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Eiffel

Eiffel

  • Status: Released
  • 07-10-2021
  • Runtime: 108 min
  • Score: 6.249
  • Vote count: 694

The French government is asking Gustave Eiffel to design something spectacular for the 1889 Paris World Fair, but he simply wants to design the subway—until he crosses paths with a mysterious woman from his past.

Romain Duris

Gustave Eiffel

Emma Mackey

Adrienne Bourgès

Pierre Deladonchamps

Antoine Restac

Armande Boulanger

Claire Eiffel

Andranic Manet

Adolphe Salles

Alexandre Steiger

Jean Compagnon

Philippe Hérisson

Edouard Lockroy

Jérémie Petrus

Edmond

Jérémy Lopez

Maurice Koechlin

Frédéric Merlo

Georges

Damien Zanoly

Émile Nouguier

Clémence Boué

Madame Lockroy

Julien Sarazin

Ouvrier boîte à sable 11

Josselin Baillarguet

Silhouette

Michèle Clément

Bougeoise

Juliette Blanche

Amie d'Adrienne

Sophie Fougère

Mme Bourgès

Philippe Richardin

Membre du conseil

Matthieu Piriou

Ouvrier

Stéphane Page

Invité Bourgès 2

Aurélien Luzeux

Ouvrier acrobate Tour Eiffel

Aurélia Frachon

Vendeuse de fleurs au Parc Monceau

Philippe Saïd

Membre du conseil

Dominique Pozzetto

L'huissier du Ministère

Benoît de Gaulejac

Les Banquiers

Hervé Masquelier

Les Banquiers

Joseph Rezwin

R. Milligan McLane

David Olivier Fischer

Acteur

Pierre Le Baleur

Ouvrier boite à sable

CinemaSerf

Romain Duris turns in a creditable enough performance but otherwise this is a rather lacklustre mix of romance and engineering that veers way too much to the former than the latter. The narrative tries to run the twin threads of his younger years - where he builds a bridge and falls in love with "Adrienne" (Emma Mackey) with a contemporary one that sees him bidding in a competition to design the Parisian entry for the 1889 World Fair. His plan to build a 300m tower wins - it beat the Mètro - but pretty quickly he faces industrial issues, strikes, banking confidence colly-wobbles and to add to his complications, he re-alights on "Adrienne", by now married to the influential "Antoine" (Pierre Deladonchamps). There are a few scenes - especially when they are laying the foundations to the tower and when aligning the metal works, when the engineering elements impress and we get some clue as to his genius. The use of sand, water and sheer brute force to ensure millimetre accuracy is sometimes quite tensely portrayed here. Unfortunately, though, for the most part it's a rather uninspiring melodrama about his turbulent relationship and though it does offer an interesting explanation as to why the tower might look like the letter "A", it all just sinks into a rather mediocre sediment of mush. The production looks good, the costumes and settings are well presented, but the rest of it is unremarkable and I found myself wondering why I thought he wasn't Maximillian Schell and she wasn't Margot Robbie. One for the telly, I'd say.