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A Secret

Original title: Un secret
  • 2007
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
3.4K
YOUR RATING
A Secret (2007)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer1:52
1 Video
3 Photos
DramaWar

A 15-year-old boy unearths a shocking family secret.A 15-year-old boy unearths a shocking family secret.A 15-year-old boy unearths a shocking family secret.

  • Director
    • Claude Miller
  • Writers
    • Claude Miller
    • Natalie Carter
    • Philippe Grimbert
  • Stars
    • Cécile de France
    • Patrick Bruel
    • Ludivine Sagnier
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    3.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Claude Miller
    • Writers
      • Claude Miller
      • Natalie Carter
      • Philippe Grimbert
    • Stars
      • Cécile de France
      • Patrick Bruel
      • Ludivine Sagnier
    • 27User reviews
    • 58Critic reviews
    • 72Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 13 nominations total

    Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:52
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast41

    Edit
    Cécile de France
    Cécile de France
    • Tania Stirn
    • (as Cécile De France)
    • …
    Patrick Bruel
    Patrick Bruel
    • Maxime Nathan Grinberg…
    Ludivine Sagnier
    Ludivine Sagnier
    • Hannah Golda Stirn…
    Julie Depardieu
    Julie Depardieu
    • Louise
    Mathieu Amalric
    Mathieu Amalric
    • François Grimbert à 37 ans
    Nathalie Boutefeu
    Nathalie Boutefeu
    • Esther
    Yves Verhoeven
    • Georges
    Yves Jacques
    Yves Jacques
    • Commandant Béraud
    Sam Garbarski
    Sam Garbarski
    • Joseph
    Orlando Nicoletti
    • Simon Grinberg à 7 ans
    Robert Plagnol
    • Robert Stirn
    Valentin Vigourt
    • François Grimbert à 7 ans
    Quentin Dubuis
    • François Grimbert à 14 ans
    Chantal Banlier
    • Maria
    Myriam Fuks
    Myriam Fuks
    • Mère Hannah
    Philippe Grimbert
    • Le passeur
    Michel Israël
    • Père Hannah
    • (as Michel Israel)
    Justine Jouxtel
    • Rebecca Finke
    • Director
      • Claude Miller
    • Writers
      • Claude Miller
      • Natalie Carter
      • Philippe Grimbert
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    6.83.3K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9Felix-28

    One of the best

    Well, I'm very definitely with those who praise this film. I think it's quite excellent.

    It has many qualities that I value. To begin with, the narrative is entirely believable. I particularly liked the fact that one of the principal characters was a Jew who didn't didn't care much about being a Jew and felt no need to proclaim his Jewishness to the world: there are many Jews like that and they are as entitled to respect as a non-practising Christian or Muslim or anyone else. The knowledge of the son that he's a disappointment to his father rang true. The acceptance by some Jews of the Nazi laws, and the belief of those same Jews that if they obey the laws, wear the star, stay away from public swimming pools, then they will be all right. The desire of those who live through the holocaust to put it behind them rather than dwell on it.

    I like its directness and understatement. There are no histrionics. The story is told; the audience observes and draws its own conclusions.

    The acting and directing are uniformly outstanding. I'd never had much time for Cécile de France, but she is perfect in this rôle. Patrick Bruel as the athletic father is just as good, and Julie Dépardieu as the family friend and the three actors who play the son at different times of his life are up there too; in fact, it's unfair to leave anyone out.

    The director Claude Miller deserves special mention. I haven't seen any of his other films, but I'll look out for him from now on. He handles the film with absolute confidence, never obtruding, but conveying every nuance without faltering. This is a classic example of how simplicity, directness and lack of elaboration can add to the power of a story.

    This film deserves much more than it's current user rating of 6.7.
    9whistlerspa

    Just Beautiful

    Beautifully filmed - stunning screenplay A simple story beautifully acted by the entire cast.

    Stunningly beautiful female leads as well.

    This film gets my vote as one of the best foreign language films I've seen. It can be a little slow moving in parts so it's a film that you want to watch when you are not in any hurry, just sit back and enjoy.

    The story revolves around Francois growing up in 50's Paris who find out a family secret. It jumps from the 30's - 80's in telling the story and I thought it a nice touch filming the 80's section in black and white. Don't miss if you like good well acted drama.
    10hendersonhall

    A real surprise

    Having read the comments on this site, after having heard a friend (whose opinions aren't always reliable) say I must see it, I expected a marginally good picture when I rented the DVD. OK, I thought, another personal story about French and German anti-Semitism in WW II. This time my friend was right! A Secret was a knockout. It hit home and revived childhood memories. And it's as much or more about pre-WW II & post-WW II as it is about during. I won't repeat what others have rightly said about the uniformly excellent acting or the directing or the photography, etc. Among the things that hit home to me were the child's (or children's) point of view--SO on target--and the very different types of Jews portrayed in this film. Even though I "knew" (intuited) what would happen to some characters, what actually did happen was better than my imaginings. Its reference to the big illusion (La grande illusion) was apt (as well as the one character who actually saw it). More than one illusion is shattered by this pic, which like my friend I highly recommend.
    bob998

