Le poulet (1963) Poster

(1963)

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6/10
LE POULET {Short} (Claude Berri, 1962) **1/2
Bunuel197626 February 2014
This quaint 15-minute French effort won the 1965 Oscar for Best Live- Action Short and was equally recognized at the Venice Film Festival; I opted to keep the original title as opposed to the English moniker THE CHICKEN in view of the fact that I watched it without the benefit of subtitles.

That said, there is very little dialogue involved and, in any case, it proved quite easy to follow – with a plot dealing with a man acquiring a cock to fatten for an eventual dinner, which his son wishes to keep as a pet instead. The child even devises the ruse of its laying numerous eggs, which his parents initially concede as a mistaken in having been given a hen…until the next day's dawning, at which it instinctively starts to crow! By now, however, the boy's innocent tantrums have warmed the hearts of Mum and Dad (played by familiar rotund character actor Jacques Marin), so they decide to let the animal live after all.

Director Berri (whose debut this was) later graduated to features, eventually becoming one of the leading figures of his native cinema with such classy period pieces as JEAN DE FLORETTE and MANON DE SOURCES (both 1986) and GERMINAL (1993).
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8/10
Long live the chicken
Horst_In_Translation28 August 2016
Warning: Spoilers
"Le poulet" or "The Chicken" is a French black-and-white short film from 1965, so this one had its 50th anniversary last year. It is the only credit for writer Charles Nastat and the director here is Claude Berri and this is an early career work for him. He was a very successful French actor, writer, director and producer in the last half century. And despite him being still fairly young when he made this,it is also among his biggest successes career-wise as it won him an Academy Award in the live action short category. I thought the first five minutes were a bit slow, but then the film gets quickly more interesting. It is not really a very touching tale or extremely relevant in terms of society, but I (as a vegetarian) liked the boy's dedication to save the chicken. And the ending was cute too, kinda touching when he starts crying. The dad is played by Jacques Marin and I thought he gave the best performance here. The mother isn't really talking that much, but she is fine too, just like the son. These 15 minutes are one of my favorite short films from the 1960s and I highly recommend the watch. Make sure to get subtitles if you aren't fluent in French.
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6/10
a fun, family friendly short
framptonhollis17 July 2017
Claude Berri's Oscar-winning debut short introduced the world to a new filmmaking talent with a knack for the pleasantly comic. Taking advantage of its simple and clever plot in the most charming way possible, this film will likely provoke laughter and joy in most families that view it. It is a fine, funny little movie with hints of an art-house-type vibe. With its slow pacing it may bore some young viewers, but over the course of its 15 minutes it tells a humorous and heartfelt tale that soon springs into comic action. The structure and style may seem a bit odd to some mainstream moviegoers, so I recommend them to be patient with the brief movie and focus. This classic short family film is far slower than most of today's two and a half hour long action movies, but it is much better and much more enjoyable. even if this work is not stylistically appealing to you, one must admit that it has a heart of gold lacking any trace of the cinematic cynicism that has taunted theaters for years upon years.
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A kid's film for everyone
sfuss19 June 1999
Like THE RED BALLOON (but funnier and less sentimental), a kid's film that appeals to adults as well.
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10/10
Very sweet...
planktonrules1 December 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This was the first film by director Claude Berri--made a few years before his first full-length film, THE TWO OF US. Not surprisingly, both films are packaged together for the Criterion DVD.

What I noticed immediately after the film began is how the film looks so unlike a Hollywood production. The setting is very rustic and simple and the people are far from the norm for a film--short or full-length. It consists of a family where the father and mother are, at best, not quite ordinary in looks. Yet, they love each other and their child and their lack of aesthetic beauty is not ridiculed in any way--they are just decent folks. I liked this, as too seldom do "normals" get included in films! The film is very simply told and with an efficiency of dialog and tricks.

The film begins with the family waking up and going on an outing. You really aren't sure where they're going--they seem to know and don't announce it for the audience! When they arrive at a farm, it becomes apparent they've come to buy a chicken to eat--as in those days, you didn't necessarily go to the market to get a roaster. However, their little boy (who is adorable) doesn't realize this and thinks the chicken is his new pet! Seeing the kid hugging and smiling with the chicken is a sight!

Later, the child finally realizes what's in store for his chicken--in a few days he'll become their dinner! So, in a clever twist, the kid concocts a plan to save the chicken's life! It's all very funny and heart warming--see it and you'll know what I mean.

Exceptionally well made, clever and cute--this one won the Academy Award for Best Short and I can understand why--it's a heck of a film.
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Chicken chum
dbdumonteil8 March 2017
In French,the "poulet" substantive has three meanings :1) a chicken 2) familiar: a cop 3)affectionate: my dear one ,honey, for a brat .

The first and the last meanings can apply to the short:see how the little boy is pampered by his parents,particularly in the morning when he jumps onto his parents' bed .

And of course there's a chicken ;and he is to be eaten on Sunday " eat,my pet,dad says ,when he feeds the chicken you don't know who is going to eat you".When the little boy,who ,after seeing ready-to- cook chicken on the butcher's display ,could never ,never in a month of Sundays ,eat his new "friend" ;yet he has learned that "they do not eat hens for they lay eggs" .....

Berris's short who was awarded two prizes was made just before his first feature film "Le Vieil Homme Et L'Enfant" ;more than the charming story ,it's the depiction of the average Frenchman in the mid- sixties: a true time capsule: the Deux Chevaux,par excellence the car of the early sixties, the (manual) coffee mill, and mainly ,mainly ,the hormone-fed chicken who led the consumers to buy their meat on the farms and to get corn-fed chicken ;it's not mentioned in the movie,but it's understood.
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