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Les triplettes de Belleville

  • 2003
  • PG-13
  • 1 घं 20 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
7.7/10
58 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
Les triplettes de Belleville (2003)
Bande-annonce [OV] देखें
trailer प्ले करें2:04
12 वीडियो
99+ फ़ोटो
Hand-Drawn AnimationSatireAdventureAnimationComedyDramaMusicSport

जब टूर डी फ्रांस के दौरान उसके पोते का अपहरण कर लिया जाता है, तो मैडम सूजा और उसके प्यारे पोच ब्रूनो बेलेविले सिस्टर्स के साथ मिलकर - फ्रेड एस्टायर के दिनों से एक वृद्ध गीत और नृत्य टीम - उस... सभी पढ़ेंजब टूर डी फ्रांस के दौरान उसके पोते का अपहरण कर लिया जाता है, तो मैडम सूजा और उसके प्यारे पोच ब्रूनो बेलेविले सिस्टर्स के साथ मिलकर - फ्रेड एस्टायर के दिनों से एक वृद्ध गीत और नृत्य टीम - उसे बचाने के लिए।जब टूर डी फ्रांस के दौरान उसके पोते का अपहरण कर लिया जाता है, तो मैडम सूजा और उसके प्यारे पोच ब्रूनो बेलेविले सिस्टर्स के साथ मिलकर - फ्रेड एस्टायर के दिनों से एक वृद्ध गीत और नृत्य टीम - उसे बचाने के लिए।

  • निर्देशक
    • Sylvain Chomet
  • लेखक
    • Sylvain Chomet
  • स्टार
    • Michèle Caucheteux
    • Jean-Claude Donda
    • Michel Robin
  • IMDbPro पर प्रोडक्शन की जानकारी देखें
  • IMDb रेटिंग
    7.7/10
    58 हज़ार
    आपकी रेटिंग
    • निर्देशक
      • Sylvain Chomet
    • लेखक
      • Sylvain Chomet
    • स्टार
      • Michèle Caucheteux
      • Jean-Claude Donda
      • Michel Robin
    • 327यूज़र समीक्षाएं
    • 131आलोचक समीक्षाएं
    • 91मेटास्कोर
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    • 2 ऑस्कर के लिए नामांकित
      • 20 जीत और कुल 41 नामांकन

    वीडियो12

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 2:04
    Bande-annonce [OV]
    The Triplets of Belleville
    Trailer 2:14
    The Triplets of Belleville
    The Triplets of Belleville
    Trailer 2:14
    The Triplets of Belleville
    The Triplets of Belleville
    Trailer 2:14
    The Triplets of Belleville
    The Triplets Of Belleville Scene: Champion's Scent
    Clip 1:49
    The Triplets Of Belleville Scene: Champion's Scent
    The Triplets Of Belleville Scene: Opening Number
    Clip 1:34
    The Triplets Of Belleville Scene: Opening Number
    The Triplets Of Belleville Scene: Grandma Trips Up The Bad Guys
    Clip 1:52
    The Triplets Of Belleville Scene: Grandma Trips Up The Bad Guys

    फ़ोटो130

    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    पोस्टर देखें
    + 126
    पोस्टर देखें

    टॉप कलाकार30

    बदलाव करें
    Michèle Caucheteux
    • Triplet #3
    • (वॉइस)
    Jean-Claude Donda
    • Le Géneral de Gaulle
    • (वॉइस)
    • …
    Michel Robin
    Michel Robin
    • 'Champion' adulte
    • (वॉइस)
    Monica Viegas
    • Madame Souza
    • (वॉइस)
    Dirk Denoyelle
    • Les commentateurs Sportifs
    • (वॉइस)
    • …
    Graziellia de Villa
    • Madame Souza (Englsh version)
    • (वॉइस)
    Noël Baye
    • 'Champion' adulte (English version)
    • (वॉइस)
    Suzy Falk
    • Triplette
    • (वॉइस)
    Nicole Shirer
    • Triplette
    • (वॉइस)
    Germaine Charest
    • Triplette
    • (वॉइस)
    Helen Wambolt
    • Triplette
    • (वॉइस)
    • …
    Evelyn Snow
    • Triplette
    • (वॉइस)
    • …
    Ron Séguin
    • Triplette
    • (वॉइस)
    • …
    Helga Van der Heyden
    • Additional voice
    • (वॉइस)
    Jeron Amin Dewulf
    • Additional voice
    • (वॉइस)
    • (as Jeron Dewulf)
    Jef Tips
    • Additional voice
    • (वॉइस)
    Hendrik Van Eycken
    • Additional voice
    • (वॉइस)
    Emmanuel Biront
    • Additional voice
    • (वॉइस)
    • निर्देशक
      • Sylvain Chomet
    • लेखक
      • Sylvain Chomet
    • सभी कास्ट और क्रू
    • IMDbPro में प्रोडक्शन, बॉक्स ऑफिस और बहुत कुछ

