The film uses musical elements native to French music and plays around with experimental sounds using objects involved in the film, such as a bicycle wheel during one of the tracks. Leaping across train stations, carnival rides, and leaving clues for the mysterious admirer at locations displaying the beautiful French landscape, the film culminates in the reunion between her and the mysterious man-turned-love-interest after a hefty cat-and-mouse chase. Following a series of events that develop the young girl’s character as one driven by a desire to experience and a drive to connect others with her own sense of playful adventurousness, the main plot revolves around her adventures as she attempts to find the owner of a mysterious book of passport picture-like photographs. The film follows Amelie as she navigates through the streets and corners of Montmartre. Yann Tiersen’s score for the 2001 critically acclaimed film, “Amelie,” captures the essence of innocence through the rose-colored lens of the French landscape, tying together the story of a curious Parisian waitress Amelie.
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