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A Good Year
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A Good Year is a 2006 romantic comedy film set in Provence, a region in southeastern France. It is directed by Ridley Scott. It reunites him with star Russell Crowe, whom he directed in Gladiator, and co-stars Albert Finney. Fox 2000 Pictures distributed the film.
Contents
- 1 Plot
- 2 Cast
- 3 Production note
- 4 Reception
- 5 External links
- 6 References
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Plot
Based on author Peter Mayle's international bestseller of the same name, A Good Year stars Freddie Highmore, Russell Crowe as Max Skinner, a cunning investment expert who, after learning his beloved Uncle Henry (Albert Finney) has died without a last will and testament, travels from London to Provence to visit the gorgeous, if overgrown vineyard he's inherited. Slowly, the women (especially Fanny Chenal, played by Marion Cotillard, the sultry owner of the local café), wine, and Mediterranean climate transforms him from a soulless, unloved miser into a warm-hearted man able to appreciate the world he's let pass by him far too long.
Cast
Production note
The vineyard scenes were filmed at Château La Canorgue during the 2005 harvest in the
Luberon area of Provence.
[1]
Reception
The film was badly received by critics and (as of January 2007) has estimated losses of around $20 million. In the US and UK, critics savaged Crowe's performance as miscast and in France it was attacked as cliché-ridden.
[2] However, some reviewers found it romantic and beautiful.
- Appalling from start to finish, A Good Year collapses under clichés of an ochre Luberon made for a loaded Anglo-Saxon elite. (Libération)
- A sappy romantic comedy lacking in charm and humor. (rottentomatoes.com)
- Crowe's as excellent a romantic lead as he is a gladiator, and A Good Year wouldn't be nearly as good without him. (Metromix.com)
- (Crowe's) authority as an actor evaporates without any accompanying gain, and Scott... has trouble finding a suitable tempo and style. The movie is wildly overshot and overcut; the simplest scenes jump around from angle to angle. The filmmakers may love Provence, but they don’t trust the audience to love it; even as a travelogue, the movie is a cheat. (The New Yorker)
- A Good Year is never less than visually ravishing, its warm, inviting vistas of the French countryside and its unhurried, pleasant vibe putting the viewer in the same frame of mind as Max. (Miami Herald)
- A Good Year is like a promising wine that's a bit new to the bottle. It goes down rough, but there's this marvelous aftertaste on the palate. (Orlando Sentinel)