LouHomey
From my favorite movies..
Iseerphia
All that we are seeing on the screen is happening with real people, real action sequences in the background, forcing the eye to watch as if we were there.
Humbersi
The first must-see film of the year.
BelSports
This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
JvH48
Saw this at the Rotterdam film festival (iffr.com) 2016. I did not expect, reading the synopsis on the festival website, a gallery of eccentrics. We got it nevertheless but I'm not complaining. Leave your logic at home, since a real corpse in the real world cannot survive three nights without producing an unhealthy smell, unlike this particular corpse that seemed to get away with natural phenomena as we know it. The whodunit and the role of the police are just a small part of the story, merely a vehicle to assemble all these non-average figures into one single story, flowing with unexpected turns of events from begin to end, without losing its drive and without dull moments.
pogofan
Both my wife and I gave this film three stars out of five when we saw it last night at filmfestdc. We might have enjoyed it more had it been described more accurately: though it has a few humorous moments, mostly near the beginning, it is _not_ a comedy. For us, the best things about it were the beautiful lead actress, whose face was evocative and touching, and the depiction of rural French life.One correction of a previous IMDb review: there _is_ a very brief sex scene (just a few seconds, though preceded by a somewhat longer scene of oral and physical foreplay). I would also disagree that the movie is "about necrophilia," though certainly that plays a major role in the plot. And though the main character is definitely buttoned-up--the arc of the movie is about her becoming unbuttoned, so to speak--I don't think she should be called prudish; a prude would not have tolerated Pattie's stories of her sexual escapades. Sorry for the quibbles, but after last night, I want to see the film described as accurately as possible!
writers_reign
With two of the finest mid-age French actresses and one of the finest older generation actors this film has a lot going for it on paper. With so many beautiful and talented actresses in France I find it almost mandatory to separate them by age-groups and it's not so long ago that both Karin Viard and Isabelle Carre were in the youngest category that now features names like Cecile de France, Melanie Douty, Deborah Francois etc and as Viard and Carre move upwards lustrous names like Carole Bouquet, Isabelle Huppert, Nathalie Baye, Catherine Frot and the rest step aside. On paper the storyline is flimsy to say the least; buttoned-up Carre has come to the country to arrange the funeral of her mother and encounters the ultimate free-lover in Viard, who delights in relating her many sexual exploits to the prudish, strait- laced Carre. Inevitably, of course, Carre emerges from her shell just as the moment Sergi Lopez is beachcombing. There's actually more to it than this but you need to look for it.
jfseignol
This movie firstly seems to be a comedy confronting two women with radically different attitude about sex: Patty describes her very active sex life with a lot of embarrassing details to the shy and conservative bourgeois Caroline who just wants to conduct the funeral for her mother. Beyond these very funny scenes, it turns out to be a beautiful, heart-warming and poetic reflection about sex, happiness, grief and death. We follow Caroline in her journey from a sad, conventional, "respectable" life to the discovery of simple happiness, helped by the memories of her late libertine mother and a series of funny and nice people. The two main actresses are wonderful. (Note that contrary to what this review may imply, there are no sex scenes in this movie, although some language may sound very explicit).