Such a Pretty Little Beach (1949) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
11 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
After Poetic Realism
boblipton17 February 2019
In the summer it's a handsome if undistinguished summer resort. It's winter now, and it rains all the time. Only one hotel is open, and it caters to consumptives. Gérard Philipe shows up and rents a room. He says he is a student. As the movie proceeds it becomes clear that he has been here before; he was the boy who did all the unwelcome chores and was beaten by the owner. The woman he ran away with, a famous singer, has been murdered. It's like HOTEL DU NORD, run by a sour Jane Marken.

What comes after poetic realism fails? What movie can you make when there is no G*d, no fate driving lives, because he is an old man, dying of tuberculosis? What happens, as one character remarks, there is no love, so you should take advantage of it? You get film noir, of course, but film noir is about crime and evil. How do you make a movie about love when there is no such thing, when Madeleine Robinson wants to help, when Philipe wants to help, but no one can help? This despairing movie examines that question, and it does so very well in its own, bleak way.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
On The Beach
writers_reign10 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
In some ways this could be described as Dedee d'Anvers 2 given that Yves Allegret's previous film (Dedee) had been set in a port, Antwerp, and was shot through with definite noir features - rain, gloom, despair - as is this, Allegret's follow-up film and arguably as his own life would be within the year; at the time he shot this he was still going home to his wife, Simone Signoret, who starred in three of his films, and daughter, Catherine, but within months Signoret would meet another Yves (Montand) and ask for a divorce. He did a great job on Dedee and another on Maneges (both starring Signoret) but with Une si jolie petit plage he hit one out of the park with the bases loaded. Everything is just right from the dead-beat town smack dab in the middle of East Jesus, the opening shot of the headlights approaching camera straight out of Quai des brumes to the cast top-billing Madeleine Robinson despite centering on Gerard Philippe but also taking in Julien Carrette, Jane Marken, Gabriel Fontan and Jean Servais (who played the songwriter lover as if he knew that Rififi was only a few years in the future). I'm guessing that not many leading actresses would happily play a drudge for nine reels but Robinson does it gladly and scores heavily in a thankless role. It's very much an ensemble cast and the principal setting, an out-of-season hotel is reminiscent of Key Largo, another downbeat 'message' entry roughly contemoraneous with Plage. It's not exactly a barrel of laffs but it is great filmmaking.
7 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
A beautiful, dramatic and touching film
zutterjp484 August 2019
A very dramatic story of a man who comes back to a place where he has spent his adolescence.The description of this little hotel, the beach and his guests is very good.Also the story of this strange guest is fascinating. The French critic Gerorges Sadoul wrote that "Une si jolie petite plage" is the best noir film of Yves Allégret. Gérard Philipe enjoyed very much his role in this film.The performances of Jean Servais and Madeleine Robinson are also very good.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
The missing link between the French thirties and the nouvelle vague?.
dbdumonteil10 August 2001
It's 1948,the French "nouvelle vague" is yet to come,and nevertheless "une si jolie petite plage" seems to announce the era. Gerard Philippe's character might be the missing link between Carné's desperate characters of the thirties ("le jour se lève","Quai des brumes")and the mistreated rebels of the late fifties/early sixties(Truffaut's Antoine Doinel ,Franju's "la tête contre les murs" hero). The landscape has rarely been so depressing that in this Allégret's masterwork;like Poe's "Usher house",it seems to influence the characters,to rub off on the hero .These desolate shores never seem to see the sun,the inn itself is hostile .For the hero,this is the end of the road,he has become a murderer,and having lost all his illusions,he comes back to this eating-house where he used to work as a child (he was an orphan)As the rain which keeps falling down,bad luck is here to stay:a young boy ,an orphan too,is working now in this miserable place and the hero urges him not to accept this miserable life with no future in sight,but in vain.The servant (Madeleine Robinson) tries to do the same for the young man whom she loves.All in vain.In the last pictures,a breathtaking tracking out takes us faraway from this doomed place as if the director himself wanted to escape such a darkness.Gérard Philippe used to regard this film noir as one of his very best.
28 out of 29 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The « noirest » of noir films is also the ultimate Gérard Philipe vehicle (MAJOR SPOILERS)
benoit-328 May 2004
Warning: Spoilers
This film comes with a pre-titles warning that one shouldn't generalize from this story that all state-assisted orphans necessarily become criminals and that 'criminals come from all walks of life'. It then swiftly proceeds to invalidate that statement.

