Eiffel | |
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Directed by | Martin Bourboulon |
Screenplay by | Caroline Bongrand |
Produced by | Vanessa van Zuylen |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Matias Boucard |
Edited by |
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Music by | Alexandre Desplat |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Pathé Distribution |
Release dates |
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Running time | 108 minutes[2] |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Budget | $25.2 million[3] |
Box office | $13.6 million[4] |
Eiffel is a 2021 French romantic drama film directed by Martin Bourboulon, from a script written by Caroline Bongrand. The film stars Romain Duris as Gustave Eiffel and follows a fictionalized romance between Eiffel and Adrienne Bourgès, his childhood sweetheart, played by Emma Mackey. It also stars Pierre Deladonchamps in a supporting role.
Eiffel premiered on 2 March 2021 at the Alliance Française French Film Festival in Australia, and was released in France on 13 October 2021, by Pathé Distribution.[5][6][7] The film received mostly positive reviews, and grossed over $13 million worldwide.[8][9][10][11][12]
Plot
31 March 1889 – Gustave Eiffel sits in his office, atop the newly completed thousand-foot (300 metre) iron tower he has designed and constructed – the Eiffel Tower.
September 1886 – Eiffel receives an award for his groundbreaking design for an iron skeleton to support the Statue of Liberty. Afterward, he considers what his next construction should be, for the 1889 World’s Fair in Paris. Two of his employees, Maurice Koechlin and Émile Nouguier, propose a 200 metre (656 feet) steel tower, but he turns down their proposal, favouring a Metro system for Paris. In order to get publicity for his enterprise, he contacts an old friend, journalist Antoine de Restac. At a society party, Eiffel meets Restac’s wife, Adrienne. They have a strange, instant connection. Transfixed by her, Eiffel suddenly announces he will build a 300 metre steel tower, shocking the other guests.
Bordeaux, 1860 – while building an iron bridge over the treacherous River Garonne, Eiffel dives in to rescue a construction worker who fell into the river. Eiffel demands wood for safety scaffolding from his superiors, but his request is turned down. Eiffel goes to Bourgès, a wealthy local businessman, to ask for the wood. Eiffel meets Adrienne, Bourgès’ headstrong daughter. Impressed by having secretly witnessed Eiffel’s heroism on the bridge, she speaks up in defence of his request for the wood and secures it for him. Adrienne invites Eiffel to her birthday party. At the party he is awkward, but she finds his aloofness attractive. He kisses her, then storms off, embarrassed. She shows up later at his office, saying she’s attracted to him. Eiffel doesn’t believe her and sends her away, so she throws herself into the river, to spite him. He rescues her and they make love and begin a passionate affair.
1886 – Eiffel presents his plans for the tower to the judges for the competition. At the ceremony to announce the winner, as his name is announced, Eiffel and Adrienne instinctively hold hands. Restac sees this. Eiffel begins construction of the tower. At a garden party, he dances with Adrienne and asks her to meet him at a cheap hotel in the country. She refuses. As construction continues, the workers threaten to strike. Adrienne realises Restac has become suspicious of her. She searches his things and finds a cartoon belittling Eiffel’s tower. Out of jealousy, Restac is using his position as a top journalist to sabotage public opinion against the tower. Restac subtly warns Eiffel about this. With uncertainty clouding the whole undertaking, the workers at the tower go on strike.
Bordeaux, 1860 – Eiffel learns Adrienne has left town and runs to her house, where her father tells Eiffel she was just stringing him along him, and that she never wants to see him again.
1886 – Adrienne shows up at the cheap hotel. She reveals to Eiffel that the reason she left him 30 years ago was that she was pregnant with his child, and her parents forbade her to marry Eiffel, or ever see him again. She raced from the house to be with him, but as she tried to escape over the fence, she fell and was impaled on a spike, losing the baby and almost dying. Eiffel realises Adrienne has always loved him and they make love. When the banks threaten to pull funding for the tower, Eiffel finances the tower with his own fortune. Seeing Eiffel is betting everything on the tower, the workers cease their strike. Adrienne visits the completed first level and she and Eiffel kiss above the rooftops of Paris.
Restac, who married Adrienne and nursed her back to health after her family abandoned her, is aware of her affair with Eiffel. He tells her he will ruin Eiffel’s reputation and destroy the tower’s chances of completion if she doesn’t end the affair. Adrienne tells Eiffel she has agreed to leave the city with Restac, to protect Eiffel and his tower.
Furious and powerless, Eiffel orders the tower’s construction to be completed with rivets instead of bolts, so it can never be torn down. He pushes his team to exhaustion and finishes the tower in time for the World’s Fair. At the grand opening, Eiffel sees Adrienne in the crowd. After they briefly make eye contact, she leaves, knowing she has sacrificed everything so his masterpiece can be completed.
Returning to the opening scene, Eiffel writes in his journal in his office atop the tower. He sketches atop a diagram of the tower, adding letters beside it, to form the name Adrienne. It suddenly becomes apparent that the tower is in the shape of the capital letter “A”. Eiffel has made the tower a permanent monument to their love. He walks out and surveys the city, which sprawls beneath him.
