My Piece of the Pie

2011 [FRENCH]

Comedy / Drama

Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 50% · 14 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 34% · 250 ratings
IMDb Rating 5.8/10 10 2304 2.3K

Plot summary

France, a factory worker, lives with her three daughters in Dunkirk. The factory where she worked has been closed, leaving France and all of her workmates without a job. She decides to go to Paris to look for work. There she finds a cleaning job at the home of a rich man, Steve, whose world is radically different from her own. As their paths keep crossing, she discovers that her employer played a part in closing the factory in Dunkirk...



October 23, 2023 at 10:10 AM

Director

Cédric Klapisch

Top cast

Kevin Bishop as Nick, le broker
Karin Viard as France
Marine Vacth as Tessa
Gilles Lellouche as Steve Delarue
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
1001.85 MB
1280*546
French 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 48 min
Seeds ...
2.01 GB
1920*818
French 5.1
NR
24 fps
1 hr 48 min
Seeds ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Chris_Pandolfi 5 / 10

A Bad Ending as an Economic Statement

Most of "My Piece of the Pie" functions as an odd-couple story with a timely edge on class structure and the status of the world's economy. These initial sections of the film are routine and structurally and thematically predictable, but at least they hold their own with some decent performances and a few well-placed moments of levity. But then we're smacked upside the head with a final act that's unpleasant, grossly implausible, and painfully misguided in its efforts to make a statement. It starts with that most reliable of plot devices, a surprise twist, and finishes ambiguously, satisfying writer/director Cédric Klapisch's desire to symbolically reveal the state of the world we live in. I'm not here to say that he isn't making a valid point. He is, however, going about it the wrong way.

It begins in the French seaside village of Dunkirk, where, thanks to outsourcing, a factory has just been shut down. For the aptly named France (Karin Viard), a blue-collar worker, the news comes as a devastating shock, and she's introduced lying in a hospital bed after a failed suicide attempt. She's a single mom with three children, and she's now faced with the task of finding a new job. She decides to travel to Paris, where she trains to become a housekeeper. Getting her into the program requires some fudging of the truth, as it's specifically designed for immigrant women; she gets through with a Russian accent and a booming personality. She's then assigned to the luxurious apartment of a wealthy power broker named Steve (Gilles Lellouche), who has just returned to Paris after living in London for ten years.

Steve is handsome, but he's also cocky, and he doesn't know the first thing about relating to women. This is evidenced by an unnecessary scene in which he tries to woo a French model by taking her on a trip to Venice, where he lavishes her with expensive gifts. He is, of course, only interested in sex, and he takes great offense when the young woman announces that she never makes love on the first date. She is but one of several women in his life. It seems the only thing Steve does know how to do is make money. France notices this, and after a very short period of time, she feels bold enough to dispense her wisdom about women. The surprising thing is that he seems willing to listen – and this is after introducing himself to her as the workaholic hardass.

The situation begins to change after the unexpected revelation that Steve is the father of a little boy named Alban (Lunis Sakji). The kid is dropped off by his mother, who's about to go away on a month-long vacation to Thailand. Naturally, Steve completely forgot about this arrangement. He's now faced with taking care of a child, which he doesn't know the first thing about. Luckily, he has France, who has experience with children. He promotes her to the position of nanny, with a 100-euro salary increase as an incentive. France is thrilled by the extra money, although it comes with an unfortunate tradeoff, namely spending more and more time away from her own children, who she used to visit every weekend. In the process of staying in Paris, France pushes Steve inch by inch towards becoming a respectable man; he learns about communicating with women, he begins to appreciate his son, and he finally admits that being rich isn't making him happy.

On the basis of what I've just described, you'd think this movie would do just fine as a Hollywood romantic comedy. But don't be too hasty. There's a darker side to this story, and it reveals itself not long after the aforementioned plot twist. It's founded on an innately cinematic coincidence, which would be fine were it not for the fact that Klapisch was striving for a realistic depiction of current economic conditions. What begins as implausible quickly becomes unsavory, as we learn that neither Steve nor France are as innocent as they initially seemed. We then end on an unresolved, highly unsatisfying note. There's nothing wrong with refusing to tie up stories in neat little packages, although it helps if you make sure the tone is balanced out along the way.

To be sure, I know what Klapisch is trying to say: Globalization and the digital revolution have stripped the industrial world of any value it once had, thus creating a rift between finance and labor. And of course, we all want our piece of the pie. What I don't understand is why Klapisch had to make this statement in this particular way. I find it hard to accept when it relies on an ending that requires not only tremendous suspension of disbelief but also a different, less sympathetic viewpoint of its main characters. "My Piece of the Pie" has a few well-written moments, and I certainly enjoyed the performances by Viard and Lellouche, who do have natural on screen chemistry. Unfortunately, the way it ultimately delivers its message does a lot more harm than good.

-- Chris Pandolfi (www.atatheaternearyou.net)

Reviewed by strawberrybear-818-862925 10 / 10

Great movie, if only more movies were made like this

Apologies for the short review but I felt I needed to react to the few other reviews.

I really loved the movie and recognised Klapish's style straight away. The actors act just right and give a really good depth to the characters. The dialogues are excellent and especially the conversations at the boring drinks with other financiers/traders were as if they were taken from my own experience! My only criticism, SPOILER, is that I thought the end was a bit too fast and a bit too much of a shortcut. I am not sure if it is laziness but a few more minutes would have been good.

That said the fact I didn't want it to end just shows how enjoyable this movie is!

Reviewed by rowmorg 8 / 10

Love this adorable movie

Karin Viard is a major star, and Lellouche comes across well too in this social comedy, which is not really a satire. Viard is a girl of the soil who worked in a solid factory all her life, only to have it ruined by resurgent China and the container business. She tries to kill herself, and her three daughters and sister rally round her until she decides to try her luck in Paris, at a school for cleaners where she pretends to be foreign. She ends up working for a complete tosser, in fact the stock speculator who destroyed her factory without giving a thought to the workers. It takes her a long time to find out, and when she does, she is in bed with the jerk and they've just had tremendous sex, something he of course jokes about on the phone, overheard by her. When his toddler son disappears she has the idea of kidnapping him off to Dunkerque to get the tosser over there and face the music. Both actors perform extremely well and the film sweeps you away with the goodness of "France" and the cynical wickedness of "Steve". Thoroughly recommended.

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