Before Sunset Movie Review
Before Sunset Review

"Before Sunset" Overview

Rating: R
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Richard LinklaterProducer : Richard Linklater,Anne Walker-McBay
Screenwiter : Richard Linklater,Julie Delpy,Ethan Hawke
Starring : Ethan Hawke,Julie Delpy,Vernon Dobtcheff
Nine years ago, Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Celine (Julie Delpy) turned a chance
meeting on a train into a romantic 24 hours wandering the streets of Vienna. At
the end of Richard Linklater's engaging Before Sunrise (1995), the young
one-night lovers go their separate ways -- Jesse back to the U.S. and Celine
back to France -- their hearts captured and the promise of their separate
futures ahead of them.
Now, the pair meets again in this unlikely sequel that reunites the two stars
with writer/director Linklater, returning to his do-it-yourself roots after the
wild commercial success of his School of Rock. In Before Sunset, he stays true
to his original characters while bringing them into an updated world where
their lives may not be what either expected.
Jesse is enjoying the success of his first book, an unapologetically romantic
novel based, not so subtly, on his first fateful encounter with Celine. When
his whirlwind PR tour takes him to a Parisian bookstore, Celine shows up to see
him. He's got 20 minutes to catch up before hopping on a plane, and the pair
leaps right back into the type of conversations that took place back in Vienna.
The consistent lobbing and volleying of ideas between them is the same, but the
content has changed. The views and philosophies that were once the focus of
their dorm room-style banter in Sunrise have become much bigger. Celine is a
passionate pessimist when it comes to world ecology, but she actually has a
career fighting for a cleaner planet. The oft-fumbling Jesse is still wowed by
art, literature, and culture, but now he's a willing participant sitting on a
minor hit book.
Their common denominator, still, is that they think of one another. While this
all may sound very Bridges of Madison County to the uninitiated, Linklater
doesn't tell a saccharine story. His lead characters (and lead actors) have an
urban hipness that transcends a tacky I'll-never-forget-you tone that other
storytellers might lean on to the point of knocking it over. Linklater, who
shares a screenwriting credit with both Hawke and Delpy (they all worked
together on the curious Waking Life, by the way), knows not to have Celine and
Jesse's conversation be about the standard stuff. Yes, they discuss their lives
and their blissful night together, but they also chat about other issues, some
broad and some mundane. Calling it My Dinner with Jesse (My Coffee with Jesse?)
might be fair, especially since the pair is even more insular than their first
meeting, but sitting alongside their exchange of the occasional political barb
is the romance between them.
Don't be put off if you haven't seen Before Sunrise. In quick, no-dialogue
flashbacks, Linklater inserts scenes from that first film that establish the
couple's look, their setting, their gaze upon one another. It provides enough
of a springboard to illustrate that time has gone by quickly (Jesse claims it
feels like two months) and that the couple's hopes and promise during their
first connection may not have manifested.
As Before Sunrise comes to a close, the film takes on that desperate feeling
that two friends, whose romance may truly be written in the stars, will have to
part. In Before Sunset, that pressure is not as palpable, but the stakes are
much higher: life's opportunities may now be fewer, or may have been missed
altogether. All three of the film's primary collaborators take advantage of
their own opportunities with this one, layering Jesse and Celine's 80-minute
conversation with a freshness, a surprising urgency, and two characters full of
desire, faults, and – still – hope.
The DVD adds a short behind-the-scenes featurette to this wonderful little film.
When Ethan met Delpy... again.
Reviewer: Norm Schrager





