A Heart in Winter (Un coeur en hiver) | |
---|---|
Directed by | Claude Sautet |
Produced by | Philippe Carcassonne |
Written by | Claude Sautet Jacques Fieschi |
Starring |
Emmanuelle Béart Daniel Auteuil |
Music by | Maurice Ravel |
Cinematography | Yves Angelo |
Edited by | Jacqueline Thiédot |
Distributed by | Koch-Lorber Films |
Release date
|
2 September 1992 (France) June 4, 1993 (USA) |
Running time
|
105 min. |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Box office | $11.7 million |
A Heart in Winter (original French title Un cœur en hiver) is a French film which was released in 1992. It stars Emmanuelle Béart, Daniel Auteuil and André Dussollier. It was chosen to compete at the 49th Venice International Film Festival, where it won four awards, including tying for the Silver Lion. It was nominated for Best Foreign Film at the 1994 BAFTA awards.
The romantic drama was the second-to-last film made by French writer/director Claude Sautet. He would work with Béart again on his final feature, 1995's Nelly and Mr. Arnaud (original title Nelly et Monsieur Arnaud).
Highly regarded violin restorer Stéphane (Daniel Auteuil) works and plays squash with his longtime business partner Maxime (André Dussollier). After Maxime, who is married, begins romancing concert violinist Camille (Béart), Stéphane is called in to do some urgent repairs on Camille's violin. Camille begins to fall for Stéphane, and reveals the truth to Maxime. Stéphane's cool reaction causes confusion for Camille, and she lashes out at him for denying his feelings.
The film features a number of performances of chamber music composed by Maurice Ravel, played by Jean-Jacques Kantorow (violin), Howard Shelley (piano) and Keith Harveyr (cello). New Zealand musician Jeffrey Grice appears in the film in the role of the pianist.
The film contains only excerpts of Ravel compositions, but the soundtrack album includes them in their entirety, performed by Jean-Jacques Kantorow (violin), Philippe Muller (cello) and Jacques Rouvier (piano). A fourth Ravel composition not excerpted in the film, Berceuse sur le nom de Gabriel Faure, is on the soundtrack album. The film helped further popularise especially Ravel's Piano Trio. The track listing: