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  1. 103. Play trailer 2:30. 1 2. 2 Videos. 99+ Photos. Drama Romance. A young American studying in Paris in 1968 strikes up a friendship with a French brother and sister. Set against the background of the '68 Paris student riots. Director. Bernardo Bertolucci. Writer. Gilbert Adair. Stars. Michael Pitt. Louis Garrel. Eva Green.

    • Bernardo Bertolucci
    • 3 min
  2. Mar 24, 2023 · Theatrical trailer of "The Dreamers" by Bernardo Bertolucci. Starring Michael Pitt, Eva Green, Louis Garrel, Anna Chancellor, Robin Renucci, Jean-Pierre Kalf...

    • 2 min
    • 17.4K
    • Trailer World
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  4. Mar 28, 2024 · The Dreamers Trailer | On 4K UHD 13 May - YouTube. Icon Film Distribution. 10.4K subscribers. Subscribed. 113. 14K views 1 month ago. Pre-order now: https://amzn.to/3vjH5co When Isabelle and...

    • 2 min
    • 13.6K
    • Icon Film Distribution
  5. Feb 6, 2004 · In May 1968, the student riots in Paris only exacerbate the isolation felt by three youths: an American exchange student named Matthew (Michael Pitt) and twins Théo (Louis Garrel) and Isabelle ...

    • (2.6K)
    • Bernardo Bertolucci
    • NC-17
    • Michael Pitt
    • Overview
    • Plot
    • Cast
    • Production
    • Reception
    • Music and soundtrack
    • Home media
    • External links
    • References

    is a 2003 romantic drama film directed by Bernardo Bertolucci. The screenplay is by Gilbert Adair, based on his 1988 novel The Holy Innocents. An international co-production by companies from France, the United Kingdom, and Italy, the film tells the story of an American university student in Paris who, after meeting a peculiar brother and sister who are fellow film enthusiasts, becomes entangled in an erotic triangle. It is set against the backdrop of the 1968 Paris student riots. The film makes several references to various movies of classical and French New Wave cinema, incorporating clips from films that are often imitated by the actors in particular scenes.

    There are two versions: an uncut NC-17-rated version, and an R-rated version that is about three minutes shorter.

    Matthew is an American exchange student who has come to Paris to study French. While at the Cinémathèque Française protesting the firing of Henri Langlois, he meets the free-spirited twins Théo and Isabelle. The three bond over a shared love of film. After dinner with their parents, Théo and Isabelle offer Matthew the chance to stay with them while their parents are on a trip. Matthew accepts, considering them his first French friends.

    Matthew becomes suspicious of their relationship after seeing them sleeping nude together; he soon discovers that they accept nudity and sexuality liberally. Matthew begins to accept Théo and Isabelle's sexuality and his time living with them soon becomes idyllic. The three re-enact a memorable scene from Bande à part by "breaking the world record for running through the Louvre", and Matthew and Théo engage in playful arguments about Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton, Eric Claptonand Jimi Hendrix, as well as the subject of Maoism, which Théo fervently believes in.

    After Théo loses at a trivia game, Isabelle sentences him to masturbate to a Marlene Dietrich poster in front of them. After Matthew loses at another game, he is dared by Théo to take Isabelle's virginity in front of him. Matthew and Isabelle then become lovers.

    During this time, Matthew begins to pursue a relationship with Isabelle, separate from Théo. Matthew and Isabelle leave the house and go on a regular date, which she has not experienced before. Théo retaliates by inviting a companion up to his room, upsetting Isabelle. She distances herself from both Théo and Matthew, only to find them next to each other on Théo's bed when an argument between the two turns erotic. She then surprises them with a makeshift bedsheet fort and the three fall asleep in each others' arms.

    The next morning, Théo and Isabelle's parents arrive home and find the sleeping trio naked in bed together. They are startled by what they find, but let them be, departing after leaving a cheque. Isabelle wakes up and discovers the cheque, realising that their parents have found them out. Wordlessly, she attaches a hose to the gas outlet and lies back down with the still-asleep Théo and Matthew, attempting to commit murder-suicide. After a few moments, however, they are awakened by a brick being hurled through the window; they discover hundreds of students rioting in the streets.

    All three of them are overjoyed and proceed to join the protesters. Théo then joins a small team of protesters preparing Molotov cocktails. Matthew tries to stop Théo by kissing him and his sister, arguing against violence, but he is shunned by both Théo and Isabelle.

