, but that would
be like watching one episode of a series like "The Wire" or "The Sopranos"
and wondering what the big deal is. Only a handful of patrons in my theater
joined me in a one-day triple-feature; I guess the others have a better
memory than I do that they could see each film on separate days, though a
marathon does inevitably lead to some mind-wandering that could miss
important clues and revelations so this is ideal for a triple-packed DVD.
On DVD we'll be able to replay the excellent acting to see if in fact the
actors do shade their performances differently when particular scenes are
enacted from different characters' viewpoints -- are these takes from the
same staging or not? How is each subtly different that we get a different
impression each time? Or are we bringing our increasing knowledge (and
constantly changing sympathies) about each character to our impressions of
the repeating scenes?
One reason this conceit works is because of the unifying theme of obsession
- each character is so completely single-minded in their focus on one issue
that they are blind to what else is happening even as they evolve to find
catharsis. One is literally a heroin addict, but each has their
psychological addiction (revenge, co-dependence, hypochondria, jealousy).
The slow revelation technique also works because of the parallel theme of
aging and acceptance of the consequences of their actions, as some can face
how they have changed and some can't change. You need to see all three films
to learn about each character's past and conclusion, as secondary characters
in one film are thrust to the fore in another in explaining a key piece of
motivation.
The only place they really interchange is in an ironically, meaningless
political debate at the public high school they each have some tie to.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- The 3rd part of a fascinating trilogy., 23 February 2006
Author:
michel-crolais from France
Pascal Manise is a police inspector whose wife, a schoolteacher, is
under the influence of morphine. Pascal, who loves too much his wife,
buys the drug for her with Jacquillat, a local godfather who formerly
has given money to left-winger terrorist organization. Pascal, on other
hand, search Bruno le Roux, a terrorist of that organization who
escaped recently from prison and who search the man who has denounced
him to police. That man is Jacquillat and Jacquillat wants that Pascal
gives information about Bruno le Roux and for that, refuses drug for
Pascal's wife until Pascal accept this deal. Pascal's refusal has for
consequences serious withdrawal symptoms for his wife, Agnes. This
movie use the same characters that the two former parts of the trilogy
and also some sequences, but the lightning of the movie is centred
essentially on the problem of drug dependence and its consequences on
the loving husband's comportment. The movie is very well acted
especially by Dominique Blanc (Agnes, Pascal's wife) and by Gilbert
Melki (Pascal).
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- A nearly successful experience, 13 January 2003
Author:
faniouge from paris, France
This film (which can be seen as a standalone film) is part of a trilogy.
Three films, not consecutive, but parallel. Three stories, simultaneous,
with same actors, same characters. Main actors in one film are secondary
actors in the two others. There are common scenes between each movie, but
always shown in a different way, a different point of vue.
"Un couple epatant" is a comedy, with (Ornella Muti/Francois
Morel),"Cavale" is a thriller, with (Lucas Belvaux/Catherine Frot), and
"Apres la vie" is a drama, with (Gilbert Melki/Dominique Blanc).
You can see only one or two of these movies, but it is really better to see
all of them, as each one enlights some dark moments of the two others. The
supposed order is the one i used, but you can see these films in any order.
Individually speaking, the films are average (except "Apres la vie", the
best one), but globally the experience is very good and very exciting.
Apres la Vie shows what is happening physically to a drug addict woman
and what is the life is for her husband who is a sort of corrupted cop.
This is a Al-Anon typical story is the best I ever seen in this type of
drama. In the same order movies like Barfly or Leaving Las Vegas are in
the same class of movie. I recommend you to watch this movie because it
shows a lot in special type of psychologic syndrome. The sole reason to
live for the cop is bringing the substance to his wife. The thing is
that guy really doesn't know this, she's addicted since ten years all
their lives have been ruled by this injection drug.It is an instructive
movie and it is totally realistic, it will update your consciousness.
Even if it is a dark story the love that the couple is showing is very
impressive and sensitive. When the drug dependence goes to the point of
a lethal convulsion and if, by luck if you have only a criminal hand to
save your life then you will take it. In that state of miserable
situation this movie is showing an exceptional way to share a difficult
situation in a sort of opportunity. 8/10. A good drama for teachers and
students in psychology.