Cast
- Romain Duris as Gustave Eiffel
- Emma Mackey as Adrienne Bourgès[13]
- Pierre Deladonchamps as Antoine de Restac
- Armande Boulanger as Claire Eiffel
- Bruno Raffaelli as M. Bourgès
- Alexandre Steiger as Jean Compagnon
- Andranic Manet as Adolphe Salles
- Philippe Hérisson as Édouard Lockroy
- Stéphane Boucher as Pauwels
- Jérémy Lopez as Maurice Koechlin
- Damien Zanoly as Émile Nouguier
- Sophie Fougère as Mme Bourgès
- Joseph Rezwin as R. Milligan McLane (as Joe Rezwin)
- Jérémie Petrus as Edmond
- Hervé Masquelier as Un banquier
- Benoît de Gaulejac as Un banquier
- Clémence Boué as Madame Lockroy
- Dominique Pozzetto as L'huissier du ministère
- Philippe Saïd as Membre du conseil
- Philippe Richardin as Membre du conseil
- David Olivier Fischer as Le Président de la République
- Frédéric Merlo as Georges
- Catherine Giron as Invitée Bourgès 1
- Stéphane Page as Invité Bourgès 2
- David Grolleau as Paulo
- Christian Loustau as Officiel inauguration
- Fabien de Chavanes as Ouvrier chantier tour
- Denis Leluc as Huissier Conseil de Paris
- Thierry Nenez as Dessinateur 1
- David Sevier as Dessinateur 2
- Vincent Combe as Membre du Conseil
- Juliette Blanche as Amie Adrienne
Reception
Peter Debruge of Variety wrote that "Not a biopic so much as a sketchy piece of historical fiction, Eiffel identifies itself as 'librement inspiré de faits réels,' which roughly translates to 'a made-up crock of hooey'."[15] David Stratton of The Australian wrote that "I am a man with an idea greater than himself, Eiffel tells the various interested parties when he makes his formal bid to build the tower. I think the director of this film took that line to heart, and I am glad he did".[16] Nesselson of Screen International wrote that "Ambitious, handsomely appointed and unapologetically old-fashioned".[17]
References
- ^ "New French film paints Eiffel Tower engineer as hopeless romantic". theguardian.com. 13 October 2021.
- ^ "EIFFEL". Australian Classification Board. Retrieved 26 February 2021.
- ^ "Eiffel : une première image du duo romantique formé par Romain Duris et Emma Mackey". Le Figaro. June 27, 2020.
- ^ "Eiffel (2021)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved June 5, 2022.
- ^ "Top five films you have to see at the 2021 Alliance Française French Film Festival". scoop.com.au. 15 February 2021.
- ^ "French Film Festival review: Eiffel". indaily.com.au. 25 March 2021.
- ^ "'Eiffel', Starring Emma Mackey and Romain Duris, Acquired by Blue Fox Entertainment in the U.S. (EXCLUSIVE)". veriety.com. 5 November 2021.
- ^ "Box-office France: James Bond returns to the top, Eiffel crosses the million". news.in.24.com. 4 November 2021.
- ^ "Crítica de 'Eiffel'". 20minutos.es. 8 November 2021.
- ^ "Eiffel: A brisk, exciting and likeable tale about one man and his famous tower". I.stuff.co.nz. 16 September 2021.
- ^ "Eiffel (M) movie review". canberraweekly.com.au. 13 November 2021.
- ^ "FILM: EIFFEL – the man who built the tower ****". lenews.ch. 27 August 2021.
- ^ "First Look: Emma Mackey and Romain Duris in 'Eiffel' (exclusive)". screendaily.com. 26 June 2021.
- ^ "LIGHT UP | TokyoTower". Archived from the original on 2022-08-15.
- ^ "'Eiffel' Review: Tony French Meller Concocts Trite Romance as the Inspiration for the Eiffel Tower". veriety.com. 10 November 2021.
- ^ "Tall tale of Paris icon a real bolter". theaustralian.com. 25 October 2021.
- ^ "'Eiffel': Review". screendaily.com. 11 October 2021.
External links
- Eiffel at IMDb
- Eiffel at Rotten Tomatoes
- 2021 films
- 2021 romantic drama films
- 2021 biographical drama films
- 2020s French-language films
- 2020s historical drama films
- 2000s historical romance films
- Pathé films
- French romantic drama films
- French historical romance films
- French historical drama films
- French biographical drama films
- Romantic period films
- Films directed by Martin Bourboulon
- Cultural depictions of engineers
- Films about architecture
- Films scored by Alexandre Desplat
- Films set in 1860
- Films set in 1886
- Films set in 1889
- Films set in the 1860s
- Films set in the 1880s
- Films set in Paris
- Films set in Île-de-France
- Films set in Bordeaux
- Films shot in Paris
- Films shot in Île-de-France
- Films shot in France
- Gustave Eiffel
- Eiffel Tower in fiction
- Fiction about world's fairs
- 2020s French films
- 2000s French films