Two Days, One Night (French: Deux jours, une nuit) is a 2014 drama film written and directed by the Dardenne brothers, starring Marion Cotillard and Fabrizio Rongione. It is an international co-production between Belgium, France and Italy.[5][1][8] The film had its world premiere at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival where it competed for the Palme d'Or.[9]

Two Days, One Night
French theatrical release poster
FrenchDeux jours, une nuit
Directed byLuc Dardenne
Jean-Pierre Dardenne
Written by
  • Luc Dardenne
  • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
Produced by
  • Luc Dardenne
  • Jean-Pierre Dardenne
  • Denis Freyd
Starring
CinematographyAlain Marcoen
Edited byMarie-Hélène Dozo
Production
companies
Distributed by
  • Cinéart (Belgium)[1]
  • Diaphana Films (France)[1]
  • BIM Distribuzione (Italy)[1]
Release dates
  • 20 May 2014 (2014-05-20) (Cannes)[3]
  • 21 May 2014 (2014-05-21) (Belgium & France)[1]
  • 13 November 2014 (2014-11-13) (Italy)[1]
Running time
95 minutes[4]
Countries
LanguageFrench[4]
Budget7 million[2]
Box office$9 million[6][7]

The film and Cotillard's performance received generally positive reviews. It grossed $9 million worldwide on a €7 million budget, becoming the Dardenne brothers' highest-grossing film. It won the Sydney Film Prize at the 2014 Sydney Film Festival, was nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language, nominated for two César Awards, nominated for three European Film Awards, winning Best Actress for Cotillard, and for nine Magritte Awards, winning three, including Best Film and Best Director for Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne. Cotillard also won the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress and the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress.

The film was selected as Belgium's submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 87th Academy Awards, but was not nominated, though Cotillard received a Best Actress nomination for her performance in the film, making her the first actor to be nominated for a Belgian film.[10]

Plot edit

In Seraing, an industrial town near Liège, Belgium, young wife and mother Sandra prepares to return to work at Solwal, a small solar-panel factory, after a medical leave of absence for depression and anxiety. During her absence, Solwal management realises her colleagues are able to cover her shifts by working slightly longer hours and proposes a €1,000 bonus to each if they agree to make Sandra redundant. On Friday evening, after Sandra hears the news and that only two of the 16 voted for her to stay, she breaks down, feeling hopeless and worthless.

Her husband, Manu, tries to lift her spirits. A co-worker friend Juliette, who voted on her behalf, convinces her to talk to M. Dumont, the Solwal manager. Sandra is too petrified to speak, but Juliette argues her case. Juliette tells him some of the workers felt pressured to vote against Sandra by the factory foreman Jean-Marc, who insinuated one job must be eliminated. Though hesitant, Dumont agrees to a second, secret ballot early Monday.

Realising that her fate rests in the hands of her co-workers, Sandra must visit each of the 14 over the course of the weekend to persuade them to reject the monetary bonus, and she faces an uphill battle to keep her job before the crucial vote on Monday. Most of her co-workers are counting on the bonus for their own families. Some of her co-workers are immigrants and some are already working second jobs to get by; most react with sympathy, but a few with anger. Sandra is crushed when a co-worker she considered a friend pretends not to be home, but is heartened by the few who support her and say they will vote for her. Timur, an immigrant from Dagestan, breaks down in tears and says he is ashamed of himself, as Sandra covered for him when he broke a panel on his first day. He says he will change his mind and talk to another worker on her behalf.

On Sunday afternoon, Sandra discovers that Jean-Marc has been calling their co-workers to convince them not to change their votes, and that in reality he is against Sandra coming back because of her depression. She visits her co-worker Anne, whose husband rudely throws her out and screams at both women. Dejected, Sandra attempts suicide at home by overdosing on Xanax, but when Anne arrives to tell her she will vote for her, Sandra confesses to Manu, who forces her to vomit the pills up. Sandra recovers at the hospital and is touched when she finds out Anne came to the hospital too. Sandra tells Manu they will visit the remaining three that evening. When Anne tells her she has decided to leave her husband, Sandra invites her to their house to spend the night.