1 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Best of the lot, 12 September 2005
Author:
Bob Taylor (bob998@sympatico.ca) from Canada
I've just seen the trilogy on successive nights on Tele-Quebec. An
Amazing Couple, said to be a comedy, is painfully bad: there isn't a
joke worthy of the name throughout the full two hours. On The Run is
better; it's a good little thriller about a man whose obsessions lead
him to join a Baader-Meinhof-type gang. Finally, After Life is a
character study of a dedicated detective who unknowingly marries a drug
addict, then goes around desperately trying to score drugs for her.
Here the actors finally come into their own. Dominique Blanc gives one
of the best portrayals of somebody in the grip of addiction that I have
seen. Her drug behavior is integrated into her personality in a very
convincing way, not just sketched in. The overdose scene is powerful.
Her marriage and her role as teacher are suffering from her habit, and
she'll have to make a choice. Gilbert Melki shows the tenderness in his
cop character; you can believe he'd wreck his career for his wife.
1 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- A trio of films that should be seen en masse...?, 1 May 2004
Author:
Kevin O'Toole (culturedogs) from Hartford, CT, USA
Lucas Belvaux's trilogy of films is meant to be taken as one multi-faceted
unit, and is best viewed as such. The first (as I saw them), "On the Run,"
was a `thriller,' with Lucas Belvaux as a terrorist escaped from prison to
settle scores and look up an old flame (Catherine Frot). In that film,
there were the first glimpses of events in the romantic comedy, "An Amazing
Couple." The trilogy ties up with this character study (or `melodrama'),
"After the Life" ("Après la vie"), about the relationship between a pathetic
and suffering drug-addicted teacher (Dominique Blanc) and her down on his
luck and co-dependent cop husband (Gilbert Melki). The thriller was hobbled
a bit by it's involvement with the other interwoven stories, but the
romantic comedy and `melodrama' work fine as stand alones, and are even
enriched by the angles explored and explained by the other films. All three
should be seen together. Or, as a friend of mine has supposed, maybe I
should just rent Kieslowski's `Three Colors' trilogy instead ?
0 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Nice trilogy, 20 February 2003
Author:
sagedolt
I just saw all three movies and have to say that I liked them all. They
are
good each in its own way. Repeating scenes - every time from a different
point of view, the same actors and heroes but different aspects. It is
not
one story told several times. It is more of several stories (or several
lives?) entangled and inseparable from each other.
The only negative thing is that the movies are long. So long that I won't
buy them on DVD when they will be available (or will I?)
But one thing is sure: I'll go watch the next movie made by Belvaux,
whatever it might be. This guy will show me something
interesting.
1 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Interesting cinematographic experiment, 3 February 2003
Author:
Ruben Mooijman from Ghent, Belgium
Après la vie is a part of a very interesting cinematographic experiment.
The
other parts are two other films made by Lucas Belvaux: Un couple épatant
and
Cavale. The three films are set in the same city (Grenoble in the French
Alps) during the same period of time and share the same roles. The point
is,
in each of the three movies the focus is on different people. The leading
actors in one movie are the supporting actors in another one, and vice
versa. Some scenes in the movies are exactly the same, some are the same
but
filmed from a different viewpoint, and most scenes are unique to one of
the
three movies. Belvaux has chosen three different genres: a comedy (Un
couple
épatant), a drama (Après la vie) and a thriller (Cavale).
So far, so good. The experiment works: after seeing all three of the
films,
a fourth imaginary film emerges in which all the different pieces of the
puzzle come together. There is only one little problem: not all three
films
are good. The comedy is not very funny, the thriller is not very
thrilling,
and only the drama is in a way dramatic. I found Après la vie (about a
cop
who has to become corrupt because he needs dope for his drug-addicted
wife)
by far the best one out of the three. But perhaps this is because I saw
this
movie after the other two and knew the story already more or less. Cavale
was the first one I saw and, to be honest, I had trouble understanding
everything that happened (although a friend I saw the movie with had no
trouble at all). But perhaps this is an inevitable consequence of the
experiment.