    Slow moving; not altogether convincing

    Claude Miller is a director I have been much interested in in the past, and the sufferings of those targeted by Nazis during the war can't fail to affect me, but this film dealing with a Jewish family before, during and after the war somehow does not grip me as it should. I can't fault the actors, they are all good, and Cécile de France is inspired, but the endless flashbacks and flash-forwards tried my patience greatly. When I have to ask myself who this character is who is hurling angry words at another character, I lose patience with the story. Some pruning of plot and characters would have benefited the film.

    Miller also made L'Accompagnatrice, again a war story, which suffered from many of the same faults. I think he is best at contemporary stories like Betty Fisher et autres histoires and Garde à vue, when he can work with the actors without having to recreate an historical context.
    7Quinoa1984

    not everything works, but when it does it's some riveting, tragic stuff

    One of the big achievements of Un Secret which must be noted is that the director, Claude Miller, doesn't entirely sympathize with his characters or make them out to be all completely good Jews. They're not. This is a film concerning the holocaust that doesn't just make a blanket statement like "Nazis = Bad". No, there were Jews who were in denial, and tried to cloud over the horrible fact that was upon all of Europe, and indeed it's when the film takes its most dissecting view at the flaws of these characters that the veneer is stripped away of completely innocent people being swept up in the maelstrom. While Miller obviously acknowledges and shows the horror of anti-semitism in France (one brief scene in a classroom showing Night and Fog is especially startling) and of the rise of Hitler, he puts his eye on the Grinberg family and what really happened between François Grimbert's parents (name changed when he was a kid) before and during World War 2.

    Miller's approach with Un Secret is a tricky one structurally, and it doesn't quite find it's footing until a third of the way into the film. He tries to find a back-and-forth-and-back form of dealing with three periods of time: 1930s, 1950s/1960s and 1985 when everybody is older and it turns to black and white (an opposite touch that works, for a moment), and it's only effective in about the first five minutes. I became wary of those sudden jumps to the 1985 portion of the film, where we see an old Maxime Nathan Grinberg (Patrick Bruel) grieving over the loss of his dog and his son trying to find him, and found it didn't strike anywhere near as well as the 50s scenes. On top of this, after all of the film has ended, that huge chunk of the film with the focus on that first marriage of Grinberg's with Hannah and his very obvious but eventually-acted-on infatuation with Tania (very sexy Cecile de France) was far more effective dramatically and tonally than anything else in the film.

    This is not to say Un Secret doesn't cast a very fascinating look into this particular boy's lack of perspective and of his father's determination to compete on a physical level with the Germans, to almost "be" one in a perfectionist sense athletically, and how this one secret is part of scarred memory, attachment to one's faith and religion and who they are, and love and lust. The cast is generally excellent, with Bruel, De France and Sagnier delivering work with nuance and exquisite, painful emotions that resonate from one into the next scene (Sagnier is so good she gets us to feel repulsed, or at least taken completely aback, by what she does while in hiding). And the moods of joy and despair in a Jewish family circa 1930s and 1940s- and the subsequent self-imposed shame of people in Europe even after the war ended- is captured with some real power and accuracy.

    But Miller also can't completely fix together his narrative; he feels the need to jump around as if it will create a really intriguing rhythm, where if he stepped back and told it without sudden jumps or surreal bits like the "brother" in the boy's bedroom at night the film would benefit. There is also a lack of a real resolution; the 1985 scene just didn't cut it for me as far as an unspoken father/son thing, and despite it sounding conventional a confrontation of the boy to his parents might have brought something more interesting than the uneven subtlety of the ending. A lot of this is so hearth-breaking in its true dimensions and probing of the subject that the only real disappointment is how it doesn't fell... complete with itself.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Eva Green was considered for the role of Tania and Pascal Elbé for the role of Maxime.
    • Connections
      Features Triumph of the Will (1935)
    • Soundtracks
      Les Valseuses
      Music by Stéphane Grappelli

      Performed by Laurent Korcia

      Arranged by Laurent Korcia et Jean-Efflam Bavouzet

      © Editions Musicales Fantasia - Universal Music Publishing

      Avec l'aimable autorisation de Universal Music Projets Spéciaux

      (P) 2004 Naïve

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 3, 2007 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official site
      • UGC Distribution (France)
    • Languages
      • French
      • Yiddish
      • German
      • Hebrew
      • Latin
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Un secreto
    • Filming locations
      • Felletin, Creuse, France(train station)
    • Production companies
      • Canal+
      • France 3 Cinéma
      • La Région Île-de-France
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $623,558
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $37,135
      • Sep 7, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $16,499,179
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 45 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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