This quirky film is really noir at its noirest. A former state-assisted orphan (Philipe) comes back to the one-lifeguard beach town where he was picked up years before by an unscrupulous older Parisian chanteuse, who, coincidentally, has just been violently murdered in what the police see as a jewel heist. (This chanteuse's voice is portrayed on record by none other than Edith Piaf and the parallels between her personal life and that of the murdered character are so numerous it's a good thing Piaf had a sense of humour and thought there was no such thing as bad publicity.)

Stopping at a decrepit hotel in the middle of a very rainy winter (the only one open), Philipe meets up with the bourgeois, uncomprehending and bigoted owners, guests and habitués. He feels a natural sympathy for the uncommunicative 15-year old servant-orphan-ward of the state (Christian Ferry) whom he sees as himself at that age, before he was lured to the big city and a life of semi-prostitution and self-degradation which has ended so tragically.

He notes that this young man uses as a refuge the very same beach cabin that he himself had built many years before. He notices that this young man also has sexual trysts with an older sexually-frustrated female guest of the hotel, whose husband is an invalid. This young man, despite Philipe's overtures, takes an almost instant dislike to the stranger and sees him as an interloper.

The young man is in turn counselled into a life of crime by the chanteuse's ex-boyfriend, a sophisticated songwriter (Jean Servais), who has come after Philipe looking for the missing jewels. He lets on that the young man should not be reticent to use his physical charms for personal gain, that there is no such thing as love and that we are all put on this earth to take as much as we can.

Philipe's character is the epitome of his standard characterization as an idealistic poet fallen on bad times, seemingly from birth. He realizes that life hasn't given him many opportunities and that the ones he got he has turned to evil. His main wish is to prevent this other young man from following in his tracks. (The women in this film are mostly window dressing.) He eventually tells the young man the whole story of how he was corrupted by his association with the chanteuse and her milieu until he came to the point where murdering her was his only way out. He urges the young man to be patient with life, not to run away and not to follow bad advice.

What happens next is a total reversal of what we assumed the young man to be. That is, his blank and/or moody expressions had led the viewer to believe that he was a somewhat timid, brutalized victim, unsure of his way out of childhood into adulthood. But his answer to Philipe's tirade is the ultimate nonchalant, icy downer: 'Vous l'avez bien eue, la vieille', which translates 'roughly' as 'You really did the old bag in, didn't you?'. This is just as shocking to Philipe as it is to the spectator. Philipe sees this as the ultimate betrayal of his ideals and his hopes and another proof of the corruption of this world, which leads to the fatalistic and inevitable ending.

The truth of this film can only be understood at the poetic level of wounded innocence, the Madeleine Robinson and André Valmy characters acting as less-wounded or more resilient and grounded individuals who try to help Philipe out of his misery but can only adopt the role of Greek chorus to his tragic, inescapable fate (to the wonderful accompaniment of Maurice Thiriet's music).
18 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Noir?...yes, but
taylor988520 January 2003
The text we read at the beginning indicates the direction of the film; we are asked to sympathize with and not to condemn the orphans and abandoned children brought up in state-run facilities. We are told that these children often grew up to become the "elite" of society. The Gabin character in Carne's Le jour se leve also grew up on the "assistance publique," but he is a fighter for justice, unlike the passive, tormented Pierre. Yves Allegret has filmed Gerard Philipe as a sort of Christ-figure walking through the muddy streets of this third-rate resort town. There is a scene with Madeleine Robinson cuddling Philipe that is very much like the Pieta.

Jean Servais as the slimy Fred has some effective scenes; he reminds us of Jules Berry driving Gabin to murder in Le jour. If the script had focussed more on the conflict between Pierre, the killer of the club singer and Fred, the dead woman's old boyfriend, instead of devoting reams of script pages to the social and political aspects of homeless children (no matter how moving their plight may be) the noir tradition would have been much better served.

I'll finish by praising the actors: Servais is great, Jane Marken as the proprietress of the hotel is a model of petit-bourgeois intolerance, Carette's salesman is boring and right. Only Gerard Philipe fails to give a rounded performance because the script won't let him.
11 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Wonderful atmosphere, but the story is slight and the second half drags terribly
MogwaiMovieReviews15 January 2024
The film begins splendidly, with Gerard Philipe arriving by bus to an out-of-the-way and out-of-season seaside town where it always rains and the beach is always empty. He checks into the little inn there claiming to be a student looking for some peace and quiet for his nerves, but clearly he has a big secret he is hiding, and an elderly resident of the inn seems to recognize him, too.