So if you want to enjoy an unusual experiment, go see all three movies.
If
you think that takes too much time and costs too much money, go see Après
la
vie - a decent drama - and forget about the other two. Unless you want to
admire the breathtaking beauty of Ornella Muti: then Un couple épatant is
your best choice because she has a leading role in this movie.
0 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Drug culture, 26 February 2004
Author:
jotix100 from New York
In comparison to "An Amazing Couple", this film has a different texture, as
it deals with the realities of drug addiction. The director inserts scenes
from the previous film, as we get to see why things happened the way they
did in the second installment of this trilogy.
It is incredible to think Agnes, very nicely played by Dominique Blanc, has
been able to maintain her drug problem for more than 20 years and still keep
her job at the local high school where she teaches. Now we know: her husband
Pascal, a detective, keeps her supplied with drugs he takes from junkies and
dealers. Pascal is Agnes worst enemy because being afraid to lose her, he
maintains also a double life; not only does he not help the woman he loves,
but breaks the law in the process.
It is even more incredible when we see road blocks where people are checked
for possible drug dealing in the school where Agnes teach and where another
teacher is interrogated about the drug problem in that particular school. In
many ways this film is an eye opening in knowing to what extent drugs are
prevalent in today's society, be it in Europe, or the United
States.
Some of the material doesn't work very well. There are many unanswered
questions in this whole mess. The best thing for the film are Gilbert Melki,
as the detective that is willing to break the law and Dominique Blanc, as
the tormented Agnes.
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Après la vie (2002)
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-
Part 3 has to be seen with Part 1 and Part 2, 29 February 2004
Author: noralee from Queens, NY
"On the Run (Cavale)" is the first third of an engrossing experiment in story telling that crosses "Rashomon" with a television miniseries to show us an ensemble of intersecting characters over a couple of days to gradually reveal the complicated truth about each.
Writer/director Lucas Belvaux uses a clever technique to communicate just how differently the characters perceive the same situations-- they are literally in different movies and, a la "Rules of the Game," everyone has their reasons.
"On the Run"is a tense, fast-paced escaped con on-the-run Raoul Walsh-feeling film, with the auteur himself playing a Humphrey Bogart-type who can be cruel or kind; "An Amazing Couple (Un couple épatant)" is an Ernest Lubitch-inspired laugh-out-loud comedy of mistaken communication; and "After the Life (Après la vie)" is a Sidney Lumet-feeling gritty, conflicted cop melodrama with seamy and tender moments.
"Time Code" experimented turning the two-dimensions of film into three with multiple digital video screens. This trilogy is more effective in showing us what happens as characters leave the frame. Belvaux goes beyond the techniques used in the cancelled TV series "Boomtown" or the films of Alejandro González Iñárritu in "Amores Perros" and "21 Grams" with their stream-of-consciousness flashbacks character by character.
I don't see how I can deal with each film separately. Theoretically, one can see the three movies alone or independently out of order, but that would be like watching one episode of a series like "The Wire" or "The Sopranos" and wondering what the big deal is. Only a handful of patrons in my theater joined me in a one-day triple-feature; I guess the others have a better memory than I do that they could see each film on separate days, though a marathon does inevitably lead to some mind-wandering that could miss important clues and revelations so this is ideal for a triple-packed DVD.
On DVD we'll be able to replay the excellent acting to see if in fact the actors do shade their performances differently when particular scenes are enacted from different characters' viewpoints -- are these takes from the same staging or not? How is each subtly different that we get a different impression each time? Or are we bringing our increasing knowledge (and constantly changing sympathies) about each character to our impressions of the repeating scenes?
One reason this conceit works is because of the unifying theme of obsession - each character is so completely single-minded in their focus on one issue that they are blind to what else is happening even as they evolve to find catharsis. One is literally a heroin addict, but each has their psychological addiction (revenge, co-dependence, hypochondria, jealousy).
The slow revelation technique also works because of the parallel theme of aging and acceptance of the consequences of their actions, as some can face how they have changed and some can't change. You need to see all three films to learn about each character's past and conclusion, as secondary characters in one film are thrust to the fore in another in explaining a key piece of motivation.
