Customer Reviews
Dream Thief - By: ianrmillard, 06 May 2008 
Jeremy Irons is a jewel thief (apparently specializing in Bulgari) who uses clever hoaxes rather than outright force to steal or rob from the prestige shops in which he specializes. While sailing round the world from France he suffers from a problem with his brain. Meanwhile...a singer in France has a contract in Morocco & suffers a similar ailment. They meet in Fez, but then an Italian contessa has her very valuables jewels stolen by a cat burglar....
A watchable film, despite the extreme unlikelihood of a real thief being able to get away with jewel heists in Irons' manner! The ending is slightly ambiguous but not unsatisfying. The locations are great, the acting ditto.
Unambitious but entertaining fluff - By: Trevor Willsmer, 25 Feb 2006 
Sometimes it's a director's least ambitious films that are their most satisfying. And Now... Ladies & Gentlemen... may just be a piece of romantic fluff from Claude Lelouch, but it's entertaining romantic fluff that doesn't outstay its welcome even at the 128-minute mark. Lelouch is a director whose ambition is only rarely matched by his material, usuallly overcompensating with impressive technique that fails to hide the thinness of the story & characters. While no-one could ever mistake And Now... for having any depth, it's an pure audience pleaser (albeit possibly for a middle-aged audience that no longer exists) that genuinely pleases. It's rarely laugh out loud funny & it's not one of the great screen romances, but it is a charming & engaging number skilfully crafted.
It's styled after those glossy widescreen 60s romantic comedies about glamorous people in faraway places, usuallly involving light comic banter & (possibly) wrongly accused gentlemen jewel thieves. Jeremy Irons, so often a hard actor to warm to, is surprisingly likeable here & shows a real gift for comedy in the jewel robbery scenes (the first of which nods amiably to Lelouch's earlier La Bonne Annee). As is his wont, Lelouch casts yet another popular French singer in the other lead, this time Patricia Kass, who turns out better than initiallly expected. The two are eventuallly drawn together by the same neurological symptoms, which cause him to dream of returning his ill-gotten gains & her to forget her lyrics while coming over alll monochrome, finding themselves in Morocco & en route to a healing shrine & possible romance. With the exception of Thierry L'Hermitte, Amidou & Claudia Cardinale, most of the cast of familiar faces from French cinema have little to do but make an appearance, but they never overbalance the film in the way that the top-heavy casting so often does in the director's other films. Extremely likeable.
Paramount's DVD (unlike the French DVD) is devoid of any extras, but at least offers a good 2.35:1 transfer.
A charming movie with insightful performances. - By: B DURLACHER, 22 Jan 2006 
This is a charming & sensitive movie, with excellent performances from the supporting cast, & a superlative performance from Jeremy Irons who obviously relished his character & plays it with great skill. The story is extremely clever & intriguing, & the singing of the female lead so good that it is surprising she has not reached the top eschelons of popular French music. A movie I can heartily recommend & which I watched three times, getting more enjoyment from it every time.
A Claude Lelouch admirer, Johannesburg, South Africa