The Beat That My Heart Skipped

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The Beat That My Heart Skipped
(De battre mon cœur s'est arrêté)
Directed byJacques Audiard
Written byJacques Audiard
Tonino Benacquista
Produced byPascal Caucheteux
StarringRomain Duris
Niels Arestrup
Jonathan Zaccaï
Gilles Cohen
Linh Dan Pham
Aure Atika
Emmanuelle Devos
Melanie Laurent
CinematographyStéphane Fontaine
Edited byJuliette Welfling
Music byAlexandre Desplat
Release dates
  • 17 February 2005 (2005-02-17) (Berlin)
  • 16 March 2005 (2005-03-16) (France)
Running time
107 minutes
CountryTemplate:Film France
LanguageFrench
Budget$5.3 million
Box office$10,988,397

The Beat That My Heart Skipped (French: De battre mon cœur s'est arrêté) is a 2005 French film directed by Jacques Audiard and starring Romain Duris. It tells the story of Tom, a real estate thug[clarification needed] torn between a criminal life and his desire to become a concert pianist. The film premiered on 17 February 2005 at the Berlin Film Festival. The film was given limited Release to theaters in North America and grossed $1,023,424 and $10,988,397 worldwide.

Plot

Intense young "tough" Thomas Seyr is a 28-year old real estate broker involved in shady business deals. His business partners, Fabrice and Sami, spend much of their time ruthlessly chasing squatters and illegal immigrants out of the buildings they have procured and trying to work their way around government housing regulations. Thomas is born to this kind of work; his father, Robert, is also involved in dodgy enterprises and sometimes calls upon Thomas to take care of unpleasant business (like beating up people who refuse to pay). Tom shows a protective and defensive attitude to his father who doesn't always appreciate what his son does for him–so much so that when his father introduces his new girlfriend to Tom, Tom undermines her to her face, and insults her to his father. Though she is a model, he decides she is "a whore." Later, when he tries to enlist her help to watch over his father, she tells him they broke up due to Robert changing his attitude and she is aware of Tom's backstabbing because Robert told her. Robert by this time is in danger from a Russian gangster, Minskov (Anton Yakovlev) who scammed him of a great deal of money and Tom is worried for his safety.

On the side, Tom wants to be a pianist like his mother and finds a teacher, virtuoso Miao Lin, to prepare for an audition opportunity. She speaks only Chinese, Vietnamese and some English, but no French. Eventually Tom reaches the high standards of his teacher while carrying on a relationship with the wife of one of his business partners. Stretched to the limit and overtired, he fails to complete the audition. He goes to see his father only to find the apartment destroyed and his father murdered. Tom is devastated. Cut to two years later where Tom is Miao Lin's manager and partner, organising her schedule, her performances and being by her side. Just before a concert, he chances to see Minskov, takes him by surprise in the stairwell, gives him a beating on the stairs and threatens to use his own gun against him, before deciding to spare him. The film closes with Tom in the audience, knuckles and shirt bloody, exchanging slow-burning looks with Miao Lin at the piano.

Cast

Background

The film is a remake of James Toback's 1978 film Fingers, but it devotes more attention to the relationship between Tom and his piano teacher, Miao Lin. The idea that affection can blossom despite a language barrier is one which Jacques Audiard has raised before in Read My Lips (starring Vincent Cassel).

For the film, Duris learned to play his own piano sequences–most notably, Bach's Toccata in E minor, trained by his sister, pianist Caroline Duris, who performs on the soundtrack.[1]

The film's French title comes from the lyrics of the Jacques Dutronc song La Fille Du Père Noël ("Santa Claus' Daughter"). The film title literally translates to English as "From beating, my heart has stopped".

Awards and nominations

Won

Nominated

References

  1. ^ Toumani, Meline (2005-07-10). "The 60-Day Course in Perfect Fake Piano Playing". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-01-03. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)

External links