The only place they really interchange is in an ironically, meaningless political debate at the public high school they each have some tie to.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

The 3rd part of a fascinating trilogy., 23 February 2006
Author: michel-crolais from France
Pascal Manise is a police inspector whose wife, a schoolteacher, is under the influence of morphine. Pascal, who loves too much his wife, buys the drug for her with Jacquillat, a local godfather who formerly has given money to left-winger terrorist organization. Pascal, on other hand, search Bruno le Roux, a terrorist of that organization who escaped recently from prison and who search the man who has denounced him to police. That man is Jacquillat and Jacquillat wants that Pascal gives information about Bruno le Roux and for that, refuses drug for Pascal's wife until Pascal accept this deal. Pascal's refusal has for consequences serious withdrawal symptoms for his wife, Agnes. This movie use the same characters that the two former parts of the trilogy and also some sequences, but the lightning of the movie is centred essentially on the problem of drug dependence and its consequences on the loving husband's comportment. The movie is very well acted especially by Dominique Blanc (Agnes, Pascal's wife) and by Gilbert Melki (Pascal).
2 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

A nearly successful experience, 13 January 2003
Author: faniouge from paris, France
This film (which can be seen as a standalone film) is part of a trilogy. Three films, not consecutive, but parallel. Three stories, simultaneous, with same actors, same characters. Main actors in one film are secondary actors in the two others. There are common scenes between each movie, but always shown in a different way, a different point of vue.
"Un couple epatant" is a comedy, with (Ornella Muti/Francois Morel),"Cavale" is a thriller, with (Lucas Belvaux/Catherine Frot), and "Apres la vie" is a drama, with (Gilbert Melki/Dominique Blanc).
You can see only one or two of these movies, but it is really better to see all of them, as each one enlights some dark moments of the two others. The supposed order is the one i used, but you can see these films in any order.
Individually speaking, the films are average (except "Apres la vie", the best one), but globally the experience is very good and very exciting.
Apres la Vie a very good Al-Anon drama, 28 August 2006

Author: Jean.Francois Belisle (jbelisle@webnet.qc.ca) from Canada
Apres la Vie shows what is happening physically to a drug addict woman and what is the life is for her husband who is a sort of corrupted cop. This is a Al-Anon typical story is the best I ever seen in this type of drama. In the same order movies like Barfly or Leaving Las Vegas are in the same class of movie. I recommend you to watch this movie because it shows a lot in special type of psychologic syndrome. The sole reason to live for the cop is bringing the substance to his wife. The thing is that guy really doesn't know this, she's addicted since ten years all their lives have been ruled by this injection drug.It is an instructive movie and it is totally realistic, it will update your consciousness. Even if it is a dark story the love that the couple is showing is very impressive and sensitive. When the drug dependence goes to the point of a lethal convulsion and if, by luck if you have only a criminal hand to save your life then you will take it. In that state of miserable situation this movie is showing an exceptional way to share a difficult situation in a sort of opportunity. 8/10. A good drama for teachers and students in psychology.
1 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

Best of the lot, 12 September 2005
Author: Bob Taylor (bob998@sympatico.ca) from Canada
I've just seen the trilogy on successive nights on Tele-Quebec. An Amazing Couple, said to be a comedy, is painfully bad: there isn't a joke worthy of the name throughout the full two hours. On The Run is better; it's a good little thriller about a man whose obsessions lead him to join a Baader-Meinhof-type gang. Finally, After Life is a character study of a dedicated detective who unknowingly marries a drug addict, then goes around desperately trying to score drugs for her.
Here the actors finally come into their own. Dominique Blanc gives one of the best portrayals of somebody in the grip of addiction that I have seen. Her drug behavior is integrated into her personality in a very convincing way, not just sketched in. The overdose scene is powerful. Her marriage and her role as teacher are suffering from her habit, and she'll have to make a choice. Gilbert Melki shows the tenderness in his cop character; you can believe he'd wreck his career for his wife.
