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Whatever You Say (film) - Wikipedia

  • ️Tue Dec 17 2002

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Whatever You Say
Image of a film poster

French theatrical release poster

Directed byGuillaume Canet
Screenplay by
Produced byAlain Attal
Starring
CinematographyChristophe Offenstein
Edited byStratos Gabrielidis
Music bySinclair

Production
companies

Distributed byM6 Droits Audiovisuels

Release date

  • 17 December 2002 (France)

Running time

110 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Budget$4.3 million[1]
Box office$2.8 million[2]

Whatever You Say (original title: Mon idole) is a 2002 French comedy-drama film directed by Guillaume Canet and starring François Berléand, Guillaume Canet, Diane Kruger, Daniel Prévost, and Clotilde Courau.[3]

Philippe Letzger (Philippe Lefebvre) is the host of It's Tissue Time!, an exploitation television game show where contestants are made to cry. The show's audiences are warmed up by one of Letzger's assistants, Bastien (Guillaume Canet), an ambitious young man who provides Letzger with good ideas for the show, for which his boss eagerly takes credit. Bastien tolerates Letzger's antics in order to work with Jean-Louis Broustal (François Berléand), the show's sophisticated producer whom he admires. Bastien's girlfriend, Fabienne (Clotilde Courau), is frustrated by his worship of the suave producer. Bastien is equally frustrated when he finds out that the blonde he is attracted to at the office is in fact Broustal's young wife, Clara (Diane Kruger).

One day, Broustal begins to take interest in Bastien's ideas for the show, and invites him to spend the weekend with him and his wife at their country estate to work on a concept for a new show called Proof in Pictures. When they arrive, Clara quickly seduces Bastien, but Broustal does not seem to care. During the weekend, Broustal tells the young man that he can make him a television star, but the couple's motives seem strange, and possibly sinister.

  1. ^ "Mon Idole". JP's Box-Office. Retrieved 3 January 2014.
  2. ^ "Whatever You Say".
  3. ^ "Whatever You Say (2002)". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2015. Archived from the original on 3 January 2015. Retrieved 3 January 2014.