Sometimes it takes a change of scenery to have a change of heart.
Max Skinner (Russell Crowe), a ruthless London bond trader, learns that his uncle (Albert Finney) has died and left him a vineyard in Provence; he goes there, convinced that he’ll end up selling it. The kind of film well-to-do directors make when they reach a certain age and start thinking about retiring as comfortably as possible. Ridley Scott’s vision is certainly attractive enough; he offers us lovely views of rural France, a pleasant romance between Crowe and Marion Cotillard as well as rosy memories of a childhood spent in Provence. One complaint: slapstick really isn’t the director’s or Crowe’s forte.
2006-U.S. 115 min. Color. Widescreen. Produced and directed by Ridley Scott. Novel: Peter Mayle. Cast: Russell Crowe (Max Skinner), Albert Finney (Henry Skinner), Marion Cotillard (Fanny Chenal), Abbie Cornish, Didier Bourdon, Tom Hollander… Freddie Highmore.
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