1 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-
A trio of films that should be seen en masse...?, 1 May 2004
Author: Kevin O'Toole (culturedogs) from Hartford, CT, USA
Lucas Belvaux's trilogy of films is meant to be taken as one multi-faceted unit, and is best viewed as such. The first (as I saw them), "On the Run," was a `thriller,' with Lucas Belvaux as a terrorist escaped from prison to settle scores and look up an old flame (Catherine Frot). In that film, there were the first glimpses of events in the romantic comedy, "An Amazing Couple." The trilogy ties up with this character study (or `melodrama'), "After the Life" ("Après la vie"), about the relationship between a pathetic and suffering drug-addicted teacher (Dominique Blanc) and her down on his luck and co-dependent cop husband (Gilbert Melki). The thriller was hobbled a bit by it's involvement with the other interwoven stories, but the romantic comedy and `melodrama' work fine as stand alones, and are even enriched by the angles explored and explained by the other films. All three should be seen together. Or, as a friend of mine has supposed, maybe I should just rent Kieslowski's `Three Colors' trilogy instead ?
0 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Nice trilogy, 20 February 2003
Author: sagedolt
I just saw all three movies and have to say that I liked them all. They are good each in its own way. Repeating scenes - every time from a different point of view, the same actors and heroes but different aspects. It is not one story told several times. It is more of several stories (or several lives?) entangled and inseparable from each other.
The only negative thing is that the movies are long. So long that I won't buy them on DVD when they will be available (or will I?)
But one thing is sure: I'll go watch the next movie made by Belvaux, whatever it might be. This guy will show me something interesting.
1 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-
Interesting cinematographic experiment, 3 February 2003
Author: Ruben Mooijman from Ghent, Belgium
Après la vie is a part of a very interesting cinematographic experiment. The other parts are two other films made by Lucas Belvaux: Un couple épatant and Cavale. The three films are set in the same city (Grenoble in the French Alps) during the same period of time and share the same roles. The point is, in each of the three movies the focus is on different people. The leading actors in one movie are the supporting actors in another one, and vice versa. Some scenes in the movies are exactly the same, some are the same but filmed from a different viewpoint, and most scenes are unique to one of the three movies. Belvaux has chosen three different genres: a comedy (Un couple épatant), a drama (Après la vie) and a thriller (Cavale).
So far, so good. The experiment works: after seeing all three of the films, a fourth imaginary film emerges in which all the different pieces of the puzzle come together. There is only one little problem: not all three films are good. The comedy is not very funny, the thriller is not very thrilling, and only the drama is in a way dramatic. I found Après la vie (about a cop who has to become corrupt because he needs dope for his drug-addicted wife) by far the best one out of the three. But perhaps this is because I saw this movie after the other two and knew the story already more or less. Cavale was the first one I saw and, to be honest, I had trouble understanding everything that happened (although a friend I saw the movie with had no trouble at all). But perhaps this is an inevitable consequence of the experiment. So if you want to enjoy an unusual experiment, go see all three movies. If you think that takes too much time and costs too much money, go see Après la vie - a decent drama - and forget about the other two. Unless you want to admire the breathtaking beauty of Ornella Muti: then Un couple épatant is your best choice because she has a leading role in this movie.
0 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

Drug culture, 26 February 2004
Author: jotix100 from New York
In comparison to "An Amazing Couple", this film has a different texture, as it deals with the realities of drug addiction. The director inserts scenes from the previous film, as we get to see why things happened the way they did in the second installment of this trilogy.
It is incredible to think Agnes, very nicely played by Dominique Blanc, has been able to maintain her drug problem for more than 20 years and still keep her job at the local high school where she teaches. Now we know: her husband Pascal, a detective, keeps her supplied with drugs he takes from junkies and dealers. Pascal is Agnes worst enemy because being afraid to lose her, he maintains also a double life; not only does he not help the woman he loves, but breaks the law in the process.
It is even more incredible when we see road blocks where people are checked for possible drug dealing in the school where Agnes teach and where another teacher is interrogated about the drug problem in that particular school. In many ways this film is an eye opening in knowing to what extent drugs are prevalent in today's society, be it in Europe, or the United States.
Some of the material doesn't work very well. There are many unanswered questions in this whole mess. The best thing for the film are Gilbert Melki, as the detective that is willing to break the law and Dominique Blanc, as the tormented Agnes.
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