Sandra speaks to Alphonse, a young African immigrant who is working as a welder on contract. He will only get €150 because he is new, but he is afraid of Jean-Marc, who told him to vote against Sandra if he wants to get along with his co-workers. Alphonse tells her he wants to vote for her, but he's afraid Jean-Marc will find out and write him up for his mistakes, which could damage his chance of renewing his contract when it expires in September.

On Monday morning, as the Solwal workers vote again, Jean-Marc reacts angrily to Sandra. She stands up for herself and reminds him that he acted unfairly. In the second ballot, eight vote for her to keep the job, and eight vote to keep the bonus – not enough to overturn Friday's vote. She tearfully thanks those who voted for her, including Alphonse. She tells Anne she can stay at their house again that night and stoically clears out her locker.

However, Dumont calls her into his office and congratulates her on convincing so many to support her. He tells her he has decided to give everyone the bonus but still keep her on. Sandra's joy is short lived as he explains he will simply not renew a worker whose contract expires in September – Alphonse. Sandra politely declines his offer – she now has the confidence to start anew, and pursue a new life for herself. "We put up a good fight," she tells Manu proudly.

Cast edit

  • Marion Cotillard as Sandra Bya, working-class wife and mother of two children
  • Fabrizio Rongione as Manu Bya, Sandra's husband who works as a chef
  • Catherine Salée as Juliette, Sandra's friend and co-worker
  • Olivier Gourmet as Jean-Marc, Sandra's supervisor at Solwal
  • Christelle Cornil as Anne, Sandra's co-worker
  • Timur Magomedgadzhiev as Timur, Sandra's co-worker
  • Myriem Akheddiou as Mireille
  • Pili Groyne as Estelle, daughter of Sandra and Manu
  • Simon Caudry as Maxime, son of Sandra and Manu
  • Batiste Sornin as M. Dumont, manager at Solwal
  • Serge Koto as Alphonse, welder at Solwal

Production edit

Development edit

On 25 February 2013, The Film Stage announced that Marion Cotillard would star in the Dardenne brothers' next film, Two Days, One Night, and that Fabrizio Rongione, who had previously worked with the Dardenne brothers in Rosetta (1999), L'Enfant (2005), Lorna's Silence (2008), and The Kid with a Bike (2011), would have a supporting role as the husband of Cotillard's character in the film.[11] Cotillard is the most famous actor the Dardenne brothers have worked with,[12] and the first French actor they cast as the lead in one of their films, which usually have relatively unknown Belgian actors in the cast.[13] Jean-Pierre Dardenne said about that choice; "hiring such a famous actress was an additional challenge for us. Marion was able to find a new body and a new face for this film."[14] One of the Dardenne brothers' first requests for Cotillard was for her to lose her French Parisian accent, in order for her character to sound as an authentic Belgian.[15] Cotillard said she was very happy when the Dardennes praised her Liège accent.[15]

The Dardenne brothers were co-producers on Jacques Audiard's 2012 romantic drama film Rust and Bone, which Cotillard had starred in, and they met the actress by chance on that film's set in Belgium when she was coming out of an elevator holding her baby.[14] They said they were won over immediately.[14] "Driving back to Liège, we didn't stop talking about her: her face, her look…", said Luc Dardenne,[14] who also called their first encounter with Cotillard a "cinematic love at first sight".[16] The brothers then told Cotillard about a project they were writing about a young doctor and that they would love to work with her, and she said the same to them.[16]

Initially, the Dardenne brothers had a different project in mind in which Cotilard would play a doctor,[17] but that script did not come together because they had writer's block,[16] so they decided to write a different film for her,[16] which was originally a project they had begun about ten years before but left behind.[11][16] They started writing the script for Two Days, One Night in October 2012 and finished in March 2013.[14]

The script was based on a story the Dardenne brothers read in a sociology book about a worker at Peugeot in France in 1998, who was fired after his boss incited his team to vote for his dismissal because he was preventing them from getting bigger bonuses.[16][18] Luc Dardenne said he and his brother were also thinking of Sidney Lumet's 1957 courtroom drama film 12 Angry Men, "because it's a process of going to see people to try and change their minds", he said.[19]

The film was a Belgian production with French and Italian co-producers.[5][1] It was produced by Dardenne's Les Films du Fleuve with co-production support from France's Archipel 35, Italy's BIM Distribuzione and Belgium's Eyeworks Film & TV Drama. It received funding from the Flemish Audiovisual Fund, RTBF and Centre du cinéma et de l'audiovisuel.[2] It received 500,000 euros from Eurimages.[2] The total budget was seven million euros.[2]