    •Michael Pitt as Matthew

    •Eva Green as Isabelle

    •Louis Garrel as Théo

    •Anna Chancellor as Mother

    •Robin Renucci as Father

    •Jean-Pierre Kalfon as Himself

    The first draft of the screenplay was an adaptation by Gilbert Adair of his own novel, The Holy Innocents (1988), inspired by the novel Les Enfants terribles (1929) by Jean Cocteau and the eponymous film directed by Jean-Pierre Melville in 1950. During pre-production, Bertolucci made changes to it: he "peppered the narrative with clips from the films he loves" and dropped homosexual content – including scenes from the novel that depict Matthew and Théo having sex – which he felt was "just too much." After the film was released, he said that it was "faithful to the spirit of the book but not the letter."

    Eva Green told The Guardian that her agent and her parents begged her not to take the role of Isabelle, concerned that the film – which features full frontal nudity and full rear nudity along with graphic sex scenes – would cause her career to "have the same destiny as Maria Schneider." Jake Gyllenhaal screen tested for the role of Matthew alongside Green, but eventually removed himself from consideration due to concerns about the film’s nudity. Michael Pitt was cast instead.

    On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has a positive score of 60% based on 161 reviews, with an average rating of 6.18/10. The site's consensus reads, "Though lushly atmospheric, The Dreamers doesn't engage or provoke as much as it should." The 40 reviews gathered by Metacritic gave it an average score of 62/100, which places the film in the website's "generally favorable" category.

    A.O. Scott of The New York Times said the film was "disarmingly sweet and completely enchanting" and described it as "fus[ing] sexual discovery with political tumult by means of a heady, heedless romanticism that nearly obscures the film's patient, skeptical intelligence." The Times called it a "heady blend of Last Tango and Stealing Beauty, but one that combines the grubbily voyeuristic elements of each film rather than their relative strengths." Roger Ebert gave the film four stars, his highest rating, describing the film as "poignant" and "extraordinarily beautiful".

    The music advisors were Julien Civange and Charles Henri de Pierrefeu. Janice Ginsberg is credited as music supervisor and Nick Laird-Clowes as music consultant. The soundtrack was released in February 2004; Allmusic gave it three out of five, noting that "while its juxtapositions of French tradition and counterculture are jarring at times, Dreamers still does a worthy job of capturing the film's personal and political revolutions through music."

    1."Third Stone from the Sun" – The Jimi Hendrix Experience

    2."Hey Joe" (cover version) – Michael Pitt & The Twins of Evil

    3."Quatre Cents Coups" (from the score of "Les Quatre Cents Coups") – Jean Constantin

    4."New York Herald Tribune" (from Breathless) – Martial Solal

    5."Love Me Please Love Me" – Michel Polnareff

    was released on DVD in 2004. It includes a BBC film directed by David M. Thompson, Bertolucci Makes The Dreamers, narrated by Zoë Wanamaker, and a documentary Outside the Window: Events in France, May 1968 with contributions from Robin Blackburn, Adair, and Bertolucci. Bertolucci says that 1968 was about cinema, politics, music, journalism, sex and...

    •The Dreamers at IMDb

    •The Dreamers at the TCM Movie Database

    •Template:Allrovi movie

    •The Dreamers at Box Office Mojo

    1.Les coûts de production des films en 2005 (in fr) (1 March 2006).

    2.The Dreamers at Box Office Mojo

    3.Stealing beauty, a February 2004 article from 4.CONFESSIONS OF A NERVOUS MUSE: Eva Green, interviewed. | Neil Young's Film Lounge (in en) (2003-12-30).

    5.NC-17 comes out from hiding, an April 2004 article from the 6.The Dreamers (2004) - Financial Information. The Numbers.

    7.The Dreamers. Rotten Tomatoes.

    8.The Dreamers. Metacritic.

  6. Feb 6, 2004 · Watch the movie trailer for The Dreamers (2004). Directed by Bernardo Bertolucci and starring Michael Pitt, Louis Garrel, Eva Green and Jean-Pierre Kalfon. An American college student, Matthew, pursuing his education abroad in Paris in 1968 becomes friends with a French brother, Theo, and sister, Isabelle, through a shared love of the cinema ...

  7. When Isabelle and Theo invite Matthew to stay with them, what begins as a casual friendship ripens into a sensual voyage of discovery and desire in which nothing is off limits and everything is possible.

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