CINESTIA
ExploreFavoritesRadar
Sign in
ExploreFavoritesRadar
All Titles
French Exit
Soundtrack
YouTubeGoogle
Radar
Get notified when it hits streaming, rent, or buy below your target price.
Related titles
Contempt
Contempt
Once Upon a Time in America
Once Upon a Time in America
The Shawshank Redemption
The Shawshank Redemption
The Green Mile
The Green Mile
Das Boot
Das Boot
COLLECTION · Movie · 2021

French Exit

“My plan was to die before the money ran out,” says 60-year-old penniless Manhattan socialite Frances Price, but things didn’t go as planned. Her husband Franklin has been dead for 12 years and with his vast inheritance gone, she cashes in the last of her possessions and resolves to live out her twilight days anonymously in a borrowed apartment in Paris, accompanied by her directionless son Malcolm and a cat named Small Frank—who may or may not embody the spirit of Frances’s dead husband.

Source: TMDB
* 5.6 (171)ComedyDramaCanada · Ireland
Directors
Azazel Jacobs
Countries
Canada · Ireland · United States
Studios
RocketScience · Elevation Pictures · Screen Siren Pictures · Keeper Pictures
Runtime
113 min
Age rating
R(US — 17+)
Release
12/02/2021
Score
5.6 / 10 (171)
Where to watch
Rent
Amazon VideoAmazon VideoApple TV StoreApple TV StoreGoogle Play MoviesGoogle Play MoviesFandango At HomeFandango At Home
Buy
Amazon VideoAmazon VideoApple TV StoreApple TV StoreGoogle Play MoviesGoogle Play MoviesFandango At HomeFandango At Home
Cast
Michelle Pfeiffer
Michelle Pfeiffer
Frances Price
Lucas Hedges
Lucas Hedges
Malcolm Price
Tracy Letts
Tracy Letts
Franklin Price (voice)
Valerie Mahaffey
Valerie Mahaffey
Mme Reynard
Susan Coyne
Susan Coyne
Joan
Imogen Poots
Imogen Poots
Susan
Danielle Macdonald
Danielle Macdonald
Madeleine the Medium
Isaach de Bankolé
Isaach de Bankolé
Julius
Daniel Di Tomasso
Daniel Di Tomasso
Tom
?
Eddie Holland
Young Malcolm Price
Comments

Sign in to comment and discuss this title.

…
User reviews
M
Manuel São Bento
★ 4.0 / 10
If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @ https://www.msbreviews.com I find surreal comedy one of the most challenging subgenres to appreciate. In my experience, the humor must be pitch-perfect in order for me to actually laugh throughout the runtime of a purposefully absurd film. In addition to this, I need to feel some sort of connection with the protagonist(s). Otherwise, I'll struggle to truly enjoy the fun inside all the chaos. I've never seen a movie by Azazel Jacobs (The Lovers, Terri), who brings the same screenwriter of the latter film, Patrick deWitt. Michelle Pfeiffer delivers a phenomenal performance, showing tremendous emotional range and an acting experience that allows her to seamlessly navigate any script thrown at her. Ultimately, Pfeiffer proves that she still has what it takes to lead the biggest movies of each year. Unfortunately, I found French Exit an incredibly tough film to enjoy. From the remaining disappointing performances - Lucas Hedges is frustratingly annoying in this role - to the lack of interest in the overall narrative, it's one of those movies that either the viewers connect with immediately, or it's not going to be an easy watch. Surreal comedy implies a nonsensical screenplay, which might trigger some people to dislike it from the get-go. It's an extremely specific type of humor that doesn't usually reach big groups of people. Azazel Jacobs brings Patrick deWitt's screenplay to the screen with remarkable commitment, but in the end, it's a slow, stretched-out film with not that many laughs to offer. Rating: C-
TMDB
SWITCH.
★ 8.0 / 10
I really can't do justice to just how thoroughly entertaining a film 'French Exit' is. It had me roaring and cackling with laughter, totally enchanted by its irreverence and good humour. You feel as if you're watching a great piece of classic theatre, where silly rich white people bumble around in fancy rooms, unaware that they're revealing, with their silly irrelevant lives, just how strange and beautiful life and love and sadness and happiness can be. Michelle Pfeiffer's tremendous central performance, full of camp and acid and sadness, would be enough of a reason to see 'French Exit', but it's all the more rewarding for how complete an experience it is. The ridiculous and the surreal are employed for the purpose for which they are always at their best - to make us laugh at how silly life can be, and sigh at the truth that, no matter what, we want to keep living regardless. - Daniel Lammin Read Daniel's full article... https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-french-exit-a-farcical-and-ridiculous-delight
TMDB
Keywords
paris, francebased on novel or bookcatwidowmediumaffectationreincarnationocean crossingsocialitecomplex
Related links
Explore catalog
Cinestia publishes lists, reviews, a collection and soundtracks for movie and series discovery.