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      Violette

      2013 2h 19m Biography Drama Romance List
      86% Tomatometer 50 Reviews 68% Audience Score 500+ Ratings The life and work of French novelist Violette Leduc. Read More Read Less Watch on Fandango at Home Premiered Nov 28 Buy Now

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      Violette

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      Violette

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      Critics Consensus

      Led by an outstanding performance from Emmanuelle Devos, Violette is a rewarding, bracingly honest look at social mores and the literary life.

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      Critics Reviews

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      David Lewis San Francisco Chronicle This well-acted, wonderfully photographed biopic explores the troubled life of French feminist author Violette Leduc and her complicated ties to Simone de Beauvoir... Jun 30, 2020 Full Review Missy Schwartz Entertainment Weekly She [Emmanuelle Devos] gives a tremendous performance, somehow managing to turn an emotion as ugly as self-loathing into something beautiful to behold. Rated: A- Dec 3, 2014 Full Review Kate Muir Times (UK) [Leduc] remains a small and rather irritating sideshow to the more powerful St Germain crowd, and the focus on her life is surprisingly dull. Rated: 2/5 Oct 3, 2014 Full Review Nicholas Bell IONCINEMA.com As a portrait of the relationship between these two women, the film is exceptionally engaging and engrossing. Emmanuelle Devos and Sandrine Kiberlaine deliver rewarding performances, strikingly at odds as they are genuinely complimentary. Rated: 3.5/5 Aug 30, 2019 Full Review D.W. Mault CineVue It's refreshing to see a film that centres on a daring female creative who is just as self-indulgent and self-pitying as any male artist. Rated: 3/5 Apr 3, 2019 Full Review Ren Jender Bitch Flicks [Violette] is a nice change in that it focuses on not one, but two women writers who work hard over a period of years to become successful artists (both critically and financially) in their own right. Mar 12, 2019 Full Review Read all reviews

      Audience Reviews

      View All (25) audience reviews
      Serge L True story. What I saw was a hysterical woman in need of sexual satisfaction that married and homosexual and had homosexual friends until late in life. Then, she was happy. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 05/19/20 Full Review simon b Good movie - almost a documentary - of the life of this leading post war French author and pioneer of honest women's writing about sexuality and life. Without the overt political content of her mentor Simone de Beauvoir. A friend of Albert Camus and Jean Genet. Enjoyed it as much for the history as for the excellent acting. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 03/30/23 Full Review william k Strong period biodrama with an excellent ensemble, especially Emmanuelle Devos in the title role credibly portraying the troubled, but talented author. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member Interesting movie about Violette Leduc. It shows the difference between Violette and Simone De Beauvoir: two types of women and writers. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/21/23 Full Review Audience Member Réalisation fade, mais le reste tient la route Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/30/23 Full Review Audience Member Call me sexist but watching a movie about a woman who screams and sobs for over two hours is not my idea of a good time. The woman in question is Violette Leduc, who was one of the first woman writers in France to tackle such charged issues as female sexuality, lesbianism and abortion head on. To be honest, I had never heard of Violette Leduc until I saw this film. I had heard of Simone de Beauvoir, who was, I learned, Violette's mentor and patron. It was de Beauvoir who pushed Leduc to explore her literary voice. Most probably, if it weren't for de Beauvoir providing a combination of encouragement, tough love and money, Leduc would have jumped off the Eiffel Tower or something similar. That's how troubled she was. The film, VIOLETTE, covers a 20-odd year span of Leduc's life from WWII to the mid-1960s. As the film begins, Violette is a black market trader of food in the French countryside along with Jewish writer Maurice Sachs. They are passing themselves off as husband and wife, though Sachs' sexual proclivities clearly favour his own gender. After rebuffing Violette's advances one too many times, Sachs takes off, leaving Violette to fend for herself. We come to learn that others have left Violette before and the pattern will repeat itself, as she is attracted to both men and women she can't have. Violette makes her way to Paris just as the war is coming to an end. While delivering black market meat to a client, she happens upon a copy of de Beauvoir's novel about a ménage-a-trois, and is struck by the size of the work. Until then, she had never considered that a woman could have so much to write about much less having it be published. She immediately reads it and is riveted to it. She quickly gets to work on her own manuscript and tracks de Beauvoir down to give it to her. De Beauvoir is impressed with the work, entitled "In the Prison of Her Skin", and so begins their lifelong relationship. This film is a very competent effort in introducing Leduc to a new generation of readers who, like me, have never heard of her. The problem I had with the film, though, is that it lacks the same passion that Violette (both the person and the writer) had. For much of the film, we watch Violette engage in hysterics either when her friends spur her sexual advances or when her literary works don't get the recognition she thinks they deserve. (If it weren't for de Beauvoir writing the preface for Leduc's most famous work, "The Bastard", she may still be an obscure writer today.) Director Martin Provost says he was introduced to the Leduc's writing while he was working on the film, SÉRAPHINE, which is the story based on the life of French painter Séraphine de Senlis. After reading some of Leduc's works, Provost said knew he had to make a film about her. "To my mind," he said, "Séraphine and Violette are sisters. Their stories are so similar, it's unnerving." Without a doubt, Leduc suffered from low self-esteem. In the film, she comes across as a woman who is always on the verge of a nervous breakdown. If you find that character type interesting, you may like this film. Unfortunately, for the rest of us, it's just too tedious to watch. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 01/28/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

      69% 68% Miss Potter 80% 84% The Theory of Everything TRAILER for The Theory of Everything 49% 40% Hemingway & Gellhorn 28% 24% The Last of Robin Hood 32% 24% Rodin TRAILER for Rodin Discover more movies and TV shows. View More

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      Movie Info

      Synopsis The life and work of French novelist Violette Leduc.
      Director
      Martin Provost
      Screenwriter
      Martin Provost, Martin Provost
      Production Co
      Centre National de la Cinematographie, TS Productions, Climax Films, France 3 Cinéma
      Genre
      Biography, Drama, Romance
      Original Language
      French (France)
      Release Date (Streaming)
      Oct 15, 2015
      Runtime
      2h 19m
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