All this is established admirably, and the mystery and atmosphere it generates is first rate. Unfortunately, once we start to learn more of his story, the mystery falls away and the rest of the film is just interminable shots of Philipe wandering around in the rain and occasionally crying for no reason we can see. None of the other characters have any depth or believability to them, and many of their actions don't seem to make sense. Random generic statements about orphans throughout bog the story down and never add up to anything clear or meaningful. One gets the feeling the creators didn't get any further than the premise before starting making the film and then just gave up putting any more work into keeping the ball rolling.

So the second half of the film is undeniably a failure, but up till that point it's really very good indeed, and a great example of the kind of film noir that only the French could make.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The quintessence of Gerard Philipe
lqualls-dchin30 December 2012
His sensitive performance as Prince Myshkin in L'IDIOT (1946) had brought international attention, and his performance in THE DEVIL IN THE FLESH (1947) made him a star; with his next two films, LE CHARTREUSE DE PARME (1948) and UNE SI JOLIE PETITE PLAGE (1949), Gerard Philipe's position as the premier leading man of French cinema in the post-war period was assured.

Just as PEPE LE MOKO, QUAI DES BRUMES, LA BETE HUMAINE and LE JOUR SE LEVE had established the Jean Gabin persona in the 1930s (what Andre Bazin had termed "the tragic destiny"), so these four films established the Philipe persona, the sensitive young man overwhelmed by destiny. In UNE SI JOLIE PETITE PLAGE, the small seaside resort out-of-season, with its fog, its desolation, and its ramshackle buildings, is a perfect setting for this story of lost souls seeking connection and (possible) redemption. Madeleine Robinson, as the young woman working at the inn, is Philipe's counterpart: a sullen girl battered by circumstances who nevertheless is touched by the fragility of the young man. The fact that, on a realistic level, Gerard Philipe does not project the hardened facade of a criminal is rather the point: the point of a star persona. In this case, Philipe's projection of an intensely isolated, even alienated, psyche which defined the existential dilemma that was being defined by writers such as Sartre and Camus in the post-war epoch, was really enshrined in this movie.

