Chéri

2009 "Indulge in a wicked game of seduction"
6.1| 1h26m| R| en| More Info
Released: 26 June 2009 Released
Producted By: Miramax
Country: United Kingdom
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

The son of a courtesan retreats into a fantasy world after being forced to end his relationship with the older woman who educated him in the ways of love.

Genre

Drama, Comedy, Romance

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Chéri (2009) is now streaming with subscription on Prime Video

Director

Stephen Frears

Production Companies

Miramax

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Chéri Audience Reviews

Alicia I love this movie so much
SpunkySelfTwitter It’s an especially fun movie from a director and cast who are clearly having a good time allowing themselves to let loose.
FirstWitch A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.
Bob This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
jotix100 The years preceding the first world war in Paris were characterized by a style of living never equaled again in any other period of time. It was a time of living lavishly in a society where money mattered more than anything. The newly rich, as well as the royalty, loved playing in what became the place where they went to party and see one another, Maxim's.Lea De Lonval was a high class act. She was highly sought by men searching for an adventure, outside their marriage. As the story begins, Lea goes to pay a visit to an old friend, Madame Peloux, a former courtesan, now living in splendor from the fortune she made out of her good fortune while playing the field. Lea is pleasantly surprised to find Cheri, the son of her friend, whom she had not seen in a while.Cheri is instantly smitten by the gorgeous creature he used to know as Nounou. Lean, in turn, feels suddenly alive with the attentions the young man is paying to her. What Lea started as an innocent affair turned into a relationship of six years. Madame Peloux, wanting to have Cheri settled, arranges a marriage with the young daughter of Marie Laure, another woman in their circle who is eager to marry the girl.Lea is not prepared for what happens to her after Cheri goes away, for she had fallen in love at this stage of her life. Trying to forget the young man, she goes to Biarritz in search of adventure, but it is too late for her. She cannot forget the man that brought a new lease to her life. Cheri, on the other hand, is still obsessed with Lea, but during their last meeting she points out to the fact she has aged and he will be better off trying to make a go with his own wife, an unselfish deed on her part.Stephen Frears directed the Colette novel about that golden era in Paris. The adaptation was by Christopher Hampton, a distinguished playwright himself. The production offers a glimpse on that society, focusing on one woman who falls in love against her better judgment and must pay for the pleasure she got. One would have imagined this take on Colette's work could not have a great impact if not done by the French, but Mr. Frears and Mr. Hampton pulled a surprise with this enjoyable film.Michelle Pfeiffer makes a wonderful Lea. She has been one of the most beautiful presence in the movies ever since her beginning. Now, approaching fifty, her looks have not diminished as she glows with a different light. Obviously, she understood the tragedy for the woman she is playing where looks mattered more than anything, and aging was indeed a tragedy. Rupert Friend makes a dashing Cherie. Kathy Bates has some fun playing Madame Peloux, the aging former courtesan. Felicity Jones is seen as Edmee.Cinematographer Darius Khondij captures the atmosphere required of the period where the action is set in vivid colors. The tuneful musical score by Alexandre Desplat adds texture to the film. Stephen Frears got an excellent work out of his cast and crew.
anonanon22 Why is this movie rated as 6.2 out of 10? Are people blind? Crowds of movie goers flock to Avatar and Alice in Wonderland, and stuff like Cheri are completely overlooked. This is a delicious flick, with a great unusual and touching romantic story, gorgeous early 20th century atmosphere and brilliant interpretations from gorgeous Michele Pfeiffer and Kathy Bates. The story flows slow and stylishly like the surroundings of Belle Epoque and the final is so moving it makes a stone cry. Definitely the best movie I saw in 2009 together with Bright Star from Jane Campion. Please go see it and don't believe anyone who tells you otherwise.
whathappensincinema There is something about Michelle Pfeiffer. She just has an indelible star quality that makes her seem born to be an actress. Even more specifically, she seems to have been born to play a character like Lea de Lonval…not because Lea is a glorified prostitute, but because she is a vivacious, vibrant woman who commands the attention of everyone she meets. Likewise, Pfeiffer commands our attention in "Chéri", a delightfully dishy romantic drama that is as entertaining as freshly-shared gossip and as tragic as a tearjerker. Pfeiffer exudes female sexuality as Lea, a courtesan who has amassed great wealth and a small set of friends over her illustrious career. One of her friends is a fellow courtesan, Madame Peloux (Kathy Bates), who is loud, comical, and concerned about the affairs of her handsome son, Chéri (Rupert Friend), who is not innocent, but rather untrained. And thus begins Lea's assigned mission: refine Chéri and return him as a suitable gentleman.Their affair begins as expected, but continues quite unexpectedly, with them falling in love and devoting years to each other. Lea is twenty-four years older than him and, though a sexual relationship is allowed and even encouraged by his mother, anything beyond that is strictly forbidden by society. Slightly reminiscent of William Shakespeare's pair of star-crossed lovers, Lea and Chéri know that they can never be together, but their love is impossible to restrain. That is until Madame Peloux arranges a marriage between Chéri and a pleasant enough young woman, thus sealing the end of any chance, however slim, they ever had of creating a life together. Lea realizes the searing loss that this arrangement brings immediately, but it takes Chéri, often too blinded by his own childish self-serving nature, much longer to realize…and, in a world populated by such people as these, even a little too long can often be just long enough.Please read my full review on my blog: www.whathappensincinema.blogspot.com
lastliberal Let's see; Michelle Pfeiffer is 51, and Rupert Friend is 28. A typical cougar relationship, except there were no cougars in the late 19th Century France, during the Belle Epoque.This is a period of excess and Lea de Lonval (Pfeiffer) is living on her earnings, and she is teaching Cheri (Friend). the son of a friend (Kathy Bates), a fellow retired prostitute, about life. After six years of companionship, she has grown attached to Cheri, and is dismayed to learn his mother wants him married to the daughter (Felicity Jones) of another prostitute (Iben Hjejle).It is definitely a period piece with lavish costumes and sumptuous living, and emotions the rule of the day.What should have been a French film is decidedly English, but it was enjoyable nonetheless.