The Room Upstairs (1946) Poster

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8/10
European star charisma.
Sorsimus13 September 2002
A pleasant French melodrama starring Dietrich and Gabin. Above average because of the great chemistry of the stars, although it must be mentioned that the script does not allow Dietrich to reach her very best.

Also notable for its social theme, the issues that make romance impossible are small town prejudices and class barriers.

Slightly overlong and slowly paced and with a silly moral climax, yet worth a look for those who like Dietrich and/ or old Hollywood melodramas.
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7/10
Really entertaining crime drama
bob9984 October 2005
I thoroughly enjoyed the acting in this. Gabin is in good form as a decent contractor who gets mixed up with a tarty Dietrich. He keeps his star luster under control. Marcel Herrand as the oily consul de Laubry is impressive, just as he was as the thug in Les Enfants du Paradis. Jean d'Yd plays Dietrich's uncle as a shambling Monsieur Hulot figure; he's really wonderful to watch. His last scene testifying at the trial is very touching. Margo Lion plays Gabin's sister superbly; she'll be remembered after most of the story fades from memory.

Marlene Dietrich and her slow sensuous drawl--what can I say about her? I found her as convincing in French as she was in German and English. She's going to win your heart even as you deplore her lack of ethics. Finally, some excellent camera-work from Roger Hubert, who shot Les Enfants du Paradis and Les Visiteurs du soir for Carne.
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6/10
Marlene and Jean
bkoganbing25 May 2018
The one and only teaming of Jean Gabin and Marlene Dietrich is this post World War II melodrama where Gabin plays the title role of Martin Roumagnac. Gabin is in the building trades and is a working class stiff. After the war guys like him were much in demand and he's on the way to a good living.

That is until he meets Dietrich who is playing one of her patented notorious women. He falls for her like a wheelbarrow full of his own bricks and goes way into cost overruns making her one grand villa. But she's marking time with him, he's a bit of amusement, Marlene's after the rich Marcel Herand whose shrew of a wife is lingering a bit too long on death's door to suit Dietrich and Herrand.

Gabin and Dietrich were quite an item over here during his exile period in America before he joined the Free French. Had Martin Roumagnac been better received Dietrich might well have set up permanent residence in France. No need to dub her, Dietrich's French was as fluent as her English. As it was eventually she did make Paris her home.

Some good performances to note are Jean d'Yd as Dietrich's uncle and Margo Lion as Gabin's sister. Blood relatives no nicknames involved for both. Also that of Daniel Gelin as a young student crushing out over her big time.

There's a lot of similarities with Martin Roumagnac and The Letter with the roles reversed. If you've seen either the Jeanne Eagels or Bette Davis versions than you know what happens in Martin Roumagnac.

The film came out in 1946 and didn't make it to our shores until 1948 because of the omnipresent Code. I think more than fans of the stars will appreciate it today.
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Men flutter to me as mops around a flame....
dbdumonteil8 October 2003
..and if their wings burn ,I am not to blame. During the final trial,the lawyer quotes this famous song "falling in love again" ,a nod to the movie which made Marlene Dietrich a star ,"das Blaue Engel".

Four men flutter to her in "Martin Roumagnac":the hero (see the title )(Jean Gabin) ,a consul (Marcel Herrand) ,a man married to a shrew (Noël Roquevert) and a supervisor (Daniel Gelin,whose part is reduced to that of a deus ex machina).Actually the movie has a pre-war flavor.This nice fellow (here, a bricklayer),Jean Gabin played it a lot of times before (see Gremillon's "gueule d'amour" ,Carné's masterpiece "le jour se lève" )The sociological side -working class hero versus society man- is only skimmed over and Marlene Dietrich is miscast:how can we believe her part of a seeds woman?But there 's some humor and it mainly concerns the supporting cast:the postman is colorful and the scene when he gives evidence is great fun;Dietrich's uncle provides an excellent contrast with his niece.

