Movie Background

Clouds of Sils Maria

A veteran actress comes face-to-face with an uncomfortable reflection of herself when she agrees to take part in a revival of the play that launched her career 20 years earlier.

Director(s)

Brady Corbet

Olivier Assayas

Dominique Delany

Christelle Meaux

Tobias Asam

Antonia Pollak

Cast & Crew

Brady Corbet

Brady Corbet

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Nora Waldstätten

Nora Waldstätten

Actress in Sci-Fi movie

Sean McDonagh

Sean McDonagh

London theater assistant

Chloë Grace Moretz

Chloë Grace Moretz

Jo-Ann Ellis

Ben Posener

Ben Posener

Journalist in London

Tobias Asam

Tobias Asam

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Aljoscha Stadelmann

Aljoscha Stadelmann

Urs Kobler

Lars Eidinger

Lars Eidinger

Klaus Diesterweg

Juliette Binoche

Juliette Binoche

Maria Enders

Olivier Assayas

Olivier Assayas

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Dominique Delany

Dominique Delany

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Christelle Meaux

Christelle Meaux

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Johnny Flynn

Johnny Flynn

Christopher Giles

Steffen Mennekes

Steffen Mennekes

Journalist (uncredited)

Hanns Zischler

Hanns Zischler

Henryk Wald

Kristen Stewart

Kristen Stewart

Valentine

Angela Winkler

Angela Winkler

Rosa Melchior

Stuart Manashil

Stuart Manashil

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Claire Tran

Claire Tran

Maria's London assistant

Péter Farkas

Péter Farkas

Journalist in Zürich

Ricardia Bramley

Ricardia Bramley

Talk show host

Luise Berndt

Luise Berndt

Urs' assistant

Gilles Tschudi

Gilles Tschudi

Mayor of Zürich

Benoit Peverelli

Benoit Peverelli

Berndt

Caroline De Maigret

Caroline De Maigret

Chanel PR

Arnold Gramara

Arnold Gramara

Waldhaus concierge

Valery Bukreev

Valery Bukreev

Wilhelm Melchior

Katrin Schmidt

Katrin Schmidt

Dorothea von Duisburg

Phoebe Lin

Phoebe Lin

Cello player (concert at the Waldhaus)

Katarzyna Nawrotek

Katarzyna Nawrotek

Violin player (concert at the Waldhaus)

David Seghezzo

David Seghezzo

Oboe player (concert at the Waldhaus)

Claire-Anne Piguet

Claire-Anne Piguet

Harpsichord player (concert at the Waldhaus)

Jerry Kwarteng

Jerry Kwarteng

Journalist (uncredited)

Jakob Köhn

Jakob Köhn

Jo-Ann's Manager (uncredited)

Wilhelm J. Reitzenstein

Wilhelm J. Reitzenstein

Paparazzo (uncredited)

Rosa Schrehardt

Rosa Schrehardt

Kellnerin (uncredited)

Antonia Pollak

Antonia Pollak

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Details

GenresDrama
Runtime2h 4 mins
Released on20 Aug 2014
Languageen
Produced InFrance
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Reviews

MaxTyrone

8/10

On the way to accept an award from the playwright that discovered her - the very same man who suddenly passes away before the ceremony - acclaimed actress, Maria Enders, is forced to reconcile both her age and her role in contemporary art. While rehearsing for a role, of which she has no choice taking due to her age, she has to reckon with the young actress playing her old role. This is a slow-paced movie, that is, it takes its time revealing the deteriorating confidence of an aging actress. What accentuates her strife are the locations: the lonesome mountains, long winding roads, both straddled by rolling, ground-smothering fog and clouds. Great lingering shots and cinematography eases the eye, as Maria rehearses and incrementally loses her mind with her young assistant, Valentine. Although her assistant attempts to defend what her boss deems as insufficient art (or cinema) and unprofessional (particularly the young costar of the upcoming play), Maria threshes with the stifling fact that her roles - both her role in the play and in the world of art - are changing without her control or consideration. The acting in this film is commendable, with a solid performance from Juliette Binoche (as always) and a surprising effort from Kristen Stewart. These two carry the movie with palpable chemistry - so much so that every turn in their relationship dictates not only the environment of the film, but also the audience. This film is for the patient, and for those who don't mind huge questions.

Reno

6/10

**The actors and their generation difference, evolution of cinema and the beauty of nature.** This is about a middle aged actress who spends in the Swiss Alps with her personal assistant while preparing for the upcoming project. During that time, she receives a news that the author of the book which was adapted for the screen 20 years ago where she play a main role and now in its remake, she's doing another part, while a young sensation playing the main part. This is more like the evolution of cinema. The 20 years is too soon for her, while the cinema and its trend advanced rapidly. Precisely to say, the commercial films and young actors taking over the art films and true artists' places respectively. If you at least 30 years old, you would get this film more than others. Because while I was growing up in the 90s, the cinema was so different. I'm not talking about the technology like computer graphics, but the story and how it was narrated for the screen. Now the science- fiction and dystopian themes taking over with the young audience and social media support. I think it was a quite meaningful film, particularly if you adore films like the recent evolution in cinema was so faster than ever. The negatives were, the film was too long, slow pace and too simple drama. The positives were, the actors and their performances, the locations, theme and some of the dialogues. Directed by a French filmmaker, this is an international project with a few guest appearances. Most of the film was set in the Alps. Totally different than what I was anticipating, but I still like, except in a few parts where I got bored for its weak development. So this is for the selected audience, that mean it will be appreciated by a very few and I'm kind of neutral with mostly in its favour. _6/10_

badelf

10/10

“We're not allowed to regret anything. If we're sincere, then we're the sum total of our experiences ... with no exceptions.” Art and Reality - one imitates the other. But which is the imitator and which is the creator? That invisible thread between art and reality is the heart of this film. Olivier Assayas has created a complex, intelligent, layered psychological drama, where the "stage script" and the film are connected by the gossamer art-reality thread. Juliette Binoche and Kristen Stewart delivered masterful performances with all the nuances required to bring Assayas' vision to life. The first third of the movie appeared to be bland, disjointed, and even on the edge of ennui. At the end, I realized the brilliance of this work that, in fact, there were no unnecessary scenes.

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