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And Now Ladies And Gentlemen Reviews

2003 Certificate PG
  • Rated:
  • 50
  • from 501 members

Weaving several intriguing plotlines into one that culminates in an idyllic hotel paradise in Morocco, Claude Lelouch has created a stylish romantic adventure with AND NOW LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. Two strangers leading separate lives in different cities come together in this tale of mystery and fate. Valentin (Jeremy Irons) is an .. Read more

Starring Jeremy Irons, Patricia Kaas, Thierry Lhermitte, Alessandra Martines
Director Claude Lelouch
Genres Drama, Romance

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  • Critics' reviews of And Now Ladies And Gentlemen

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  • 2 stars out of 5

    How do you make the Rolling Stones — one of the world's great live bands — look boring? Make a documentary about their 1972 US tour as dull as this one, in which Mick Jagger and company give all they've got, but the director (Rollin Binzer) can't seem to deliver. It would help if the cameras were in the right place at the right time. This is depressing stuff, especially for fans.

    • Radio Times
  • Most helpful members' reviews (3) of And Now Ladies And Gentlemen

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  • 22 out of 31 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    Goodnight Ladies and gentlemen

    The plot to this film was very slow and boring.The part english and french dialogue got confusing as it kept swiching from one to the other so one tended to loose track of the story. Half way through my wife fell asleep but did'nt miss much anyway.This is by far one of the worst films we have rented so far and if this ever reaches tv will avoid it like the plague.

      • S Everill from West Midlands
  • 6 out of 6 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    My kind of film!

    Can't believe so many people didn't like this film. Beautifully directed by Claude LeLouch with music by Michel Legrande, the storyline is unusual and brilliantly acted by Jeremy Irons in the lead role, with singer Patricia Kass as his co-star.

    Irons plays a daring jewel thief and con-man par excellence, who - during a period of luxurious retirement with his mistress in Monte Carlo - begins to suffer severe headaches and blackouts. Simultaneously, a beautiful cabaret singer in Morocco has been plagued by similar symptoms and fate brings the two of them together with interesting consequences. The film has an atmospheric and timeless quality, with witty dialogue,comedy and tragedy finely mixed. The locations (London, Paris and Morocco) are glamorous and in the case of Morocco, highly evocative. If you enjoyed 'The Sheltering Sky', then you would almost certainly enjoy this. The music is an added bonus, particularly for lovers of cool jazz and Michel Legrande's unforgettable love songs.

    As for the French dialogue and English sub-titles, something which seems to bother so many people, I would add that these are much clearer than in most foreign films. The actors speak slowly and even a non-French speaker like myself can get the gist of conversations without the added assistance of the sub-titles. I liked this film so much that I'm going to buy it and watch it lots more times!

      • granita from Farnham
  • 5 out of 5 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    Intriguing

    You want to keep watching it, it has a nice feel, good storyline and superb acting by Jeremy Irons

    I suspect the subtitles have put many people off, but it is worth persevering with them and the twisting storyline

      • A customer from Worcestershire
  • Most recent members' reviews (2) of And Now Ladies And Gentlemen

    View all
  • 22 out of 31 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    Goodnight Ladies and gentlemen

    The plot to this film was very slow and boring.The part english and french dialogue got confusing as it kept swiching from one to the other so one tended to loose track of the story. Half way through my wife fell asleep but did'nt miss much anyway.This is by far one of the worst films we have rented so far and if this ever reaches tv will avoid it like the plague.

      • S Everill from West Midlands
  • 6 out of 6 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    My kind of film!

    Can't believe so many people didn't like this film. Beautifully directed by Claude LeLouch with music by Michel Legrande, the storyline is unusual and brilliantly acted by Jeremy Irons in the lead role, with singer Patricia Kass as his co-star.

    Irons plays a daring jewel thief and con-man par excellence, who - during a period of luxurious retirement with his mistress in Monte Carlo - begins to suffer severe headaches and blackouts. Simultaneously, a beautiful cabaret singer in Morocco has been plagued by similar symptoms and fate brings the two of them together with interesting consequences. The film has an atmospheric and timeless quality, with witty dialogue,comedy and tragedy finely mixed. The locations (London, Paris and Morocco) are glamorous and in the case of Morocco, highly evocative. If you enjoyed 'The Sheltering Sky', then you would almost certainly enjoy this. The music is an added bonus, particularly for lovers of cool jazz and Michel Legrande's unforgettable love songs.

    As for the French dialogue and English sub-titles, something which seems to bother so many people, I would add that these are much clearer than in most foreign films. The actors speak slowly and even a non-French speaker like myself can get the gist of conversations without the added assistance of the sub-titles. I liked this film so much that I'm going to buy it and watch it lots more times!

