Screened as part of NZIFF 2022

Lost Illusions 2021

Illusions perdues

Directed by Xavier Giannoli Spotlight

Reaping top awards at the 2022 Césars, this majestic, lavish fresco adapted from Balzac’s masterpiece paints a cruel portrait of 19th century Parisian society and the burgeoning world of the press, which has startling contemporary overtones.

Aug 25

Regent 3 Cinemas

Aug 28

Regent 3 Cinemas

Aug 29

Regent 3 Cinemas

France In French with English subtitles
149 minutes DCP

Rent

Director

Producers

Oliver Delbosc
,
Sidonie Dumas

Screenplay

Xavier Giannoli
,
Jacques Fieschi
,
Based on the novel by Honoré de Balzac

Cinematography

Christophe Beaucarne

Editor

Cyril Nakache

Production designer

Riton Dupire-Clément

Costume designer

Pierre-Jean Larroque

With

Benjamin Voisin (Lucien)
,
Cécile De France (Louise)
,
Vincent Lacoste (Étienne Lousteau)
,
Xavier Dolan (Nathan)
,
Salomé Dewaels (Coralie)
,
Jeanne Balibar (Marquise d’Espard)
,
Gérard Depardieu (Dauriat)
,
André Marcon (Baron du Châtelet)
,
Louis-Do Lenquesaing (Finot)
,
Jean-François Stévenin (Singali)

Festivals

Venice
,
San Sebastián 2021

Awards

Best Film, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Supporting Actor & Most Promising Actor, César Awards 2022

Elsewhere

Lucien, an idealistic young poet, harbours ambitions reaching well beyond the borders of provincial France and his family’s small printing business. Stirred by the attentions, both financial and sexual, of a wealthy patron, Louise de Bargeton, he soon finds himself catapulted into the dizzying bustle of Paris. Here his great expectations and brazen social climbing clash with reality: poetry falls by the wayside as the parvenu swiftly learns to peddle his prose to the highest bidder; he will love, suffer and survive his illusions. Sandra Reid

“This sweeping period drama may be up to its eyeballs in costumes and carriages, but it plays with all the brio and jeopardy of a modern-day gangster movie, featuring hack journalists as its antiheroes… Turns out, there’s nothing new about fake news, and it may shock today’s audiences to learn just how powerful – and how corrupt – the media was two centuries ago this year. Balzac set the tale in 1821, just as printing presses were making it possible to mass-produce misinformation, and sell-out artistes set aside their dreams of writing great literature and settled for influence instead… A sumptuous and surprisingly au courant cinematic retelling.” — Peter Debruge, Variety