    उपयोगकर्ता समीक्षाएं327

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    फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं

    10Quinoa1984

    the best neo-surrealistic animation I've seen since The Wall- a unique movie-going experience

    Within the first five minutes of The Triplets of Belleville I knew I was about to see either one of the worst films of the year, or one of the best- writer/director Sylvain Chomet and art director/designer Evgnei Tomov have created a (animated) world in which they seem to be in love with every frame, every image, every musical note, and at first there is that sense that this is an off-putting style. But soon I realized that what Chomet and Tomov were doing was much like what Luis Bunuel and Salvador Dali did with their classic Un Chien Andalou. The story is not incomprehensible because it's simple enough so that a child could follow along, and the strategy thus is to tell it with an artistic, intense, mad-cap, whatever you can think to call it, personalized view on the characters and the environments they get themselves into. That the film is from France adds a charm once the elements get skewed (the animators tackle the Tour de France, big cities, ocean-liners, singers, frogs, and the gangster underworld), and that it doesn't have- and doesn't need- subtitles to tell the story is another remarkable feat.

    As the film reached into the last act, I then realized two things- 1) this is one of those films, like Un Chien Andalou and The Wall (the great Gerald Scarfe's influence was one that I guessed, though there's probably more I didn't catch on), that won't appeal to everyone. Those expecting a cute French animated film can expect that, however a movie-goer needs to have an open mind to the material, and that the term "cute" would be taken for granted while being immersed in this film. 2) since the film is made like an original, without much compromise to where the story has to be headed or which characters do and say what, at the least The Triplets of Belleville works superbly to create an overwhelming state of mind for the viewer. Personally, I get exhilarated watching a movie where I don't even WANT to expect where the story is headed. Throughout most of the 80 minutes I felt an un-canny faith in the filmmakers that their oddball, free-wheeling visions wouldn't go up in smoke. And by the end I left wanting more for some reason or another. Like I said, some might be turned sour by the execution of the material, yet for others the fantasy-like nature of The Triplets of Belleville should make for an interesting night-out. For one thing, you won't get those frogs out of your mind very easily. A+
    Chris Knipp

    Sublime vileness

    This stranger-than-usual animation is an ornate, intriguing piece of work, with a unique visual style somewhat resembling certain English cartoonists' (Ronald Searle's, for example) but very remote indeed from either Disney or South Park or Japanese anime. There are times as you watch, especially at first, before the repetition and the overkill of intricate detail begin to pall, when the originality and visual richness clearly approach the sublime. The combination of computer and traditional hand animation methods, carried out at such a level of complexity that the film required five years to complete, is an unquestionable triumph. But you may very well be put off when you realize that overall Sylvain Chomet's first full-length animated film has no discernible point or message; that its central figures are mournful, ugly, and unfriendly; that there is little plot, virtually no dialogue, and that the void left thereby is filled with a great deal of annoying noise and repulsive imagery. The twittering visual machinery of wiggling, yapping, howling dogs, of awkward, caricatured creatures of all sorts endlessly in motion, turns into a series of nightmarish repetitions that can easily become as off-putting as they are wearying.

    I wanted to like this movie. Its originality and adeptness as a work of animation remain impressive. It gives new meaning to the very word `animation': every scene is a study of the nature and arts of motion. There are observations whose keenness is unique. As cultural commentary it certainly provides much material for debate. The vision of France a half century ago is quaint and intriguing. But the mournfulness, the sadomasochistic undertones, and the meanness build over time; and when the triplets dined on plates and pots full of still squirming frogs, my sympathies checked out. The undercurrents of nastiness both in the personalities of the principals and the depiction of American culture do not leave an endearing impression.