Filming edit

The rehearsal process lasted six weeks.[19] Filming began in late June 2013 in Seraing, Belgium and was wrapped in September 2013.[2][20]

The film was shot in chronological order.[21] The Dardenne brothers required several takes for the long sequence shots.[21] They did 56 takes for a single sequence on the second day of filming, and on the fourth day they did 82 takes.[21] Cotillard said that she even asked for more takes herself,[22] and that sometimes it went up to 95 or 100 takes.[21]

Release edit

Two Days, One Night premiered at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival on 20 May 2014.[3] The film was released in France on 21 May 2014 through Diaphana,[1] and in Belgium on the same day through Cinéart.[1] It was screened at the Sydney Film Festival on 9 June 2014 and at the Munich Film Festival on 29 June 2014. It was the closing film of the Norwegian Film Festival on 20 August 2014.[23] The film had its North American premiere at the Telluride Film Festival on 29 August 2014[24] was screened at the Toronto International Film Festival on 9 September 2014,[25] at the New York Film Festival on 5 October 2014,[26] at Hamptons Film Festival on 10 October 2014,[27] at the Mill Valley Film Festival on 11 October 2014[28] and at the Chicago Film Festival on 16 October 2014.[29] It was the opening film of Valladolid Film Festival on 18 October 2014[30] and was screened at the Savannah Film Festival on 28 October 2014.[31] and at AFI Fest on 7 November 2014.[32]

The film was released in the United Kingdom via Artificial Eye on 22 August 2014.[1] Sundance Selects distributed the film in the United States on 24 December 2014.[1]

Reception edit

Critical response edit

Two Days, One Night received critical acclaim after its premiere at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival, where Marion Cotillard's performance was highly praised and earned a 15-minute standing ovation.[33] The film has an approval of 97% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 185 reviews with an average rating of 8.4/10. The website's critical consensus states: "Another profoundly affecting work from the Dardenne brothers, Two Days, One Night delivers its timely message with honesty and clear-eyed compassion."[34] The film also has a score of 89 out of 100 on Metacritic, based on 38 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[35]

Empire gave the film five out of five stars and described it as "a rare film of unforced simplicity, with an outstanding lead performance".[36] Empire also chose Two Days, One Night as one of the 50 best films of 2014, ranked at number 44.[37] The Hollywood Reporter praised the film and stated that it stands alongside Marion Cotillard's best work.[38]

The film won the Sydney Film Prize at Sydney Film Festival "For its masterfully elegant storytelling, its dedication to a fiercely humanistic, super-realist worldview, its brave, essential commitment to community solidarity, and its celebration of a woman's power and vitality," said Jury President Rachel Perkins.[39] Writing for The Guardian, Peter Bradshaw gave the film 5 stars, praising in particular Cotillard's "supremely intelligent performance."[40]

Nicholas Barber of BBC gave the film four stars, praising Cotillard's performance saying that "she conveys a tremendous amount with the smallest, quietest gestures. When you see the fierce, tearful grin on her face after one successful encounter, and the sleepwalking shuffle she adopts when her depression threatens to engulf her, it’s plain that she is one of the finest cinema actors we have."[12] Emma Dibdin of Digital Spy gave the film four stars, calling Cotillard "fascinating to watch" and said that "The physical sluggishness and emotional numbing of depression have seldom been better portrayed on screen, and yet Two Days One Night still emerges as a psychologically delving and quietly uplifting modern-day morality play."[41]

The National Board of Review chose the film as one of the Top 5 Foreign Films of 2014.[42] Time magazine ranked Cotillard's performance in the film as the fourth best performance of 2014, shared with her performance in The Immigrant.[43]

In Spain, filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar made a list of the best films and performances of 2014, and included Cotillard's performance on his list of best foreign actresses.[44]

Box office edit

Two Days, One Night sold over 520,000 tickets in France and grossed US$3,5 million at the French box office.[45][6] It made US$1,4 million in the United States and US$7,5 million in other territories,[6] with over 1 million tickets sold in Europe.[45] The film grossed a total of US$9 million worldwide,[6] becoming the Dardenne brothers' highest-grossing film.[46]

