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Before Sunset (2004)
Released By: Warner Independent Pictures   Rating: R   In Theaters: 7/2/2004
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Studio: Warner Independent Pictures
Genre: Drama
MPAA Rating: R
Director: Richard Linklater
Language: English
Official Website: http://wip.warnerbros.com/index.html?site=beforesunset
Theatrical Release: 7/2/2004
Home Video Release: 11/9/2004
Cast: Ethan Hawke, Julie Delpy, Vernon Dobtcheff, Louise Lemoine Torres, Rodolphe Pauly
Published ID: 855094
UPC: 085393896225,
Plot: Richard Linklater directs the romantic drama Before Sunset, a sequel to Before Sunrise (1995). Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Celine (Julie Delpy) were strangers who spent a loquacious night together in Vienna. Nine years later, Jesse has written a book about the encounter. During his accelerated European book tour, he reunites with Celine in Paris. Before Jesse's flight home, he joins Celine for a picturesque walk around Paris peppered with intimate conversation: at first, about the minutiae of their day-to-day lives and their relationships, and then about their lingering feelings for one another. Before Sunset was nominated for the Golden Bear at the {~Berlin International Film Festival}. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Better Than A Sleeping Pill
Added 2/8/2010

If you are having trouble sleeping some night, pop this movie into your DVD player and you will be out like a light in no time. I found this movie extremely boring. I am a fan of Ethan Hawke's, but I think he should stick to just acting, not screenwriting, as he collaborated on this movie to write the screen play along with Julie Delpy and the gentleman who directed it. Julie should also stick to acting, and singing, in my opinion. She really has a lovely voice and gift for playing the guitar. That was the most pleasant part of the movie (and of course the sights and sounds of France.) All in all, this movie definitely didn't cut it for me. If you must see it, save your $$ and rent it at the library. Thumbs down!
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
A real life connection playing before your eyes
Added 1/30/2010

I think it depends on your age and frame of mind, but I identified with Before Sunset more than Before Sunrise. Both are must-sees and genius work by Richard Linklater. It's impressive enough that the entire 3 hours of screenplay between the two is pure dialogue between 2 people. But the reality of the conversation, the stumbling, the idiomatic expressions, mispronunciations - everything is just so real. In Before Sunrise, it seemed a little odd that Jesse (Hawke) just said he was from the "US", with no real city identified. Before Sunset is a much more mature interaction.

Ethan Hawke is a fine actor, but Julie Delpy really blew me away. A couple of my favorite quotes by Celine (Delpy) from the ferry ride just before Jesse has to leave for the airport:

Questioning how lasting their relationship might have been or could be...
"Maybe we're only good at brief encounters walking around in European cities in warm climate."

Rationalizing the mistake they both made by not exchanging phone #'s/addresses...
"I guess when you're young, you just believe there will be many people who you connect with. Later in life, you realize it only happens a few times."

That last quote really hit home for me. I do hope Linklater makes a 3rd part to this story, though my sense is that he wants the viewer to make up his mind as to what happens next. Similar to the way Jesse's book ends. The reader doesn't actually know what happens after that one night.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Better than the first
Added 11/3/2009

I absolutely enjoyed this movie. You must watch the Before Sunrise first. It's more than your typical love story. The intelligent and candid dialogue makes the movie so intriguing and realistic.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Ecstatic
Added 9/26/2009

Paris, 2003. Jesse, an American writer in his early 30s, is signing books and giving a talk at Shakespeare & Company, the famed Parisian bookseller that first printed "Ulysses" in 1922. The book chronicles a one-night stand nearly a decade earlier that he just can't get out of his mind. As he is about to finish, he locks eyes for a moment on a particular face in the stacks: Celine, the woman he met nine years before on a summer night in Vienna. For anyone who has seen and loved BEFORE SUNRISE, the film chronicling that meeting, the moment of recognition in this sequel comes as an all-time great moment in cinema...five minutes in, and I knew I was in the presence of greatness.