Philipe would prove to be a more versatile actor than initially assumed; his humor, his athletic vigor, and his exuberance can be seen in movies like FANFAN LA TULIPE and POT-BOUILLE. But UNE SI JOLIE PETITE PLAGE shows Philipe at the apex of his portrayals of tortured youth, a prototype for such stars as Montgomery Clift and James Dean.
15 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
A magnificent French classic but not a cheerful one
robert-temple-119 October 2017
This title of this film, SUCH A PRETTY LITTLE BEACH (in the original, UNE SI JOLIE PETITE PLAGE) is ironic. The story is a very sad one. The film is an intensely moody and profoundly atmospheric French film noir. It is set in 1949 (the year of its release), and a young man returns to a tiny seaside French town on the Atlantic coast, near the town of Berck (which is mentioned in the dialogue as being nearby, and the location may thus be Cayeux sur Mer). In summer time it has 'a pretty beach', though not such a little one, as it stretches a long way. But it is winter, it is pouring with heavy rain day after day, and the weather is non-stop gloom. There are still defence fortifications along the beach, and a decaying blockhouse for machine guns, called a cabin, which is a hideaway of another young man who works in the small hotel in the town. The star of the film is the 27 year-old Gérard Philipe. He is silent, thoughtful, and preoccupied. He takes a room in the hotel. An old man is sitting in the hotel's bar and restaurant paralyzed by a stroke and unable to speak. He is the now disabled owner of the hotel. It is plain that he is startled and recognises Philipe, but he can say nothing, and Philipe tries to ignore him. A prolonged air of mystery pervades this film, as we wonder who Philipe is, why he has come to this strange out of the way place in such horrid weather, and why he wishes to say so little. It becomes obvious that he has been there before and knows the place well, but only the man with the stroke knows who he is. Philipe strolls along the beach, remembering his earlier time there. He visits the little cabin, and it is clear that it was once his own hideaway. We begin to realize that he, like the new boy, is one of the many war orphans who were fostered to people like the hotelier and effectively became slave labourers in their own country. The film is a savage attack on the system which permitted the nationwide exploitation and abuse of the state orphans. The new boy is in a state of constant misery, and the same had been true of Phiiipe, who we discover left five years before. Philipe tries to befriend the new boy and show sympathy for him, but the boy cannot accept it, and shies away. In the small hotel they keep playing a 78 rpm record of a French chanteuse singing a song in the style of Edith Piaf. This obviously upsets Philipe, who knows it well and does not want to hear it. Later in the story, he ends up smashing it in a rage. We eventually learn that he had been the 'slave boy' orphan in this very same hotel five years earlier. But the singer whom we have heard on the record stopped by, picked him up, and took him to Paris with her as her young lover. Philipe hated every minute of it, and after five years of miserable subservience to the woman, he has killed her. He has gone on the run, but having nowhere to run to, he has gone back to the only place he formerly knew, the little hotel which he had also hated, but at least it had once been the only thing he could call a home. The murder is widely reported in the newspapers and the police are looking for him. A young woman who works in the hotel helps him, as does a local garage mechanic. Will he accept their help and flee across the border into Belgium and be safe, as they urge him to do? Or will the power of the woman who 'owned' him overwhelm his ability to save himself, and thus destroy him in the end? This film is brilliantly directed by Yves Allegret, and it conveys such a powerful force of anguish and suffering in so few words that it is a work of directorial genius. The script, written by Allegret's frequent collaborator Jacques Sigurd, is a masterpiece of cinematic writing. The cinematography by Henri Alekan is pure visual and compositional genius, and it is just as well that the film is in black and white, because that intensifies the mood enormously. The performances are excellent, and every aspect of the production is successful. Gérard Philipe died tragically young at the age of only 36 of liver cancer. His loss was a tremendous blow to the French cinema, for he was one of the finest male presences ever to appear on the French screen. This film has been restored by Pathé, is now in Blu-Ray with English subtitles, and should be seen by all those interested in film noir, with the caution that it is highly sophisticated, deeply sombre, and exudes more melancholy than all the leopards in cages in all the zoos of the world. No one will be cheered up by this sad and brooding film, but for those who appreciate the art of the cinema, it is a wonder.
8 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
"You remind me of a hyena. A dog living in hot countries and feeding on corpses."
morrison-dylan-fan5 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Learning that it was fellow IMDber manfromplanetx birthday soon,I looked for a film to give as a small gift they could enjoy. Having found the movie with English subtitles online months ago (and keeping it "saved") along with having enjoyed reading dbdumonteil's review, it looked like the right moment to unveil the beach.

View on the film:

A decade before the movement got into full flow, director Yves Allegret & cinematographer Henri Alekan build a sandcastle between the poetic Film Noir's of the 30's and 40's,and the realism of the French New Wave in the late 50's. Closely working with sound team Jacques Carrere and Pierre-Louis Calvet , Allegret creates an incredibly haunting sound design, pelting the hotel roof with rain which lands like gunshots, and lone creaks from doors opened in the hotel room, listened to by the residence as if part of a espionage mission. Sticking a spade into the beach with a breath-taking final shot, Allegret and Alekan display a delicate quality springing from FNW-style long panning shots catching the fellow hotel guests and staff taking a sly glance at Pierre, to brewing a icy Film Noir atmosphere of a ill-looking Pierre sleeping over dissolves,joined by the outside bullets of rain falling into Pierre embrace with Marthe.

Entering the hotel looking like he is at deaths door, the screenplay by Jacques Sigurd brilliantly matches Allegret's stylisation,in the characterization of Pierre, who Sigurd has netted between the the ridden with pessimism Noir loner of the 30's/40,with the bruised, outsider rebel streak of the FNW. Unable to take their eyes off Pierre, Sigurd cleverly circles the staff/fellow guests at the hotel to cast the ghostly image of Pierre, glowing from the simmering with menace clipped dialogue of fellow "guest" Fred,and the lone hands of empathy offered by Marthe.

The lone person in the washed out town to reach out, the elegant Madeleine Robinson gives a exquisite turn as Marthe, whose own worn-down past is cut open by Robinson to slowly entangle Marthe with Pierre, whilst Jean Servais plays for the creeping slow-burn as Fred. Permanently haunted by his past, Gerard Philipe gives a mesmerising, expressive performance as Pierre,whose every look back is carried by Philipe like a ghost,fading away on such a pretty little beach.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
the rain
Kirpianuscus15 August 2018
It seems be the lead character of this bitter film. A film about past. Remembering the play by Albert Camus. All seems a blank confession. A man. A place. The tension. And an ally . And the rain . Far by every escape.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed