An adaptation of the 1920s novel by French author Colette. about the lingering effects of a romance between a middle-aged woman and a wealthy young man. Set in 1920s Paris, where the young son of a wealthy courtesan is educated in the ways of love by a middle-aged friend of the man’s mother. When he is forced to give up the six-year relationship after marrying someone else, the young man can’t forget her and retreats into a fantasy world.
Stephen Frears, the director who bolstered his international reputation with his Choderlos de Laclos adaptation “Dangerous Liaisons” (1988), returns to the annals of period intrigue over twenty years later with this melodrama, which reunites him with Liasons scripter Christopher Hampton and star Michelle Pfeiffer.
An adaptation of Colette’s 1920 novel of the same name, the tale unfurls in late 19th Century Paris – La Belle Époque – where numerous courtesans (or female companions of noblemen who occupied the royal courts) have worked their ways up through the ranks of high society. Two retired courtesans, Charlotte Peloux (Kathy Bates) and Lea (Michelle Pfeiffer) meet for some routine gossip; Lea then meets Charlotte’s hedonistic, playboy son, nicknamed “Cheri” (Rupert Friend) and a passionate, erotic affair blossoms for the next six years between Lea and Cheri.
Eventually, Charlotte makes an aggressive attempt to interfere with the situation by setting up an arranged marriage between Cheri and the virginal, 18-year-old Emee (Felicity Jones), the daughter of another ex-courtesan, Marie-Laure (Iben Hjejle). Lea feels irritated, and responds by seeking out young male lovers during a vacation in Biarritz, but the attached Cheri is not far behind, and in seemingly no time at all the two resume their bedroom liaisons.
Production notes provided by Miramax Films.
Cheri
Starring: Michelle Pfeiffer, Kathy Bates, Rupert Friend
Directed by: Stephen Frears
Screenplay by: Christopher Hampton
Release Date: June 26, 2009
MPAA Rating: R for some sexual content and brief drug use.
Studio: Miramax Films
Box Office Totals
Domestic: $2,715,657 (45.1%)
Foreign: $3,301,046 (54.9%)
Total: $6,016,703 (Worldwide)