    The plot is simple and can be seen as little more than a rough framework on which to hang the intricate doodlings, the recreation of a grotesque nostalgic vision of postwar France, and the endless experiments with the very nature of animation, which are perhaps ultimately the film's real point. An old French granny, Madame Souza, whose walk clatters from a big orthopedic shoe, lives in a rickety house somewhere in Fifties Paris or its environs. She has in her care a large dog, Bruno, and a large, lean, boy, Champion, her orphaned grandson, who dreams of racing in the Tour de France. She herself ruthlessly supervises his training, which is shown in meticulous detail and includes, at home, the use of a variety of Rube Goldberg contraptions to feed and condition him after he has returned from his exhausting day on the roads. Champion grows up with grotesquely hypertrophied leg muscles and tiny upper body, and competes as planned in the Tour de France. But during the race he's kidnapped by sinister box-shaped gangsters and taken to the city of Belleville, over in the new world. Madame de Souza and Bruno set out in pursuit, crossing the sea in a boat, complete with dramatic storm. Once in Belleville, a blatantly anti-American vision of New York perhaps including elements of Montreal (the inhabitants and even the Statue of Liberty are grossly fat), old granny makes the acquaintance of a trio of eccentric and fleshy former women vaudeville singers (whom we've seen do their scat-singing act on an ancient TV broadcast) and these `Triplettes de Belleville' help Madame recapture Champion from the kidnappers. One writer has suggested the plot is an allegory of how Hollywood steals the best European talents and sucks them dry. If so, the theft is foiled this time.

    No movie has ever shown the curious way big cumbersome dogs can manage to get up on a bed with somebody already lying in it. This trick is shown several times. It remains one of the keenest pieces of observation I've ever seen in an animation. The intricacy of detail of Champion's training process is hard to get out of one's head; the depiction of a grueling, relentless exercise routine is unforgettable. Others will like moments like the great storm at sea, though the effects used there seemed to me out of sync with the more linear style of the rest. A momentary TV appearance of what is obviously Glenn Gould intricately nattering away at some Bach keyboard fugue, no doubt beamed to France from the Canadian Broadcasting System, provided one of many delicious little period details during the film's first half. There are also cameos squeezed in by Django Reinhardt, Josephine Baker, and Fred Astaire (who is eaten up by one of his tap shoes). Likewise the visions of period Tour de France training crews and roadside fans are priceless. It's difficult to do justice to such an intricate effort. The devil and the wonder are both in the details. Despite the lack of dialogue as a central element and its replacement by incidental noise (as well as occasional jaunty jazz), a feature that links The Triplets with the comic films of Jacques Tati, there really is a lot of quick French at times, and I have the feeling that in omitting subtitles, the filmmakers or distributors have robbed Anglophone viewers of some of the richest details; that there's French stuff here we can never hope to grasp. For the devotee, this is definitely one for repeated viewings. There's a lot to take in -- if you've got the stomach for it. Once may be enough for many, but anybody interested in animation needs that once. Not suitable for young children or anyone easily weirded out.
    10sadclownrep

    Just Great

    I found "The Triplets of Belleville" to be one of the most charming movies I've had the pleasure of seeing the last couple of years. This delightful movie follows the adventures of Madame Souza, her son, Champion, and their dog, Bruno.

    Madame Souza recognizes that something is missing from Champion's life. His parents are, clearly, gone. All he has left from them is a picture of the pair of them on a bicycle. As she silently pieces together what Champion needs to be happy, she and he discover a new life as participants in the Tour de France - he as a competitor and her as his coach and trainer.

    They live a life of quiet, simple joys until he is kidnapped, an event that leads to a trip to Belleville for all three. This fictional city will prove oddly familiar to most viewers. Here, Madame Souza is befriended by the titular characters - I will leave the "book report" style commenting here.

    There are so many delights in this picture, but I am going to focus on my favorite character, Bruno the dog. I don't think I have ever seen a movie capture a real dog as well as this one does. We see him from a puppy, learn the event that leads him to hate trains, feel anxious for him when he paws at his bowl while the silly humans finish their own dinners, and fear for him when his canine instincts lead him to places of danger.

    Throughout this all, Bruno is gloriously canine. He dreams of the things that are important to him, he sees the world as smells and images. He is awesome. Or, perhaps, she is awesome. Bruno is a male name, but many have suggested he is a she.

    Anyhow, the other characters are great fun as well, but my heart belongs to this big fat dog. Even if I hadn't loved the rest of the movie (I did), I would recomend it for Bruno alone.
    8mainecoon50

    What does it all mean?

