Lovers of Paris (1957) Poster

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8/10
Its all in the Genes.
brogmiller18 June 2020
Inspired by Balzac's series of novels entitled 'The Human Comedy' Emile Zola set about writing a 'natural and social history of a family under the Second Empire', the name of which is Rougon-Macquart. The fundamental purpose of this series is to show the profound and inescapable influence of heredity and environment in making us what we are.

This impeccable adaptation of the tenth novel takes place in a Parisian apartment building. Into this 'melting pot' of the title comes Gustave Mouret who, like his uncle Eugene Rougan in an earlier novel, is obsessed with power. In Gustave's case it is the power that his good looks and charm exert over women.

His conquests are many and very few of the females seem to offer much resistance. He is played by Gerard Philippe so need one say more?! Not only is he perfectly cast physically but his effortless artistry is a joy to behold. One of his conquests is Berthe played by the exquisite Danny Carrel, an actress whose exotic looks came from her Vietnamese mother. Gustave ends up marrying Madame Hedouin whose husband has conveniently kicked the bucket. She is played by the superlative Danielle Darrieux whose scenes with Philippe are by far the best in the film. Mention must be made of the marvellous Jeanne Marken as Madame Josserand whose efforts to get her daughters married off make her little more than a procuress.

As with all adaptations compromises have had to be made. Certain characters are diminished and many events excluded but this still a hugely enjoyable piece with never a dull moment. Splendid production values of course and the art direction by Leon Barsacq is superb.

Naturally the subject matter is right up director Julien Duvivier's street dealing as it does with hypocrisy, cynicism and wafer-thin morality.

The next volume in Balzac's series is 'Au Bonheur des Dames' but ironically Duvivier has put the cart before the horse by directing this in 1930. It is his last silent film and is likewise highly recommended.
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8/10
"An angel is neither near nor approachable."
morrison-dylan-fan21 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
After watching her in auteur film maker Julien Duvivier's classy Marie-Octobre (also reviewed),I decided to search around for trivia about lead actress Danielle Darrieux time during production,and I stumbled on a credit which revealed that Darrieux had played a small role in an earlier Duvivier title,which led to me getting ready to break open the pot of Bouille.

View on the film:

Opening with rain falling down the screen as Jean Wiener's riveting score chimes in the background,co-writer/(along with Léo Joannon and Henri Jeanson) director Julien Duvivier & cinematographer Michel Kelber glaze the movie with a quality touch of class,with beaming close-ups showing the cast at their most beautiful and giving Duvivier's "Women's Picture" an angelic atmosphere.

Keeping his major Film Noir theme beating, Duvivier gives his ladies some dark curves,with stylishly held corner shots eavesdropping on all the gossip being spun about Mouret's encounters.

Based on the 10th book in the series (!) by Émile Zola,the screenplay by Joannon/ Jeanson struggles to cover the tough censorship which the screenplay faced,that leads to the plot feeling rather loose at times,and in search of something to truly complete it.

Despite there being weaknesses,the writers thankfully shine with crisp dialogue being rolled out by the bourgeoisie towards dream boy Mouret,who wonderfully uses all his charms to wrap the women round his fingers. Taking place behind the scenes,the writers give a striking sensuality to Berthe and Mouret's affair,with Bertha trying to go against the Noir shadows to keep their romance lit.

Joined by an elegant Danielle Darrieux as Caroline Hédouin, Gérard Philipe gives a dashing performance as Octave Mouret,whose charms Philipe splashes across the screen which makes any women who comes into contact with Mouret melt.

Pushed by her family to do what they want,the gorgeous Dany Carrel gives an excellent performance as Berthe,thanks to Carrel delicately uncovering Berthe innocent passion for Mouret,and giving Berthe a gravitas awareness that despite him working there,Mouret is not the happiness of women.
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8/10
Maison de joie
writers_reign5 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Okay so it isn't top-drawer Duvivier but even second-rate Duvivier is light years of ahead of Truffaut, who saw fit to damn it with faint praise when he should have been aspiring to produce something a tenth as good as Duvivier's worst. Once again we have a cast to die for and if, as someone has remarked here, Philippe was a tad miscast as Mouret he's still a fine actor and we still have the great Darrieux, the lovely Anouk Aimee and the exquisite Jane Marken. This was Duvivier's fourth decade of film making at the very highest level and French cinema is punctuated by his work - La Belle Equipe, Carnet de Bal, La Fin du jour, Pepe le Moko, Poil de Carrot, Voice le temps des assassins - just to scratch the surface. This is right behind all of those which is praise indeed.
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excellent adaptation
reginewertheimer28 December 2002
DUVIVIER,AUTAN-LARA,DECOIN ,etc... where some of the film-directors of "french quality" film-making of the fifties,who where criticized and supplanted by the "New-Wave",with TRUFFAUT,GODARD,etc... To-night ,in one of those charming little old theatres of the latin quarter in Paris ,I've just seen POT-BOUILLE (Julien Duvivier 1957). I found it a quite acceptable sample of that period of the French production.Appropriate casting,good actor's direction,excellent lighting,costumes and setting without flaw!! Excellent craftsmanship,from people who mastered their job within the studio system. Of course it has the theatrical side of a studio job,with very professional people ,but it is never out of purpose,it is with the aim of serving a story without annoying the audience. And What a story !the famous novel of EMILE ZOLA :POT-BOUILLE. The adaptation for the screen,keeps close to the subject : show the backstage life of the parisian lower-middle class of shop-keepers,in the textile trade ,in the late 19th century.Outward respectability,inward sordidness,and money strategies.Outward respectable married couples,inward war,deceiving ,adultery.In showing the life of the inhabitants of one building ,the social antagonisms between the masters and the servants is not forgotten ,reminding us of the society of the have and have not, of the paris of the time,for whose crude pictures Zola will remain famous.Nothing to see with the English title :lovers of Paris !!! POT-BOUILLE meaning something like :let'us wash our dirty linen within the family. Don't conclude from this that the film is black and sordid. It has the rhythm and the witty dialogues of a comedy. It's worth seeing but rare on screen .
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7/10
a minor Duvivier
happytrigger-64-3905176 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
"Pot Bouille" comes just after "Voici Le Temps Des assassins", one of Duvivier's masterpiece, and it's quite the opposite, rather a light comedy of seduction (some breast nudities, Gérard Philippe seducing every girl around him) with good rhythm and very fine settings (from Versailles I guess). And sometimes tough direction by Duvivier, but "Pot Bouille" is a minor movie.
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8/10
French BALZAC Adaptation with Danielle DARRIEUX and Gerard PHILIPE
ZeddaZogenau15 December 2023
In addition to Honore de BALZAC, Emile ZOLA also made life in Paris, the world capital of the 19th century, the subject of his novels. Well-known characters also appear again and again. In the novel THE FINE HOUSE (or THE DOMESTIC STOVE) it is the young Octave Mouret who ends up in Paris from the provinces.

