Bernie | |
---|---|
Directed by | Albert Dupontel |
Written by | Albert Dupontel Gilles Laurent |
Produced by | Philippe Liégeois Jean-Michel Rey |
Starring | Albert Dupontel Roland Blanche Hélène Vincent Claude Perron |
Cinematography | Guillaume Schiffman |
Edited by | Juliette Welfling |
Music by | Ramon Pipin Noir Désir |
Distributed by | Rézo Films |
Release date |
|
Running time | 87 minutes |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Budget | $2.2 million |
Box office | $6.4 million[1] |
Bernie is a 1996 French film directed by Albert Dupontel.[2]
It tells the story of Bernie Noël, a 29-year-old man who's been raised all his life in an orphanage in Paris' suburbs. He was found in a garbage can when he was only a few weeks old. His first name comes from the man who found him there (Bernie, the building's janitor) and his last name comes from the time of year when he was found (Noël, "Christmas" in French).
At age 29, Bernie decides to leave the orphanage to explore a world that he knows only through television and what his friends have told him. On his own, roaming a Paris-by-night hostile environment, he goes through several madly epic adventures searching for his parents, before eventually finding them and "saving" them from an imaginary government conspiracy.
This neurotic and maladjusted young man will bring mischief and mayhem in his trail, which will lead him and his loved ones to a dramatic conclusion...
The film was nominated for the César Award for Best First Feature Film at the 22nd César Awards.