Tout ce qui brille | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster
|
|
Directed by |
Géraldine Nakache Hervé Mimran |
Produced by | Aïssa Djabri Farid Lahouassa |
Written by | Géraldine Nakache Hervé Mimran |
Starring | Géraldine Nakache Leïla Bekhti Virginie Ledoyen Audrey Lamy |
Music by | Jean-Philippe Verdin |
Cinematography | Guillaume Deffontaines |
Edited by | Scott Stevenson |
Production
company |
|
Distributed by | Pathé |
Release date
|
|
Running time
|
100 minutes |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Budget | $6.6 million |
Box office | $21.8 million |
Tout ce qui brille is a 2010 French film and the debut feature film for Géraldine Nakache and Hervé Mimran, who co-wrote and co-directed the film. It was filmed in Puteaux, La Défense, and Paris, notably the 16th arrondissement.
Originally, Tout ce qui brille was a 2007 short film shot by the same directors.
Ely (Géraldine Nakache) and Lila (Leïla Bekhti) are two working class girls and best friends who dream of a glitzier more glamorous lifestyle. They sneak into a club where they meet Agathe (Virginie Ledoyen) and Joan (Linh Dam Pham) a rich homosexual couple who give them a ride home to thank Ely for defending Agathe against a mugger. Lila, wanting to be at the same social level as the girls, lies about where she and Ely live, giving a much chicer address that belongs to a family she used to babysit for.
Lila continues to lie herself into the life of Agathe and Joan, as well as her new boyfriend Maxx (Simon Buret), while Ely feels more and more left out as she realizes that Lila is spending all her time partying with her new crowd, having been accepted as one of them, while Ely is nothing to Agathe and Joan but a babysitter. Eventually she grows sick of Lila's lies and reveals their true identity to Maxx. Lila, terrified at the thought of being rejected by her new friends, becomes furious at Ely. The two girls argue and stop talking. As Lila's lies begin to crumble around her, she realizes that Agathe and her social circle are not really her friends and that by working hard Ely is slowly achieving what she dreamed of. She gets a real job working at an upscale shoe store and eventually succeeds in reconnecting with Ely.
The soundtrack of the film has proven popular particularly the song "Chanson sur une drôle de vie" sung by appearing in SNEP official French Singles Chart. It is a remake of a previous Véronique Sanson hit. The soundtrack also featured the song Fit But You Know It by The Streets.