2009 French comedy-drama film
Le Concert
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![](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/3/31/Le_Concert.jpg/220px-Le_Concert.jpg) Theatrical release poster
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Directed by
| Radu Mih?ileanu
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Written by
| Radu Mih?ileanu
Hector Cabello Reyes
Thierry Degrandi
Matthew Robbins
Alain-Michel Blanc
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Produced by
| Alain Attal
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Starring
| Aleksei Guskov
Melanie Laurent
Dmitry Nazarov
Francois Berleand
Miou-Miou
Lionel Abelanski
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Cinematography
| Laurent Dailland
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Edited by
| Ludo Troch
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Music by
| Armand Amar
Tchaikovsky
|
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Production
companies
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Distributed by
| Europa Filmes
(France)
[1]
Cineart
(Belgium)
[1]
BIM Distribuzione
(Italy)
[1]
Independen?a Film
(Romania)
[1]
Ruscico
(Russia)
[1]
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Release dates
|
- September 2009
(
2009-09
)
(Russia)
- 4 November 2009
(
2009-11-04
)
(France)
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Running time
| 119 minutes
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Countries
| France
Belgium
Italy
Romania
Russia
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Languages
| French
Russian
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Budget
| $14.2 million
[2]
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Box office
| $41.1 million
[3]
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Le Concert
is a 2009 French
comedy-drama film
by
Radu Mih?ileanu
, starring
Aleksei Guskov
,
Melanie Laurent
and
Miou-Miou
. It won the
Best Original Score
and
Best Sound
awards at
Cesar Awards 2010
.
[4]
It was also nominated for two
Magritte Awards
in the category of
Best Film in Coproduction
and
Best Editing
for Ludo Troch in 2011, and
Best Foreign Film
at the
68th Golden Globe Awards
.
[5]
Plot
[
edit
]
A former world-famous conductor of the
Bolshoi Theatre
orchestra, known as "The Maestro", Andrey Simonovich Filipov, had had his career publicly broken by
Leonid Brezhnev
for defending Jewish musicians and is reduced to working as a mere
janitor
in the theatre where he once conducted, becoming an
alcoholic
in the process.
While cleaning his boss's office, he intercepts an official invitation from the prestigious
Theatre du Chatelet
in
Paris
to replace a concert of the
Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra
that was canceled at the last minute. Filipov comes up with a plan to reunite his old orchestra, composed of old
Jewish
and
Gypsy musicians
? who also have been reduced to making a living as movers or taxi drivers ? to perform in Paris and complete a performance of
Tchaikovsky
's
Violin Concerto
, which was interrupted 30 years earlier by former KGB Agent Ivan Gavrilov, who is enrolled by Filipov in his scheme as the orchestra's manager and is actively and efficiently supporting Filipov's plan, much to the dismay of Aleksandr 'Sasha' Abramovich Grossman (the orchestra's main cellist), because he suspects that Gavrilov has his own agenda for the Paris trip.
Gavrilov and Filipov demand several conditions from the Chatelet, that they are forced to accept, since the concert with the Bolshoi is significantly less expensive. One condition is that the solo violinist will be Anne-Marie Jacquet, who famously has never played Tchaikovsky's concerto because she is afraid of it. She has long dreamed of playing it with the Bolshoi and particularly with Filipov, whose fame outside of Russia has not diminished. Her agent, Guylene de La Riviere, who is also Anne-Marie's adoptive mother, is reluctant to allow that because she is acquainted with Filipov and his past, but Anne-Marie insists, and de la Riviere has no option but to accept. The orchestra is also forced to accept the sponsorship of an open
Russian mafia
boss who likes to play the cello, despite the fact that he does so terribly and who wants to be part of the orchestra.
Once in Paris, the entire orchestra disappears, partying and raising money in other jobs such as taxi drivers, movers or translators. The unprofessionalism of the Russian musicians and Anne-Marie's own impression that the performance serves as a means of
catharsis
for Filipov forces Anne-Marie to call off her participation in the concert. But Sasha convinces her to come to the theater because the Concert holds the key to Anne-Marie's past and her parents, whom she has never met, and whom she believes to be scientists who died during her infancy in the
Alps
. As it turns out, Filipov and his wife Irina were best friends of Lea and Yitzhak Strum, also Jewish musicians. Lea was an accomplished violinist and the soloist at the time of the interrupted concert thirty years before in
Moscow
. After the public humiliation they suffered under Gavrilov and the entire Brezhnev regime, the couple spoke openly against the government on
Radio Free Europe
, an American radio station that was banned in the former
USSR
. As a result, they were deported to Siberia, where they spent the rest of their lives. Lea, Anne-Marie's mother, lost her mind and played the Tchaikovsky concert in her imagination every day for her husband until her death in 1981. Her husband died six months later. Guylene, at the time the representative of a visiting French orchestra, had managed to escape with Baby Anne-Marie hidden in a
cello
case, at the behest of Irina, Filipov, and Sasha.
At the last moment, the entire orchestra, after receiving an SMS message calling them to play in honor of Lea, appears at the Theatre despite the fact that not a single rehearsal has taken place. In the meantime, the real manager of the Bolshoi, who happened to be vacationing in Paris and learned by chance about the concert, appears at the theatre to prevent the performance, but he is intercepted by Gavrilov, who locks him in a broom closet. The concert has a wobbly beginning due to the lack of rehearsals ? even Gavrilov, who actually intended to speak at a Communist Party meeting, asks God to demonstrate his existence by salvaging the situation. However, the orchestra manages to reach Filipov's ideal of spontaneous
harmony
once Anne-Marie mesmerizes everyone with her magnificent interpretation of the solo part, which she had studied on her mother's annotated score. The concert is a huge success and Filipov is able to restart his career as a conductor of the new "Andrei Filipov Orchestra" along with Anne-Marie, who joins him in a world tour.
Cast
[
edit
]
Production
[
edit
]
To prepare for her role, Laurent spent five months studying violin with
Sarah Nemtanu
of the
Orchestre National de France
.
[6]
Music
[
edit
]
The film's original score was composed by
Armand Amar
with one track written by Radu Mih?ileanu ("Le Trou Normand").
The musical work which has a central role in the film and is played during the final scene is the
Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35
by
Tchaikovsky
.
[7]
Classical selections by
Mahler
,
Mendelssohn
,
Mozart
and
Khachaturian
are also included on the soundtrack.
- "Andrei I"
- "S'Il Vous Sied"
- "Nani, Nani" (Kek Lang Chants Roms)
- "Place Rouge I"
- "Andrei II"
- "Merci Bolchoi"
- "Kalinka"
- "100% Des Voix"
- "Kalou"
- "Je Vous Baise Chaleureusement"
- "
Symphonie N°1 Titan
"
- "Ci-Git"
- "
Danse Du Sabre Remix
"
- "
Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, K. 467
"
- "Andrei III"
- "
Tziganie
"
- "Le Trou Normand"
- "Ai Routchiok" (Traditional)
- "Place Rouge II"
- "Je Regule L'Addition"
- "Sir Bina Ya Qitar" (Les Musiciens du Nil)
- "Je Suis Ravissant De Vous Rencontrer"
- "Andrei IV"
- "Les Russes Sont Comme Des Mules"
- "Avant Le Concert"
- "
Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35
"
- "Concert, Concert"
- "Vous Avez Voulu Des Russes"
Accolades
[
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]
References
[
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]
Bibliography
[
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]
External links
[
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]