In Julien DUVIVIER's film, the busy Octave is played by the jack-of-all-trades Gerard PHILIPE (1922-1959). He lives in an apartment building and works in Madame Hedouin's (Danielle DARRIEUX) laundry shop. In the oh-so-fine apartment building, it's like a cooking pot (hence POT BOUILLE) in which everything is thrown together. Gossip, hypocrisy and lots of affairs! First of all, the good Octave, which can't let anything burn. His true love is for the cool Madame Hedouin. Octave also turns out to be a great business talent, which will play an important role in the sequel THE LADIES' PARADISE. Then it's about the emergence of the large department stores, which were to begin their triumphal march around the world from Paris.

Fun cinema from France, shot in the Billancourt studios! The later ACADEMY AWARD nominee Anouk AIMEE, Jacques DUBY and Dany CARREL also appear in other roles, and she also shows off a few breast flashes. Only French cinema offered something like this in the 1950s.
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8/10
Lovers of Paris
MogwaiMovieReviews27 November 2023
Wonderful film I'd never heard of before by the great French director Julien Duvivier, based on the Emile Zola novel Pot-Bouille, which I'd also never heard of.

A handsome young man comes to 19th Century Paris and begins seducing a broad cross-section of the womenfolk of his new neighborhood while scheming to succeed as a salesman in two rival fabric stores.

The film put me in mind of the great films of Max Ophuls - "Le Plaisir", "La Ronde" and "The Earrings of Madame de..." - and it has the same delight in, and acceptance of, the mysteries of love and romance.

The cast are all faultless, but Gérard Philipe in the lead (never better) and the magnificent Danielle Dumont, as the tightly-buttoned owner of one of said stores, easily outshine them all. They add depth and nuance to a story that could have been broad comedy in lesser hands, simply through glances and body language, their thoughts and feelings flickering across their faces. A treat.
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Truffaut said...So what?who cares?
dbdumonteil21 June 2003
It's a pity people think Duvivier is a "fifties qualité France " director ,like the precedent user .Actually he was already here in the twenties and he reached summits in the thirties with such gems as "la belle équipe" "carnet DE Ball" "pépé Le moko" or "la fin Du jour".That is not to say that it was downhill afterwards.Some of his finest works came later as marvelous film noirs such as "panique" and "voici Le temps Des assassins" bear witness.

"Pot Bouille" is precisely the "voici Le temps Des assassins" follow-up.After such an impressive work ,everything would be necessarily a letdown.And alas such is the case here.Duvivier's skill for desperate films noirs is not well applied on a Zola adaptation:"Pot Bouille" ,the 10th volume in the Rougon-Macquart saga ,is more a chronicle than a linear story.A lot of subplots interfere ,some of which have been -perhaps wisely ,because of the censorship of the era- passed over in silence:for instance,the maid who delivers her baby unbeknown st to the Bourgeois in the house is nowhere to be found in this adaptation.

Duvivier needs a compact screenplay,and his bite is most of the time inefficient here.There are some good things though :Jane Marken ,as the bourgeois matronly woman,who desperately tries to get her daughters a beau marriage shines in every scene she's in.But Gérard Philippe is not well cast as Mouret,being not cynical enough;besides the happy end is not faithful to Zola :Mouret was to be the main hero of his following novel "au bonheur Des dames" ;but in "pot bouille" he does not occupy the central place,because of the huge amount of characters.Duvivier's approach is too polite ,too clean to deal with Zola successfully.
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As François Truffaut once said:
Sdicht17 May 2002
"Pot-Bouille is not a film d'auteur. On the contrary. It is quite clearly a literary work written by one person and filmed by someone diametrically the opposite. Nevertheless, Jeanson's ferocity and verve, multiplied by Duvivier's obstinate gentleness, result in something pleasant and unusual." - François Truffaut, Cahiers du Cinéma, Dec., 1957.
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