It's hard looking for something when you don't know what it is...
Amélie Poulain (Audrey Tautou) lives in Paris and in a world of her own. She works in a café, rents an apartment. Life seems to be dull but ok. Except that she's lonely.
Then everything changes.
When Amélie discovers an old box of childhood treasures in her apartment and returns it secretly to its middle-aged owner, it transforms his life - and hers.
She frees a girlfriend from a troublesome lover and steers him into passion with another. She steals her father's garden gnome and sends him on a round-the-world trip. She writes love-letters to her concierge from the woman's dead husband. It's wonderful, but her neighbour Dufayel the glass man (Serge Merlin) is watching her through his binoculars, and he knows it's not enough.
Nino Quincampoix (Mathieu Kassovitz) collects laughter, cement footprints, discarded passport photos. He works as a moaning ghoul on a ghost train.
Nino's just within sight of Amélie, but he doesn't know it. Amélie and Nino are perfect together. But will they ever find each other?
A romantic comedy... with a difference.

Special Agent Matti
Wow. Amélie is a really well-made film with a truly original eye and a truly original ear. If Requiem for a dream were a French romance it would look, sound and feel like this. See it.
M (Sexual references)
121 minutes (2:01 hours)
Film: 27 October 2001 - Sutherland Shire Film Festival
Film: 26 December 2001
DVD rental: 10 July 2002
VHS rental: 10 July 2002
DVD retail: 13 November 2002
VHS retail: 13 November 2002