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Driving Madeleine
Overlook Pick

Driving Madeleine

71
User Score197 ratings
TMDB 7.116+20221h 31mFrench
ComedyDrama

Synopsis

A seemingly simple taxi ride across Paris evolves into a profound meditation on the realities of the driver, whose personal life is in shambles, and his fare, an elderly woman whose warmth belies her shocking past.

Director
Christian CarionFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Une Hirondelle Productions13 production companies
Release
September 21, 2022Released
Box Office
Budget $3M

Top Cast

8 of 37
Line Renaud
Line Renaud
Madeleine
Dany Boon
Dany Boon
Charles
Alice Isaaz
Alice Isaaz
Madeleine, jeune
Gwendoline Hamon
Gwendoline Hamon
Denise
Hadriel Roure
Mathieu jeune
Elie Kaempfen
Matt
Christophe Rossignon
Christophe Rossignon
Le Président du tribunal
Jérémie Laheurte
Jérémie Laheurte
Raymond Haguenot, dit Ray

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Mar 8, 2026

“Charles” (Dany Boon) is a Parisian taxi driver at the end of his tether when he is given a job on the other side of the city. He can’t really be bothered but it’s a lucrative fare so he sets off to pick up “Mme. Keller” (Line Renaud). She’s 92 years of age and is reluctantly having to move into an old folks home. As they proceed to navigate the busy traffic their initially monosyllabic chat becomes more intensive, intimate and confidential as she reveals some fairly private and traumatic details of her life thus far whilst he reciprocates over a few coffees, a run in with the gendarmes, some ice cream and a lot of quite poignant conversation. Much of her backstory is played out for us thanks to Alice Isaaz as her younger self and Jérémie Laheurte as her husband/tormentor for whose aggression she has an eye-wateringly effective solution, and there is also a son “Mathieu” (Hadriel Roure/Thomas Alden) who has also been formative in seeing this old lady arrive at her current perspective on life. It’s really the engagingly crafted dialogue, set within the confines of their car, that keeps this appealing as both characters gel nicely amidst a nicely balanced mix of the serious and the more frivolous and though the actual conclusion steers perilously close to sentimentality for me, it’s still an enjoyable observation of age and attitudes that I did quite enjoy.

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