      • granita from Farnham
  • 22 out of 31 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    Goodnight Ladies and gentlemen

    The plot to this film was very slow and boring.The part english and french dialogue got confusing as it kept swiching from one to the other so one tended to loose track of the story. Half way through my wife fell asleep but did'nt miss much anyway.This is by far one of the worst films we have rented so far and if this ever reaches tv will avoid it like the plague.

      • S Everill from West Midlands
  • 6 out of 6 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    My kind of film!

    Can't believe so many people didn't like this film. Beautifully directed by Claude LeLouch with music by Michel Legrande, the storyline is unusual and brilliantly acted by Jeremy Irons in the lead role, with singer Patricia Kass as his co-star.

    Irons plays a daring jewel thief and con-man par excellence, who - during a period of luxurious retirement with his mistress in Monte Carlo - begins to suffer severe headaches and blackouts. Simultaneously, a beautiful cabaret singer in Morocco has been plagued by similar symptoms and fate brings the two of them together with interesting consequences. The film has an atmospheric and timeless quality, with witty dialogue,comedy and tragedy finely mixed. The locations (London, Paris and Morocco) are glamorous and in the case of Morocco, highly evocative. If you enjoyed 'The Sheltering Sky', then you would almost certainly enjoy this. The music is an added bonus, particularly for lovers of cool jazz and Michel Legrande's unforgettable love songs.

    As for the French dialogue and English sub-titles, something which seems to bother so many people, I would add that these are much clearer than in most foreign films. The actors speak slowly and even a non-French speaker like myself can get the gist of conversations without the added assistance of the sub-titles. I liked this film so much that I'm going to buy it and watch it lots more times!

      • granita from Farnham
  • 5 out of 5 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 4 stars

    Intriguing

    You want to keep watching it, it has a nice feel, good storyline and superb acting by Jeremy Irons

    I suspect the subtitles have put many people off, but it is worth persevering with them and the twisting storyline

      • A customer from Worcestershire
  • 8 out of 15 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    If I wasn't a gentleman.......

    If I wasn't a gentleman, I could think of many more words to use to describe this rubbish!

      • KDP from Lancashire England
  • 2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars

    Deucement

    The most sumptuous film since the English Patient. If you like laid back, prepare to be perfectly horizontal. Evocative, colourful images with a honey soundtrack make this a film to sink, very deeply, into. As you languish, feel the rest of the world melt away and absorb yourself, as the writer and director intended, in a floating, wafting bubble of cinematic excellence.

      • A customer from The highlands, where else
  • 2 out of 4 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    If I wasnt a lady

    what a load of French twaddle with a little English. Very slow and only suitable for those who want to practise their french. Boring and a waste of time for those of us that enjoy a good film.

      • Susie Williamson-Lynam from Briton Ferry
  • Rated - 1 star

    Glamorous tosh

    Incomprehensibly plotted, stuffed with posh locations and product placement: what was Jeremy Irons doing in this farrago? Watch and weep.

      • Jaded from Solihull, England
  • Rated - 2 stars

    Not interesting

    Can`t recommend it to anyone

      • A customer from London,England
  • Rated - 1 star

    Ladies & Gentlemen?l

    Don't bother!! What a boring and unecessarily complicated film and a complete waste of time. I gave up 1/2 way through.... couldn't make it out at all!

    Joy

      • A customer from Twickenham
  • Rated - 3 stars

    Better than the reviewers claimed it was

    This was an unusual film in a interesting location (Morocco) .It was never Oscar material but it was a different type of story and not predictable about 2 people with the same medical problem and how their paths crossed . Also the French singer was gorgeous !!

      • BarryBlue from Scotland
  • Critics' reviews

  • 2 stars out of 5

    How do you make the Rolling Stones — one of the world's great live bands — look boring? Make a documentary about their 1972 US tour as dull as this one, in which Mick Jagger and company give all they've got, but the director (Rollin Binzer) can't seem to deliver. It would help if the cameras were in the right place at the right time. This is depressing stuff, especially for fans.

    • Radio Times

Buy from the LOVEFiLM shop


    • And Now Ladies And Gentlemen
      Weaving several intriguing plotlines into one that culminates in an idyllic hotel paradise in Morocco, Claude Lelouch has created a stylish romantic adventure with AND NOW LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. Two strangers leading separate lives in different cities come together in this tale of mystery and fate. ...

Rating breakdown

501 Member ratings
  • 100
14
  • 90
20
  • 80
37
  • 70
51
  • 60
77
  • 50
67
  • 40
72
  • 30
65
  • 20
66
  • 10
32

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