    Yesterday evening a friend introduced me to this extraordinary piece of animation. After watching it I was left with the feeling that I'd just watched a film which communicated something to me, but I wasn't quite sure what that might be. For hours afterward I thought to myself, "Why did that film appeal to me so?" The story is simple and straightforward. The details are charming and nuanced. The rendering is a true tour-de-force. The one thing that caught my eye was the sheen of the water as Mme. Souza and Bruno are crossing the ocean in pursuit of her grandson. I can hardly believe that was animation. Then I noticed the play of the light on the water reflected against the hulls of the boats at dock in the harbor. My friend pointed out the skill of the graphic designers in maintaining the proper camera angles of the projected live film footage on the screen during the chase sequence.

    The music is absolutely captivating. Everything from the opening dance-hall sequence to the extraordinary use of the Kyrie from Mozart's Mass in C Minor during the storm at sea and the entrance into the harbor of Belleville. Notice how the music builds in richness as the camera descends from the few spires at the beginning of the sequence to the dense mass at street level.

    Remembering the details and how they relate to each other and the film as a whole keeps you thinking about the significance of the film's contents. For instance, I only now remember that the opening sequence was drawn in the archaic, fluid style of early cartoon animation (Steamboat Willy, Olive Oyl and Popeye) because, of course, it was depicting events which predated the time of the film proper. The style served a purpose, beyond being an end in itself.

    For a long time after watching the film I remained puzzled about its appeal to me. I've seen a large number of animated feature films, but none have left me quite as reflective as did this one. I was less concerned with the meaning of the details. It is a cartoon, after all.

    I continued to wonder about Madame Souza's expression. About how the creator was able to invest such meaning in those simple dark circles set behind thick lenses and the line of her mouth, which modulated between forthright resolve and a gentle satisfaction. Then it occurred to me. Beyond the larger outline of the story and the details in which it is couched, it tells us of the power of one person's love and concern for another. I suppose we all wish we could receive such unconditional love, and it makes us feel warm to think that such a thing could actually be. Even if only in a cartoon.

    The film either will or will not appeal to you, depending on what it is you're looking for in an animated feature film. I watched it without expectations, and was left wondering, "Why does it resonate with me?" And you'll want to see it again.
    Bobs-9

    Not hand-drawn, and not quite the anti-Disney

    While a lot of the comments here seem to see this as the antithesis of American Disney- or Pixar-style animation, its blood lines are not as far removed from those examples as you might think. Chomet explains in short documentary features on the DVD that the film was meant to look hand drawn, and though the character designs originated as loosely-rendered blue pencil sketches on Chomet's drawing pad, much if not all of what you see in the film itself is indeed computer animation. The look of the film, according to Chomet, is actually heavily influenced by Disney's "new" animation style of the 1960s that was unveiled in the film "101 Dalmatians."

    At the same time, it can't be denied that this film is distinctly European in style, and likely to bore people who expect an animated film to be bright, colorful, loud, and not particularly subtle or complex. Its wealth of detail is staggering, and can't be taken in through one cursory viewing. The little quirks of characterization and character design are numerous, but all the easier to discern because it's cinema in the classical sense of being primarily a visual medium, and there's not a lot of yammering for the sake of plot exposition or as a shortcut to characterization. Those are meant to be gained through observation, and what a feast for the eyes it is. This is another example of a film at which simple people with simple tastes lob the tired old warhorse criticism "pretentious." There's nothing wrong or shameful in having simple tastes, bit I wish they wouldn't feel thus obligated to publicly pee all over any work of art more subtle than a Roger Rabbit cartoon.

    I think special mention should be made of the soundtrack, which is a rich brew of sound layered on sound, but with a decidedly delicate touch. Note the sound effects in the climactic car chase through the streets of Belleville. Most filmmakers would be temped to goose up the excitement and chaos of the scene with loud, piercing sounds of crashing, screeching tires, gunshots, etc. While these noises are present, they are in fact applied very lightly and delicately, sounding almost like the collision of toy cars and the shooting of toy guns, which lends the scene a surreal, otherworldly quality that the more conventional choice of loud, overbearing sound effects wouldn't yield. It's been remarked here that the combination of minimalist dialog, strange characters, and baroquely complex settings are reminiscent of Jeunet, and I think that's the most apt comparison, particularly his earlier style as in "Delicatessen."