Accolades edit

On 19 September 2014, it was announced that Two Days, One Night would be Belgium's submission for the foreign language film category at the 87th Academy Awards.[47]

Award Category Recipient(s) Result Ref(s)
Academy Awards Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated [48][49]
British Academy Film Awards Best Film Not in the English Language Two Days, One Night Nominated [50]
Alliance of Women Film Journalists Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
Belgian Film Critics Association André Cavens Award for Best Film Two Days, One Night Won [51]
Boston Online Film Critics Association Best Actress Marion Cotillard Won [52][53]
Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Won
Top 10 Best Films of 2014 Two Days, One Night Won
Boston Society of Film Critics Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Won [54]
Best Actress Marion Cotillard
(shared with her performance in The Immigrant)
Won
Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne Nominated [55]
César Awards Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated [56]
Best Foreign Film Two Days, One Night Nominated
Chicago Film Critics Association Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated [57][58]
Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Nominated
Critics' Choice Movie Awards Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Nominated [59]
Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated [60]
Denver Film Critics Society Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Won [61]
Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
Dublin Film Critics' Circle Awards Top 10 Films Two Days, One Night 7th Place
Best Director Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne Nominated
Best Actress Marion Cotillard Won
European Film Awards People's Choice Award Two Days, One Night Nominated [62]
Best Screenwriter Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne Nominated
Best Actress Marion Cotillard Won
Georgia Film Critics Association Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Nominated [63]
Best Actress Marion Cotillard Won
Globes de Cristal Award Best Film Two Days, One Night Nominated [64]
Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
50th Guldbagge Awards Best Foreign Film Two Days, One Night Won [65]
Hawaii International Film Festival EuroCinema Hawai'i Award – Best Film Two Days, One Night Nominated
Houston Film Critics Society Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Nominated
Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
Indiana Film Journalists Association Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Won [66]
Indiewire Critics' Poll Best Actress Marion Cotillard Won [67]
International Cinephile Society Awards Grand Prix Two Days, One Night Won [68]
London Film Critics Circle Award Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Nominated
Lumières Awards Best French-Language Film Two Days, One Night Won [69]
Magritte Awards Best Film Two Days, One Night Won [70]
Best Director Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne Won [70]
Best Screenplay Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne Nominated [71]
Best Actor Fabrizio Rongione Won [70]
Best Supporting Actress Christelle Cornil Nominated [71]
Catherine Salée Nominated [71]
Best Sound Benoît De Clerck and Thomas Gauder Nominated [71]
Best Production Design Igor Gabriel Nominated [71]
Best Editing Marie-Hélène Dozo Nominated [71]
Munich Film Festival ARRI/OSRAM Award – Best International Film Two Days, One Night Nominated
National Board of Review Top 5 Foreign Films Two Days, One Night Won [42]
National Society of Film Critics Awards Best Actress Marion Cotillard
(shared with her performance in The Immigrant)
Won [72]
New York Film Critics Circle Best Actress Marion Cotillard Won [73]
North Carolina Film Critics Association Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated [74]
Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Nominated
Online Film Critics Society Awards Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
Online Film Critics Society Awards Best Picture Two Days, One Night Nominated
Best Director Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne Nominated
Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
Best Original Screenplay Jean-Pierre Dardenne and Luc Dardenne Nominated
Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Won
San Diego Film Critics Society Awards Best Actress Marion Cotillard Won [75]
Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Nominated
San Francisco Film Critics Circle Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Nominated [76]
Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
Satellite Awards Best Actress in a Motion Picture Marion Cotillard Nominated
Best International Film Two Days, One Night Nominated
Sydney Film Festival Sydney Film Prize Two Days, One Night Won [39]
St. Louis Gateway Film Critics Association Awards Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated [77]
Best Foreign Film Two Days, One Night Nominated
Valladolid Film Festival Golden Spike Two Days, One Night Nominated
Village Voice Film Poll Best Actress Marion Cotillard
(shared with her performance in The Immigrant)
Won [78]
Utah Film Critics Association Best Actress Marion Cotillard Runner-up
Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Runner-up
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Best Foreign Language Film Two Days, One Night Nominated
Women Film Critics Circle Best Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated

See also edit

References edit

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