Plot
A fashion show in Paris draws the usual bunch of people; designers, reporters, models, magazine editors...
Release Year: 1994
Rating: 4.9/10 (9,003 voted)
Director:
Robert Altman
Stars: Sophia Loren, Julia Roberts, Marcello Mastroianni
Storyline A fashion show in Paris draws the usual bunch of people; designers, reporters, models, magazine editors, photographers. Lots of unconnected stories which all revolve around this show, and an all-star cast.
Writers: Robert Altman, Barbara Shulgasser
Cast: Sophia Loren
-
Isabella de la Fontaine
Marcello Mastroianni
-
Sergei
/
Sergio
Jean-Pierre Cassel
-
Olivier de la Fontaine
Kim Basinger
-
Kitty Potter
Chiara Mastroianni
-
Sophie Choiset
Stephen Rea
-
Milo O'Brannigan
Anouk Aimée
-
Simone Lowenthal
(as Anouk Aimee)
Rupert Everett
-
Jack Lowenthal
Rossy de Palma
-
Pilar
(as Rossy De Palma)
Tara Leon
-
Kiki Simpson
Georgianna Robertson
-
Dane Simpson
Lili Taylor
-
Fiona Ulrich
Ute Lemper
-
Albertine
Forest Whitaker
-
Cy Bianco
Tom Novembre
-
Reggie
Taglines:
The year's most seductive comedy!
Release Date: 25 December 1994
Filming Locations: Moscow, Russia
Gross: $5,860,483
(USA)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
Fourteenth of fourteen pairings of Marcello Mastroianni and Sophia Loren.
Goofs:
Continuity:
In the hotel room, Anne Eisenhower lifts a glass of wine from Joe Flynn's dining cart with her left hand and takes a drink. Joe makes a comment and it can be seen that Anne's left arm is up to her face (she is visible from the chest down), but when we cut back to Anne the glass is in her right hand as she puts it down.
Quotes:
[first lines]
[subtitled version - opening lines are in French, the English subtitles are a very rough translation]
Olivier de la Fontaine:
[opening letter]
Moscow? What's this about? Put that on the desk. Dear Mr. de la Fontaine: blah, blah, blah, blah... blah, blah, blah, blah... Isabella de la Fontaine:
[to dog]
Robin. Robin. I told you not to! It's dirty. You shouldn't do that. Not in the house.
[to Olivier de la Fontaine]
Isabella de la Fontaine:
You're a shit.
User Review
Unfairly Maligned. Far better than people give it credit for
Rating: 7/10
And that's not saying that it's great either. It is not. But it's
tremendously low imdb rating makes me wonder who the heck is voting here.
Pret-a-Porter is a pretty good Robert Altman film that is no better or
worse
than Short Cuts, which, while I feel it is a good film, I also think it is
overrated. This one is, however, heavily underrated, and they both got the
same imdb score from me: 7/10 = 3/4 stars.
This is another attempt to make another Nashville. There's a humongous
ensemble cast of actors, some of the best on the planet, a couple of the
best who ever lived. The screenwriter doesn't connect it all very well,
and
lots of the characters seem superfluous or underdeveloped, unlike in
Nashville where even the characters who are only in a couple of scenes are
as familiar to the viewer as a close friend. I would particularly have
liked
the Danny Aiello/Teri Garr section to have been removed. It falls pretty
flat. The Sophia Loren/Marcello Mastrioanni section, the section that most
film buffs are going to be excited for, also plops by its end. And Kim
Basinger, a good actress, truly deserving her L.A. Confidential Oscar, is
not very good as the Southern U.S. reporter: her accent is difficult to
get
around, and her character is often annoying, too. Sometimes, though, her
pieces succeed.
Many other of the vignettes succeed quite well, although there are never
any
fireworks about to shoot off. The Tim Robbins/Julia Roberts plot is very
funny. The three publishers, Sally Kellerman, Tracy Ullman, and Linda
Hunt's
attempts to sign photographer Milo (Stephen Rea) to their magazine are all
very humorous. The love quadrangle between the two designers, Forest
Whitaker and Richard E. Grant, and their lovers is very good, also. Anouk
Aimee's section is also great, maybe the best part (Rupet Everett is good,
also). I loved her so much in La Dolce Vita and 8 1/2. I was aching for
her and Marcello
Mastrioanni to interact.
The ending is truly fantastic. It is very well directed and filmed. It's a
good film.
0