SPOILER Georges Lacombe made two good films noirs :" le Dernier des Six" (1941) which owed a lot to Henri Georges Clouzot's adaptation of a Steeman novel and "la lumière d'en face"(1955) which enhanced Brigitte Bardot's sex appeal.His flair for film noir only shows up in the last scene of "Martin Roumagnac" ,the only one which is really potent:Martin has just been shot and his sister -who did not see the scene- says "your pals say you goodbye Martin" while a news paper falls on the ground :it announces "Roumagnac released" .Indeed.END OF SPOILER

Marlene Dietrich and Jean Gabin -who lived together at the time- were to be the stars of Marcel Carné's "les Portes de la Nuit" but finally they gave up -they were replaced by Yves Montand and Natalie Nattier ,which did no good to Carné's work,since his new actors were totally inexperienced- and made "Martin Roumagnac.They never teamed again afterward.
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7/10
Marlene dietrich and Jean Gabin
silverauk6 October 2003
Georges Lacombe makes a somewhat light interpretation of this social and psychological drama by Pierre-rené Wolf. The court at the end with its "avocat" and "ministère public" deliver us quite sensational dialogues and this second part of the movie is the most interesting; the end of the movie is anti-climax but is in the line of the Martin roumagnac and his adversary. Jean Gabin and Marlene Dietrich save the film for our memory but Marlene dietrich should have been more developed.
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7/10
Star Vehicle for Dietrich and Gabin
boblipton25 May 2018
Here's a movie that was clearly produced on star power: Marlene Dietrich! Jean Gabin! She's a beautiful woman in small town, a "merry widow" with several beaux to her string, waiting for the rich, ugly wife of one of them to die so he'll marry her. She runs into Gabin, who's a construction contractor, and of course they fall in together, much to the audience's lack of surprise, and with many a shot of Marlene's legs. However, as her past and their present are revealed, there is anger and snarling and things go downhill, with lots of Gabin snarling and Dietrich to-hell-with-it shouting.

The director Georges Lacombe may be remembered as a director of early Clouzot scripts, but he started off as one of the Surrealists in Paris in the 1920s. By the end of the 1930s he was a thoroughly commercial director whose big-screen career petered out in the late 1950s, but who continued to direct made-for-TV movies into the 1970s. This move has a 1930s air to it; one would think the War had never happened.
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7/10
French Crime Classic with Marlene DIETRICH and Jean GABIN
ZeddaZogenau15 December 2023
Somewhere in the French provinces (filmed in Saint-Dizier), building contractor Martin Roumagnac (Jean GABIN) is a really big player in town. But he only really blossoms when the beautiful widow Blanche (Marlene DIETRICH) shows up. But she has her own agenda in her head...

A little provincial story that takes place before the war! The cast makes it super exciting: Hollywood star DIETRICH and France's cinema legend GABIN in one film. Both were still in a relationship at the time. And it was also DIETRICH's first film in Europe after a decade and a half. This star power gives the film additional weight.

Other roles include the later THE LEGACY OF THE GULDENBURG star Daniel GELIN as a young teacher, Margo LION and Marcel HERRAND.
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5/10
Strictly For The Birds
writers_reign1 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
There's a trivia question in here somewhere albeit one serious buffs will find too easy: what are the similarities and differences between Martin Roumagnac and Les Portes de la nuit. Similarities: Gabin left France in 1940 for Hollywood; his ex co-star and ex-lover Michele Morgan was already there but instead of re-igniting their affair he started another one, with Marlene Dietrich, a somewhat heavier hitter than Morgan. Back in France after the war he commissioned top writer-director team Jacques Prevert and Marcel Carne to come up with a film to co-star himself and Dietrich; ideally it should be a bit special because his last film, L'Imposteur, had been shot in 1942, albeit not released until 1944. He was choosing wisely,Prevert and Carne had supplied him with two of his greatest pre-war hits, Le Quai des brumes and Le Jour se leve. They rose to the challenge in the shape of Les Portes de la nuit, commissioned Sandy Trauneur to replicate the Barbes-Rochechouart Metro in the studio and were ready to go when Gabin pulled the plug leaving them all dressed up and nowhere to go. Gabin turned instead to Georges Lacombe, a journeyman director with a few respectable credits but not really in the same league as Carne. Those are the similarities, but what about the differences: Well, both films were colossal flops both with the critics and at the box office. Today, half a century later Les Portes de la nuit is an acknowledged masterpiece whilst Martin Roumagnac is an acknowledged ... flop. So, what is is about? Well you might ask; in a provincial French town Marlene Dietrich is a hooker turning tricks - and I kid you not - in a room above a shop ostensibly selling birds as pets. An early scene may or may not be subtle in that Dietrich is seen pushing a bicycle in the town square though whether the expression she's the town bicycle (everybody in town has ridden her) was current in 1946 your guess is as good as mine. Gabin is, of course, surprise, surprise, the 'nice' guy who falls for her with no idea of how she pays the rent. It ends in tears, of course, as these things always do and there's a nice 'borrowing' from The Great Gatsby in the way Gabin - who has been tried and exonerated for killing Dietrich - gets his. I doubt very much if I would want to sit through this again but then what do I know.
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