Saturday, April 27, 2013

Watch Café de Flore Movie Online No Survey

Watch Café de Flore Movie Online No Survey


Cafe de Flore is a love story about people separated by time and place but connected in profound and mysterious ways. Atmospheric, fantastical, tragic and hopeful, the film chronicles the parallel fates of Jacqueline, a young mother with a disabled son in 1960s Paris, and Antoine, a recently divorced, successful DJ in present day Montreal. What binds the two stories together is love - euphoric, obsessive, tragic, youthful, timeless love. -- (C) Official Site R
Release Date Café de Flore Nov 2, 2012 Limited
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Actors For Café de Flore

Vanessa Paradis,Kevin Parent,Hélène Florent,Evelyne Brochu,Martin Gerrier,Alice Dubois,Evelyne De La Cheneliere,Michel Dumont,Linda Smith,Joanny Corbeil-Picher,Rosalie Fortier,Michel Laperrière,Caroline Bal,Nicolas Marie,Pascal Elso,Jerome Kircher,Claire Vernet,Manon Balthazard,??mile Vallée,Chanel Fontaine

Genres Café de Flore : Art House & International,Drama

User Ranting Café de Flore : 3.8
User Percentage For Café de Flore : 77 %
User Count Like for Café de Flore : 3,459
All Critics Ranting For Café de Flore : 6.4
All Critics Count For Café de Flore : 50
All Critics Percentage For Café de Flore : 62 %

Review For Café de Flore

A forgettable film.
Jeff Shannon-Seattle Times

It's terribly long and repetitive for so delicately dreamy a diptych, and at times the modern-day story feels like little more than a drawn-out apologia for the wandering male gaze.
Robert Abele-Los Angeles Times

Goes from intriguing to irritating.
Kyle Smith-New York Post

Feels less like a movie than like a cinematic jigsaw puzzle whose agitation undermines the very continuity it wants to portray.
Stephen Holden-New York Times

Decade-hopping metaphysical romance descends into overwrought histrionics.
Neil Young-Hollywood Reporter

This mushy, mystical French-Canadian melodrama tries to make parallel a pair of love stories: one between preteens with Down syndrome in 1969 Paris, and the second between a Quebecois DJ and his new amour some 40 years later.
Brian Miller-Village Voice

An intriguingly unconventional drama that revels in dreamy interludes, stream-of-consciousness montages and weighty drama - but that never lives up to its stylistic promise.
Mike Scott-Times-Picayune

The cumulative effect is more tedious than profound.
Todd Jorgenson-Cinemalogue.com

As abstract as the film is in theory, it is brought together with the conclusiveness of finishing a puzzle with no missing pieces.
Gabrielle Lipton-Paste Magazine

Affectionate, sexy, thought-provoking, devastating, beautiful, bittersweet, life-affirming... Cafe de Flore is all that, and more. See it, listen to it, believe it.
Staci Layne Wilson-StaciWilson.com

Jean-Marc Vallée deploys a pretty sweeping arsenal of clichés in shoving his camera through the characters' streams of consciousness.
Steve Macfarlane-Slant Magazine

A moving drama about how love is refined through troubles in the lives of a devoted mother in 1969 Paris and a middle-aged man in 2011 Montreal.
Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat-Spirituality and Practice

Acting and soundtrack are spot-on but the frequent jump-cuts and lack of a compelling comparison between families work against the film's success.
Harvey S. Karten-Compuserve

An overlong film that half works.
Jim Schembri-3AW

A well-acted, visually arresting and artfully structured romantic endeavour.
Liam Maguren-Flicks.co.nz

Think of a fusion of The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, Crash, The Lovely Bones and The Tree of Life.
Graham Young-Birmingham Post

Haunting and heartbreaking, director Jean-Marc Vallée's romantic drama is an electrifying multilayered experience.
Alan Jones-Radio Times

The double-barrelled plot demonstrates great imagination. It's a shame that it amounts to so little.
Donald Clarke-Irish Times

The French story is fascinating and beautifully acted, the French-Canadian one is romantic daytime TV drivel, and the links between them - mystic, metaphysical, musical - do not lead towards resonance or enlightenment.
Philip French-Observer [UK]

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