Les triplets de Belleville

Elfrieda 2022-03-24 09:02:20

Chapin is a lonely child. He has lost his parents since childhood. He lives with Granny Susha every day. The boy is a bit autistic, likes to talk to Bruno the puppy, and likes to ride his bike alone. The singing of the three sisters of Mirador accompanies them to live a peaceful life. Finally, the mother-in-law saw Chapin's talent in cycling and wanted to cultivate him into a talent, so she continued to accompany the child to train.
Chapin was finally able to race the Tour de France. However, there was an accident because the mafia wanted to control the result, and Chapin and the other two players were taken hostage to Mirador by the gangsters. The mother-in-law desperately took Bruno on a bumpy boat to rescue her grandson. On the streets of a hometown, the mother-in-law met the three sisters of Mirador, and they joined the team to save the little Chapin.

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Extended Reading
  • Astrid 2022-03-30 09:01:05

    A story about time and alienation. The speeches at the beginning and end are contrasting and complementary to each other. Freak cities like Paris + New York are full of hollyfood, obese satires like the Statue of Liberty (in fact, the Statue of Liberty was given to America by France). The dog, whose tail was run over by the toy train, barked wildly every time he saw the train, alluding to the protagonist's retrospection of his past life-disorder, sluggishness, and grandma's love.

  • Eino 2022-03-28 09:01:05

    Weird and moving - it's rare to see the virtues of the French appear so well in one film. That summer, the hearty Xintiandi UME.

The Triplets of Belleville quotes

  • [repeated lines]

    The Triplets of Belleville: Swinging Belleville rendez-vous / Marathon dancing, doop-de-doo / Voodoo, can-can aren't taboo / The world is strange in rendez-vous

  • [last lines]

    Madame Souza: [voice over] Is that it, then? Is it over, do you think? What have you got to say to Grandma?

    [cut to Champion as an old man watching TV]

    Champion: I think that's probably it. It's over, Grandma.