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Look at Me
Directed by
Agnès Jaoui
2004
1h 50m
PG-13
Drama
,
Comedy
,
Romance
,
and more
6.8
88%
69%
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A french girl gifted with a great voice, has a complex about her weight and her appearance.
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Where to Watch Look at Me
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Cast of Look at Me
Marilou Berry
Lolita Cassard
Jean-Pierre Bacri
Étienne Cassard
Agnès Jaoui
Sylvia Millet
Laurent Grévill
Pierre Millet
Virginie Desarnauts
Karine Cassard
Keine Bouhiza
Sébastien
Grégoire Oestermann
Vincent
Serge Riaboukine
Félix
Michèle Moretti
Édith
Yves Verhoeven
Le badaud 1
Samir Guesmi
Le badaud 2
Jean-Pierre Lazzerini
Le chauffeur de taxi
Jacques Boko
Le videur
Look at Me Reviews
Houston Chronicle
Bruce Westbrook
An overrated mound of misery.
Philadelphia Inquirer
Carrie Rickey
It's a marvel that reverberates long after we leave the theater.
Dallas Morning News
Chris Vognar
This is the kind of fluid, balanced comedy-drama that Woody Allen wishes he could still make.
Orlando Sentinel
Roger Moore
At best, a most watchable character study of lives that are more interesting than compelling.
Arizona Republic
Richard Nilsen
The pleasure of the film, as in many French films from Renoir to Rohmer, is in the exactitude of observation, the accuracy of the portrait and the elegance of the writing.
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Eleanor Ringel Cater
The self-involved characters in this emotionally smart, beautifully acted and uncommonly insightful film help us look at ourselves.
Chicago Sun-Times
Roger Ebert
The thing about a movie like this is, the characters may be French, but they're more like people I know than they could ever be in the Hollywood remake.
Denver Post
Michael Booth
Rarely does a director assemble a set of characters so infantile in their emotions and so irritating to be around -- at least if they want anyone to actually pay to see the movie.
Chicago Tribune
Michael Wilmington
A witty and psychologically perceptive look at the Parisian literary scene.
Seattle Times
Moira MacDonald
Jaoui, crisply efficient as Sylvia, reveals herself as a talent to watch, and Berry disappears into the role of Lolita, carrying the movie on her weary shoulders.
Austin Chronicle
Marjorie Baumgarten
Although little about the story seems surprising or spontaneous, the film's delights lie in its acute observation of the characters and their interactions.
San Francisco Chronicle
Ruthe Stein
One of the many marvels of this keenly observed family saga is the rapidness and economy with which it establishes a disturbing father-daughter dynamic.
New Yorker
Anthony Lane
Both an implicit protest against the blindness of power and an equally fervent protest against the acquiescence of men and women who are too weak or too compromised to stand up for themselves -- that is, most people.
Washington Post
Ann Hornaday
Jaoui sets her wryly observant sights on family, artistic ambition and the tyranny of physical appearance, and the result is a bright, briskly moving film whose modest scale belies the universality of its themes.
Washington Post
Desson Thomson
The characters exude moral three-dimensionality; they're not built to behave or please us. They're not bound by that inflexible Hollywood contract to modify their lives and morals just in time for the ending.
NPR's Fresh Air
David Edelstein
It builds, almost imperceptibly, to a vision of a world in which no one looks at anyone, at least deeply enough to see beyond the trappings of beauty or fame.
Boston Globe
Wesley Morris
A marvelous, uncommonly observant, and unexpectedly rousing group portrait from writer-director-actors Agnès Jaoui and Jean-Pierre Bacri.
New York Daily News
Jami Bernard
This audience-pleaser is smart and acerbic.
Rolling Stone
Peter Travers
This bonbon spiked with malice is a triumph for Jaoui, who takes witty and wounding measure of the small betrayals that leave bruises on us all.
Newsday
Jan Stuart
The ironies and emotional truths running through the dense screenplay are too manifold to catalog here.
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