Amelie with Audrey Tautou: DVD Cover
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Amelie
a.k.a. Amelie From Montmartre, Le Fabuleux Destin d'Amelie Poulain Director: Jean-Pierre Jeunet Cast: Audrey Tautou, Mathieu Kassovitz, Rufus, Yolande Moreau

DVD - 2 Disc Set - Wide Screen Learn more

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  • DVD Release Date: 07/16/2002
  • Original Release: 2001
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 1,510

Viewer Rating: (84 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Performances" See All

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Features

Widescreen anamorphic presentation; "Amelie Effect" (English) featurette; "Look of Ameilie" (English) featurette; fantasies of Audrey Tautou (French with English subtitles); Q & A with director Jean-Pierre Jeunet (English); Q & A with director and Cast (French with English subtitles); audition clips; storyboard comparison; an intimate chat with Jeunet (French with English subtitles); "Inside the Making of Amelie" (French with English subtitles); "A Quai" music video; behind-the-scenes still gallery; French poster concepts; "The Garden Gnome's Travels" and storyboards.

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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Amelie
1. Opening Credits: Amélie's Childhood [9:04]
2. Montmartre [5:09]
3. The Memory Box [7:15]
4. Looking For Bredoteau [9:09]
5. Amélie, Guardian Angel [8:18]
6. Soul Mates [8:35]
7. Amélie Strikes Again [17:28]
8. Grumpy Collignon [7:43]
9. Amélie Looks For Nino [6:17]
10. Games [1:31]
11. New Strategies [1:58]
12. The Mystery Man Unveiled [2:28]
13. "When and Where?" [8:07]
14. Rendezvous at the Photo Booth [7:05]
15. "Absence Makes..." [6:24]
16. Seizing an Opportunity [6:11]
17. End Credits [6:28]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Four years after his Alien: Resurrection met with a cool reaction from U.S. audiences, director Jean-Pierre Jeunet's return to French-language filmmaking is an eye-popping potpourri of magic realism. Pouty ingénue Audrey Tautou (Happenstance) is the titular heroine, a daydreaming anti-socialite who takes it upon herself to anonymously help others find happiness, whether through simple matchmaking in a café or having a garden gnome travel vicariously for her aging father (Rufus). The trouble is that no matter how hard she tries, Amélie can't seem to make herself happy, let alone open up to her secret crush, Nino (Mathieu Kassovitz), a hobbyist who reconstructs discarded photo-booth pictures. A modern fairy tale bordering on a live-action cartoon, Jeunet's Oscar-nominated feel-good film is a visual banquet of gags, swooshes, and comic-book design. He eschews the dirty, monochromatic alleys of New Wave Paris for a candy-colored vision of prewar wonder, populated with lonesome eccentrics and forever awash in accordion music. Screenwriter Guillaume Laurant, who also contributed to the fancifully dark City of Lost Children, collaborates with Jeunet on a story that is at once emotionally gratifying and hilariously surreal; inanimate objects come to life, and a reclusive artist repaints the same Renoir every year. Despite all the magical set designs and storytelling, though, the movie is tout Tautou. With saucerlike eyes that could make Betty Boop jealous, her Amélie infuses every scene with both painful shyness and romantic keening. At one point, the movie proclaims the world a harsh place for dreamers. But it also proves a bouncy treat with the potential to change all that. Tony Nigro, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

Great Movieby Anonymous

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July 27, 2009: I really loved this movie, enough to put the money into owning a copy of my own. There's nothing totally astonishing about it, but the movie as a whole just flows. It's a great movie to escape to. It's an inviting movie and I recommend watching it at least once.

I Also Recommend: Debussy: Piano Works, Chocolat.

Amelieby MNflutist

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April 29, 2009: I found this movie to be long and boring, with no real plot. I can't understand what all the fuss is about.


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