    The first scene is of particular interest in that it is in a different style from the rest of the film, designed to look like old black and white animation from the 1930s. One of the conventions of animated shorts in that era was to include bizarre caricatures of celebrities. Now I recognized Django Reinhardt, Josephine Baker, and Fred Astair, but who was the orchestra conductor supposed to be? He has very distinctive features which lead me to believe he represents some specific real person, but nobody comes to mind. Maybe he's someone better known to a French audience? I'd be very interested to know.

    Some people seem to think there is a strong anti-American bias to this film. Does it poke fun at North-Americans? Sure it does, but it also makes fun of the French (note the huge noses, receding chins, and tiny little mustaches, along with the Triplets' penchant for regarding whatever slimy thing they can yank out of the swamp as a succulent delicacy). Admittedly this French caricaturing is not quite as barbed as the swipes at American culture. But come on, we're big boys. We can take it! Just gnaw on a few freedom fries and suck it up already. Actually, this film sort of sums up the history of France's attitudes toward American culture over the last 70 years. They adored us in the 1930s, but the honeymoon has been over for a while.

    One more detail. To an earlier commentator who found it hilarious that in the song "Belleville Rendezvous" the Triplets sing the phrase "ca-ca," they are in fact singing "can can" ("voodoo, can-can"). The characteristic French pronunciation "cahn-cahn" just makes it sound a lot like "ca-ca."

    इस तरह के और

    L'illusionniste
    7.4
    L'illusionniste
    La vieille dame et les pigeons
    7.8
    La vieille dame et les pigeons
    Persepolis
    8.0
    Persepolis
    Attila Marcel
    7.0
    Attila Marcel
    Vals Im Bashir
    8.0
    Vals Im Bashir
    I Lost My Body
    7.5
    I Lost My Body
    Ma vie de Courgette
    7.8
    Ma vie de Courgette
    Chico & Rita
    7.2
    Chico & Rita
    The Thousand Miles
    The Thousand Miles
    La planète sauvage
    7.6
    La planète sauvage
    Marcel et Monsieur Pagnol
    8.7
    Marcel et Monsieur Pagnol
    Merci Monsieur Imada
    6.8
    Merci Monsieur Imada

    कहानी

    बदलाव करें

    क्या आपको पता है

    बदलाव करें
    • ट्रिविया
      Among the anti-Disney riffs in the film are a Mickey-shaped turd in a toilet, and a wallet-picture of a character in Disneyland with a lollipop that says SUCKER.
    • गूफ़
      When the two waiters are running to the Mafia in the restaurant, the left-hand waiter's hair color is black; in the next take, his hair is gray.
    • भाव

      [repeated lines]

      The Triplets of Belleville: Swinging Belleville rendez-vous / Marathon dancing, doop-de-doo / Voodoo, can-can aren't taboo / The world is strange in rendez-vous

    • क्रेज़ी क्रेडिट
      After the credits have rolled we see the Pedalo rent guy waiting on the beach, looking out to sea and checking his wrist watch.
    • कनेक्शन
      Featured in Troldspejlet: एपिसोड #29.4 (2003)
    • साउंडट्रैक
      Piaf Song
      Lyrics and music by Sylvain Chomet

      Performed by Béatrice Bonifassi

    टॉप पसंद

    रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
    साइन इन करें

    अक्सर पूछे जाने वाला सवाल18

    • How long is The Triplets of Belleville?Alexa द्वारा संचालित

    विवरण

    बदलाव करें
    • रिलीज़ की तारीख़
      • 11 जून 2003 (फ़्रांस)
    • कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
      • फ़्रांस
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      • दक्षिण कोरिया
    • आधिकारिक साइट
      • Sony Pictures Classics (United States)
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      • फ्रेंच
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    • इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
      • The Triplets of Belleville
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    बॉक्स ऑफ़िस

    बदलाव करें
    • बजट
      • $95,00,000(अनुमानित)
    • US और कनाडा में सकल
      • $70,07,149
    • US और कनाडा में पहले सप्ताह में कुल कमाई
      • $1,08,080
      • 30 नव॰ 2003
    • दुनिया भर में सकल
      • $1,47,76,775
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    तकनीकी विशेषताएं

    बदलाव करें
    • चलने की अवधि
      1 घंटा 20 मिनट
    • रंग
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      • Dolby Digital
    • पक्ष अनुपात
      • 1.66 : 1

    इस पेज में योगदान दें

    किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें
    Les triplettes de Belleville (2003)
    टॉप गैप
    By what name was Les triplettes de Belleville (2003) officially released in India in English?
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