Product Details
Changing Times

Changing Times
Directed by André Téchiné

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Product Description

Can your first love be your last?

Catherine Deneuve and Gérard Depardieu star in André Téchiné’s (Wild Reeds, Les Voleurs) film about two former lovers reunited by fate. Antoine (Depardieu) has held a torch for his first love Cécile (Deneuve) for 30 years and arranges to be reunited with her in Morocco in the hopes of rekindling their love only to find that his advances are not welcomed.

"visually alive, quick-witted and full of heart" - Stephen Holden, The New York Times


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #53907 in DVD
  • Brand: KOCH ENT.
  • Released on: 2006-10-03
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.66:1
  • Formats: Color, Dolby, DVD, Subtitled, NTSC
  • Original language: French
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .25 pounds
  • Running time: 100 minutes

Features

  • The inimitable talents of Gerard Depardieu, Catherine Deneuve, and director Andr T chin combine in this adult romance. After 30 years, Antoine Lavau (Depardieu) seeks out his former lover (Deneuve), whom he's never been able to forget. Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: FOREIGN Rating: NR Age: 741952308294 UPC: 741952308294 Manufacturer No: KLF-DV3082

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
On the surface, Changing Times is a love story about a couple that is reunited after decades apart. But unlike many films so desperate for a happy ending that the characters' development are sacrificed to reach such a goal, this picture concentrates on the bittersweet reality of who they are today. Catherine Deneuve and Gerard Depardieu reunite (for the first time since 1988's Strange Place for an Encounter) to portray Cecile, a radio hostess living in Morocco, and Antoine, an engineer who finds a project in Tangier in the hopes that he can find her and win her back. Their lives are now more complicated than when they first met. She is married to a Moroccan doctor who is unfaithful to her. And Antoine doesn't seem able to relinquish the memories of the Cecile he fell in love with, regardless of the fact that the woman standing before him today may actually be more compelling. The expressive actors take their time, revealing as much with their faces as their words. Directed and co-written by Andre Techine, Changing Times has a languid, exotic, and authentic feel. The one flaw is the inclusion of another subplot--that of Cecile's adult, bisexual son who hopes to rekindle a relationship with the love of his life--an ex-boyfriend. --Jae-Ha Kim


Customer Reviews

The Impact of Love and the Ravages of Time5
Writer/director André Téchiné (Wild Reeds, My Favorite Season, Child of the Night, etc) is able to take what appear to be simple emotional responses from complicated people and create an artwork that makes us think, become introspective, and be challenged and entertained all at the same time. His ability to draw intensely personal performances from his actors makes him a director with a full heart and startling technique.

Essentially a love story, 'Les Temps qui changent' ('Changing Times') examines the lives of two people who fell in love in Paris 30 years ago, but parted. Antoine Lavau (Gérard Depardieu) has never married, so in love with his original flame Cécile (Catherine Deneuve) that he is obsessed with winning her back. Cécile has married a younger man, Natan (Gilbert Melki) who is a philandering physician, and lives in Tangiers where she hosts a dowdy talk show on the radio to help support the family. The couple has a bisexual son Sami (Malik Zidi), who has returned to Tangiers with his drug-addled girlfriend Nadia (Lubna Azabal) and her son Saïd (Idir Elomri) much to his parent's concern, and takes up with his Moroccan lover Bilal (Nadem Rachati). The family problems are further complicated by the fact that the Morroccan Nadia has a twin sister Aïcha (also played by Lubna Azabal) in Tangiers who is trying desperately to separate her life from her twin.

Antoine, an architect of means, manages to land a job in Tangiers in hopes of rekindling his romance with Cécile, but Cécile has become a feminist and a bitter woman who resents her younger husband's infidelity and wants nothing to do with love, especially with the threat of depth of feeling that Antoine's new presence in her world presents. Antoine is persistent, meets Cécile's husband for medical reasons, and tries to woo Cécile in a close to stalking manner. Cécile's best friend Rachel (Tanya Lopert) convinces her that the only way to end the ardor of Antoine is to sleep with him, which she finally does with unexpected results. While the dance between Cécile and Antoine progresses, Natan meets Aïcha, Sami and Bilal arouse old emotions, and Nadia requires rehab for her out of control drug habits. How all of these coincidental occurrences coincide in an unexpected accident for Antoine is André Téchiné's magical way of sharing the power of love in the most adverse of circumstances. The ending is surprising and thought-provoking and eminently satisfying.

Depardieu and Deneuve are luminous in their roles, adding yet other crowns to their careers of creating unforgettable, subtle characterizations on film. The remainder of the cast is also superb and the cinematography and music and editing and direction make this a feast for the eyes and the brain. Highly Recommended. Grady Harp, October 06

Not Casablanca . . .4
The trailer for this film by French director André Téchiné gives the impression that it's a story of rekindled romance between two people who were once young lovers. This is true in only the strictest sense of the word, as the obsessive and undying infatuation of one of them (Depardieu) is met for most of the film by the unsentimental reluctance of the other (Deneuve) to feel much of anything but annoyance with almost everyone in her life - including her husband, her son, and her son's girlfriend.

The larger theme of the story is the lack of real emotional connection holding any two people together. The son carries on a purely sexual relationship with an old boyfriend, while his girlfriend tries unsuccessfully to reunite with a twin sister she has not seen in many years. Deneuve's character and her husband are separating as he takes a job in another city. Meanwhile, their son's girlfriend has a drug addiction and is indifferent to his professed affection for her. In the background is the cultural divide that lies between secular Europe and Muslim North Africa.

Words fly fast and furious in many scenes as characters express anger and frustration with each other. For non-French speakers, this is a drawback, as the film's setting in Tangiers offers much for the eye and the ear that speed-reading subtitles causes the viewer to miss. Deneuve, of course, is worth seeing in anything, and while her character here is not altogether sympathetic, her presence and the way emotions register on her face are fascinating. Depardieu, for his part, looks lumpish and a bit implausible as a lovelorn man of certain years, especially as he takes a bruising tumble after walking into a glass partition.

Must-see French cinema: Téchiné's 'Les temps qui changent .'4
This film ponders the question: How do you know when it's true love? André Téchiné (1943) is known for his emotionally-charged films that explore the complexities of what it means to be human. Anyone who has seen his film Rendez-vous knows his characters behave in mysterious and unpredictable ways, often motivated solely by the ways of the heart. Set in Morocco, with a soundtrack featuring Beninese singer-songwriter Angélique Kidjo, Téchiné's Changing Times (Les temps qui changent) (2004) is a French love story. Gérard Depardieu plays Antoine, a middle-aged civil engineer, who has been counting the days since he last saw Cécile (Catherine Deneuve) thirty years ago. Cécile is now living in Tangiers, and has been married for twenty years to a Moroccan physician, Nathan (Gilbert Melki). At first, Antoine considers using witchcraft to win her back, but he is an engineer, after all, not a witch doctor. So he begins anonymously sending her roses everyday at the radio station where she works. When they eventually meet in a supermarket, at first Cécile wants nothing to do with Antoine, telling him their love is over, and that her life as a wife, mother, and broadcaster is complicated enough. Because Antoine is living in the past, he is unable to see the compelling woman Cécile has become. However, Cécile decides to have a fling with Antoine(or a "stop over," as she calls it), perhaps in an attempt to convice Antoine their love really is over, or perhaps to convince herself their love is a thing of the past. When Antoine suffers a serious accident on his new construction project, sending him to the hospital in a coma, Cécile scarcely leaves his bedside. She is visually moved when he regains consciousness. This film will appeal to romantics, except for those romantics expecting a typical Hollywood ending.

G. Merritt