Crash Test Aglaé (2017)

  • Year: 2017
  • Released: 02 Aug 2017
  • Country: France
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5037626/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/crash_test_aglae
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: French, English, German, Hindi, Kazakh, Russian, Polish
  • MPA Rating: Not Rated
  • Genre: Comedy, Drama
  • Runtime: 85 min
  • Writer: Eric Gravel, Chemsa Dahmane, Fabrice de Costil
  • Director: Eric Gravel
  • Cast: India Hair, Julie Depardieu, Yolande Moreau
  • Keywords: road trip, india, co-worker relationship, factory, co-workers relationship,
6.5/10

Crash Test Aglaé Storyline

Aglaé Lanctot, 25-years-old, is as insecure as can be. As a result of being ‘brought up’ by an irresponsible mother and by an absent father, she can now find her balance only in a methodical life and a regular, well-defined job. For instance in being the most perfectionist vehicle crash test worker ever. So imagine her dismay when she learns that her factory is going to be relocated – in India. Losing such a structuring job is simply inconceivable. So much so that when Aglaé is offered to hold the same position but thousands of miles away from home, with pay cut and without the least social benefits, she – accepts. A few days later, Aglaé hits the road in an old Citroën Visa, accompanied by her two friends and co-workers Liette and Marcelle who, for reasons of their own, have decided to follow her example.

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Crash Test Aglaé Subtitles Download

Englishsubtitle Crash.Test.Aglae.ENGSUB.BluRay
Frenchsubtitle Crash.Test.Aglae.2017.FRENCH.720p.BluRay.DTS.x264-LOST.Forced

Crash Test Aglaé Movie Reviews

Not really my type of movie,but….

I thoroughly enjoyed this French offering, it was very relaxing and easy to watch on a very hot day. It is a beautiful story of one girls road trip from France to India set in some of the most incredible scenery imaginable with the cinematography to match and outstanding acting particularly from India Hair who played her role to perfection. I was lucky enough to obtain a perfectly subtitled version in English which didn’t take anything away from the movie as subtitles often do and it will definately sit in my must watch list.

India tries to make it to… India

Year after year, once or twice a summer season, appears a regular UFO, all the more refreshing and enjoyable as it has been unheralded before and so, totally catches you by surprise. And this is the case here. Who indeed had heard before of Eric Gravel (a French Canadian living in France whose first feature this is), of his main actress India Hair (whose hitherto supporting roles – often as a schoolgirl or a student – still had not given her a name) and of the movie itself, oddly titled “Crash Test Aglaé”, filmed in 2015 but shelved until August 2017? Hardly anybody I would say, but little does it matter since no sooner have you read the summary or watched the trailer than you are hooked: you just feel like going to the closest movie theater in the area to find out about the plot developments. And to become friends with the heroine, 25-year-old Aglaé, that young woman like no others. To tell you more about her, know that the lady has been brought up by irresponsible parents and, as a result, has been suffering from permanent anxiety. In order to fight her insecurities, she has devised a special method, namely living an extremely well-ordered life and practicing her job (as a vehicle crash test worker) in a rigorous, almost finicky way, which incidentally makes her her factory’s best preparer. So just imagine the shock she experiences the day she learns the plant she works in is to be relocated: her inner framework logically tumbles down and depression looms. A different job is just unconceivable! Which is why when the parent company hypocritically offers her (along with the rest of the staff) to hold the same job at its new location… India, she… accepts! Even if it means having to travel and live 7,500 kilometers away from her native place, even if the trip is at her expense, even if it includes a pay cut and the loss of all welfare benefits. What does that matter, she will go there come rain or come shine! And away she drives in an old Citroën Visa, accompanied by two co-workers, Liette (Julie Depardieu) and Marcelle (Yolande Moreau), who – for reasons of their own – have decided to follow her. An eventful trip ensues, whose twists and turns must not be spoiled: you will be better served when you discover them on a screen yourself, whether small or big.

Suffice it to say that there are plenty of gags and witty lines – mainly in the first half of the film -, the comedy being aptly provided by Julie Depardieu and Yolande Moreau (the latter downright irresistible with her improbable Looney Tunes Granny look and wry humor). Among the most effective comic effects are the satiric bites at today’s so-said managers of human resources, their being ridiculed acting as a vicarious revenge on those inhuman fellows (I’m thinking, in particular, of the one in charge of delocations unabashedly eating peanuts under the nose of those he lays off). The relationships between the three women, whether in the factory scenes or in those featuring the trip’s disastrous beginning, also rank among the funniest.

But don’t be mistaken: “Crash Test Aglaé”, while undeniably a comedy, cannot be reduced to this kind of light entertainment. So don’t expect a pure exemplary of the genre. For there is more to Gravel’s film than just a series of good laughs. As a matter of fact, the more Aglaé moves on, the darker the tone of the narrative gets, passing from a bit crazy at the beginning to more and more serious, going as far as to border on the tragic towards the end. The reason is that, as time goes on, difficulties pile up in hostile environments for Aglaé (now alone as her companions have dropped her midway). And as the young woman never wants to give up whatever the obstacles, the situation cannot but worsen. What also makes the film less funny (but more profound) is that the journey , merely physical at the beginning is gradually matched by another – all interior: Aglaé puts herself to the test and discovers her own reactions to the ordeal she goes through until in the end she knows who she actually is and how she will embrace life in the time ahead.

But although graver the second part sequences are never boring, surprising and unpredictable as they are. The most remarkable thing may lie in fact that in the closing scenes Eric Gravel manages to marry the opposite tones of his film’s two parts. Humour and satire then resurface within the philosophical tale but without jarring, thus ending at best this offbeat picture.

As a bonus, this second part features unexpected but all the more impressive views of the Kazakhstan desert.

And let’s not forget India Hair for whom the whole movie is a showcase. Her talent really explodes in it. Forceful and stubbornly serious in a comic environment, she stands out of all the other performers. She really carries the whole film on her young shoulders and deserves praise for that

My recommendation is not to miss this stimulatingly original film. Believe me, not only will it surprise and entertain you but it will give you food for thought in addition. Not a bad programme, is it?

Transcontinental Road Movie

A great movie about three French women threatened with redundancy when the factory they work in is faced with closure and relocation to the Asian subcontinent. In a battered old car they set off to India to accept the ‘offer’, by the creeps in the HR department, of a job in the new factory – on local wages, with no flight to take them there, and no pension or benefits… Crossing Poland, Ukraine, Russia and Kazakstan, their number is gradually whittled to one, the determined and aneponymous heroine, Aglaé. This is a satire on the disgusting and heartbreaking aspects of globalisation, outsourcing and pitting one worker against another. But for all the trials and tribulations of the heroine, it is also an affirmation of ordinary people, even the Russian border guard who insists on singer a song for the singer folk who are smuggling Aglaé across his border… Fab work for this debut Canadian French director. Fabulous to have shot over so many countries. And the final message? The true face of globalisation? People.