Celine and Jesse go for a cup of coffee at a café, traversing a half-dozen windy, ancient Parisian streets, and they talk about careers and education, what has led them to this place. Interestingly enough, the dialog was largely scripted by the actors, and they both express (non-acting) interests that mirror the real lives of Hawke (a successful novelist) and Delpy (an environmental activist and musician who has recorded a couple of albums); they also play to their ages and they play characters that are reasonably successful in the outward sense, so a great aura of realism is maintained with little effort. This allows the dialog to ebb and flow, to continue easily for the 80 minute duration of this real-time walk through the streets and gardens of Paris, through life, career, love, lust, politics.

And it all may seem very boring to you, if what you expect is "drama" and "event"; if you expect your romances to be full of sex and unbelievable situations and jealousy and hysteria. BEFORE SUNSET is 80 minutes of two very intelligent, articulate people reacquainting themselves with each other, reawakening to youthful aspirations and romantic hopes that they assumed were withering. It's a paean to French ideals and American excesses, to Paris and to music and to architecture and literature, all conveyed in the expressions and words of two hopeless romantics and in the passion their director has for the noble idea, so rarely practiced, of the importance and power of each day, each hour, each minute of life.

I'm going on a bit perhaps, but I cannot think of a more "real", knowing film about love, about the lost past and the hopeful future than this minimalist tour through the eyes of a brazen Texan and a talkative Parisian. It's easy for me to fall in love with actresses, but Julie Delpy is simply unbelievable here and I've rarely felt more jealous in a movie than I did of Ethan Hawke (who I rarely like, but is as perfect here as he was in the earlier film).

There are many wonderful allusions to film history in this hour and a third but the most potent is the short cruise down the Seine near the end, which brings to mind most obviously two of the most romantic and expressionist films in French history, Vigo's L'ATALANTE (1934) and Carax' LES AMANTS DU PONT NEUF (1991). I was wondering if this film would end there, but instead the couple detours to Celine's apartment for the stunning, very appropriate finale.

Along with it's predecessor, one of the very greatest films about falling in love - an re-falling - in the history of cinema.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
IT SUCKS
Added 7/18/2009

It flat out sucks and is boring as hell. Just 80 minutes of blah blah which we just fast forwarded through.
2 out of 10 people found this helpful.
Better Than A Sleeping Pill
Added 2/8/2010

If you are having trouble sleeping some night, pop this movie into your DVD player and you will be out like a light in no time. I found this movie extremely boring. I am a fan of Ethan Hawke's, but I think he should stick to just acting, not screenwriting, as he collaborated on this movie to write the screen play along with Julie Delpy and the gentleman who directed it. Julie should also stick to acting, and singing, in my opinion. She really has a lovely voice and gift for playing the guitar. That was the most pleasant part of the movie (and of course the sights and sounds of France.) All in all, this movie definitely didn't cut it for me. If you must see it, save your $$ and rent it at the library. Thumbs down!
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
A real life connection playing before your eyes
Added 1/30/2010

I think it depends on your age and frame of mind, but I identified with Before Sunset more than Before Sunrise. Both are must-sees and genius work by Richard Linklater. It's impressive enough that the entire 3 hours of screenplay between the two is pure dialogue between 2 people. But the reality of the conversation, the stumbling, the idiomatic expressions, mispronunciations - everything is just so real. In Before Sunrise, it seemed a little odd that Jesse (Hawke) just said he was from the "US", with no real city identified. Before Sunset is a much more mature interaction.

Ethan Hawke is a fine actor, but Julie Delpy really blew me away. A couple of my favorite quotes by Celine (Delpy) from the ferry ride just before Jesse has to leave for the airport:

Questioning how lasting their relationship might have been or could be...
"Maybe we're only good at brief encounters walking around in European cities in warm climate."

Rationalizing the mistake they both made by not exchanging phone #'s/addresses...
"I guess when you're young, you just believe there will be many people who you connect with. Later in life, you realize it only happens a few times."

That last quote really hit home for me. I do hope Linklater makes a 3rd part to this story, though my sense is that he wants the viewer to make up his mind as to what happens next. Similar to the way Jesse's book ends. The reader doesn't actually know what happens after that one night.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Better than the first
Added 11/3/2009

I absolutely enjoyed this movie. You must watch the Before Sunrise first. It's more than your typical love story. The intelligent and candid dialogue makes the movie so intriguing and realistic.
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
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