La Marseillaise (film)
- 1938 (1938)
La Marseillaise is a French film of 1938, directed by Jean Renoir. A vast political, social, and military panorama of the French Revolution up to the autumn of 1792, its many episodes range from the life of ordinary working people through the committed bourgeois struggling for change up to those in the upper echelons of society defending the status quo.
Plot
Centred on characters from the rebellious city of Marseille, most of the great events of the Revolution from 1789 to 1792 occur offstage. In Marseille, citizens capture the royal fortress of Fort Saint-Jean and set up a revolutionary council. When war is declared against Austria in April 1792, the city raises a force of 500 volunteers who march to Paris. Entertained there to a banquet, a man from Alsace sings a patriotic ballad which moves the men from Marseille. Adopting it as their marching song, it is soon known as La Marseillaise. In July Prussia joins forces with Austria and the people, enraged by the threats in the Brunswick Manifesto, storm the Tuileries Palace, making prisoners of the King and Queen. A volunteer army then marches east to face the highly professional Prussian forces and in September, to the astonishment of the world, beats them at Valmy.
Fictional characters and happenings are mixed in with historical characters and actual events. While careful to show genuine revolutionaries who wanted constitutional change rather than mob violence or anarchy, as well as privileged people who accepted the need for ordered change, Renoir often uses members of the public to express the ferment of ideas that gripped France.
Reception
La Marseillaise, while not one of Renoir's better-known films, has received positive reviews from today's critics.[1]
Cast
- Pierre Renoir as King Louis XVI
- Lise Delamare as Queen Marie-Antoinette
- Germaine Lefebvre as Madame Élisabeth, the King's sister
- Louis Jouvet as Pierre Louis Roederer
- Georges Spanelly as La Chesnaye, commander of the Palace guard
- Léon Larive as Picard, the King's valet
- Elisa Ruis as the Princesse de Lamballe
- William Aguet as de La Rochefoucauld
- Edmond Ardisson as Jean-Joseph Bomier, a mason from Marseille
- Nadia Sibirskaïa as Louison, a young Parisian woman who befriends Bomier
References
- ^ "La Marseillaise (1937)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved September 6, 2015.
External links
- La Marseillaise at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
- The Whirlpool of Fate (1925)
- Nana (1926)
- Marquitta (1927)
- The Little Match Girl (1928)
- Le Bled (1929)
- On purge bébé (1931)
- La Chienne (1931)
- Night at the Crossroads (1932)
- Boudu Saved from Drowning (1932)
- Chotard and Company (1933)
- Madame Bovary (1934)
- Toni (1935)
- Life Belongs to Us (1936)
- The Crime of Monsieur Lange (1936)
- The Lower Depths (1936)
- La Grande Illusion (1937)
- La Marseillaise (1938)
- La Bête Humaine (1938)
- The Rules of the Game (1939)
- Swamp Water (1941)
- This Land Is Mine (1943)
- The Southerner (1945)
- The Diary of a Chambermaid (1946)
- "Partie de campagne" (1946)
- The Woman on the Beach (1947)
- The River (1951)
- The Golden Coach (1952)
- French Cancan (1955)
- Elena and Her Men (1956)
- The Doctor's Horrible Experiment (1959)
- Picnic on the Grass (1959)
- The Elusive Corporal (1962)
- The Little Theatre of Jean Renoir (1970)
This article related to a French film of the 1930s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e