Michel Vaillant (film)

Michel Vaillant
Directed by Louis-Pascal Couvelaire
Produced by Pierre-Ange Le Pogam
Written by Jean Graton
Source material
Philippe Graton
Source material
Luc Besson
Screenplay
Gilles Malençon
Screenplay
Starring Sagamore Stévenin
Peter Youngblood Hills
Diane Kruger
Music by Tim Abbott
Archive
Cinematography Michel Abramowicz
Edited by Hervé Schneid
Release dates
  • 19 November 2003 (2003-11-19)
Running time
103 minutes
Country France
Language French
Budget $22.9 million
Box office $6.1 million[1]

Michel Vaillant is a 2003 French movie starring Sagamore Stévenin and Diane Kruger. It depicts events around the 24 hours of Le Mans race, based largely on a comic about the Michel Vaillant character.

The racing sequences were shot during the 2002 race.

Plot

For decades, the Vaillant family has been successfully involved in various kinds of motor racing competitions. Their most notorious driver is Michel, the son of the team's founder and owner Henri and younger brother of Jean-Pierre, the team's manager. One night, Michel's mother Elizabeth has a nightmare involving his death in an accident at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, racing against a car bearing the number 13 from Leader, a team with which the Vaillants had a historic rivalry for more than a quarter of a century. Henri conforts her, assuring that they are not planning to race at Le Mans, that Leader has been out of competition for 5 years and that no one has ever used the number 13 at the race. Meanwhile, in Canada, Michel and his best friend and team mate Steve Warson are both competing in WRC cars. Michel's victory spikes the wrath of Bob Cramer, a ruthless competing driver who is blocked by Vaillant's cars during the race. Cramer ends up threatening Michel's co-pilot, David. A few days later, Henri announces that Vaillant will have an engine at time for Le Mans, and promotes David to the driver's seat at the Rally of Italy, promising him a seat at Michel's car in the 24 hour race if he does well. In Italy, Cramer forces David out of the road, causing him to crash. David is caught in the car's explosion and dies. At the funeral, Michel meets Julie Wood, David's wife. She asks him for his husband's place at Le Mans, and Michel convinces his brother to let her on the team. Meanwhile, the Leader team returns to the competition, by the hand of Ruth, Leader's daughter. They announce that they will race at Le Mans with the number 13, hiring Bob Cramer as one of the drivers. Élisabeth worries that her nightmare can become a reality and tries to dissuade Henri from competing, but he refuses to do so. The weekend at Le Mans starts, and Ruth is determined to stop Vaillant from winning, so she sabotages the car delivery. The Vaillants barely make it on time to compete. This doesn't stop Ruth, and she kidnaps Henri, threatening to kill him if his team wins. Michel initially complies, losing a lot of time each lap. He finally tells Jean-Pierre about Ruth's plan and decides to go and save his father, asking Julie to pose as him during the race. Michel tracks his father's location through the GPS in Ruth's car, but she finds him. Michel is forced by Ruth to drive the Leader, posing as Bob Cramer after an accident puts him out of competition. Ruth and Michel find each other on the track and end up colliding violently, just like in Élisabeth's nightmare. Even though the crash was horrific, they both come out of the wreckage unharmed, and Michel goes with Steve and Julie to rescue Henri from Ruth's henchmen, who start shooting as they flee and injure Steve. The race ends with Steve's Vaillant crossing the line with a flat tire, inches before Leader's car, which had an engine failure and is being pushed by its driver. Unbeknownst to everyone, Michel was posing as Steve in the final laps. They all celebrate yet another Vaillant victory, while Ruth stares blankly in defeat.

Cast

Soundtrack album

The soundtrack album for the film was performed by the band, Archive, and released on November 4, 2003.

Track listing

CD1

  1. "Le Mans" [4:52]
  2. "Bridge Scene" [5:33]
  3. "Helicoptere" [6:13]
  4. "Come to Me, Pt. 1" [3:14]
  5. "Valliant Theme" [3:48]
  6. "Nothing" [3:23]
  7. "Friend" [4:26]
  8. "Nightmare Scene" [3:20]
  9. "Leader Theme" [3:36]
  10. "Nightmare Is Over" [4:37]
  11. "Valliant (Acoustic)" [1:35]
  12. "Night Time" [2:11]
  13. "Red" [1:27]
  14. "Come to Me, Pt. 2" [6:35]

CD2

  1. "Opening Credits (Includes Nightmare Scene)" [3:23]
  2. "Indian Theme" [1:29]
  3. "Calling" [6:46]
  4. "Brass Indian" [0:52]
  5. "Main Bridge Scene (Including Sound Design)" [3:11]
  6. "End of Bridge Scene/Keen for a Dead Child" [2:18]
  7. "Falaise" [1:17]
  8. "Break In" [0:36]
  9. "Chase Scene" [2:16]
  10. "Blue Room" [1:27]
  11. "Come to Me, Pt. 3" [3:49]
  12. "Crash Scene" [2:40]
  13. "Hélicoptère" [1:42]
  14. "Warm Up/Leader Theme (Strings Version)" [4:06]
  15. "Le Mans (End)" [4:30]
  16. "Nightmare Is Over (Acoustic Version)" [2:46]

shooting

The film was partly shot during the 24 Hours of Le Mans race in June 2002. Event organizers added two cars to the field specifically to accommodate the filming but the production had to hire 6 professional drivers to drive the cars during the actual race.

Reception

The film was poorly received by critics, who felt it didn't honor the widely successful comics in which it was based on, underdeveloping the main characters and favoring a styilized and advert-like look. However, some of them praised its photography and exciting racing scenes. Despite a strong marketing campaign, it failed to reach 1 million viewers in France.

See also

References


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