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  1. Love Lasts Three Years (French: L'Amour dure trois ans) is a 2011 French-Belgian comedy film written and directed by Frédéric Beigbeder and starring Gaspard Proust. It is based on Beigbeder's novel Love Lasts Three Years. Cast. Gaspard Proust as Marc Marronnier; Louise Bourgoin as Alice; JoeyStarr as Jean-Georges; Jonathan Lambert as Pierre

  2. Jan 18, 2012 · Love Lasts Three Years: Directed by Frédéric Beigbeder. With Louise Bourgoin, Gaspard Proust, JoeyStarr, Jonathan Lambert. A look at the dissolution of a marriage.

    • (5.1K)
    • Comedy, Romance
    • Frédéric Beigbeder
    • 2012-01-18
  3. This charming comedy follows the misadventures of a literary critic who meets an irresistible and inaccessible beauty and tries to hide the fact that he wrot...

    • 2 min
    • 61.5K
    • Sydney Film Festival
  4. The Daily Telegraph's Alastair Sooke compared Love Lasts Three Years to Holiday in a Coma, a 1994 novel by Beigbeder about the same main character. Sooke said it retains "splashes of the acid wit" from the earlier book, but Love Lasts Three Years is a more reflective work with simpler language and fragmentary chapters, which successfully convey the feeling of being in love.

  5. Two of Beigbeder’s early, autobiographic novels, Holiday in a Coma and Love Lasts Three Years chart the fall and fall of his alter-ego Marc Marronier the feckless, guileless, clueless hero attempts to get laid and stay laid while all around him degenerates into frenzy and farce. Beigbeder is invariably lacerating about the Paris demi-monde ...

  6. Jun 6, 2012 · Louise Bourgoin and Gaspard Proust star in a film by actor and author-turned-director Frederic Beigbeder. A heartbroken literary critic turns his despair into creativity following a bitter divorce, only to encounter an enchanting beauty who poses a major challenge to his newfound cynicism. Marc Marronnier thought his marriage was going well ...

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  8. Frederic Beigbeder. Marc Marronier comes of age whilst exploring his professed belief that 'love lasts only three years'. Despite the wit – the author’s trademark is wrong-footing humour - this is not an easy read. But make up your mind to enjoy the constant changes in style (including the two pages without full stops, let alone paragraphs ...