Pierre et Jean (1943) Poster

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8/10
Brothers in harm
dbdumonteil22 February 2008
"Pierre et Jean" still remains ,along "Une Vie" ,Maupassant's best work apart from his short stories.How many illegitimate sons are there in his 200+ short stories?More than you'll ever know!How many women married to a greybeard (Jean Renoir's masterpiece " Une Partie de Campagne" dealt with the subject)? A pretty woman (Renee Saint Cyr) is married to a grumpy crude petit bourgeois who spends his spare time fishing (Noel Roquevert).They have one son,Jean,a sensitive little kid whose sensitiveness the papa is incapable to feel.Enter a handsome doctor the woman falls in love with.

Years go by!How time flies! Mama is proud of his son who 's just passed his exam:he 's a doctor now;but this is another child ,Pierre.

Andre Cayatte's film is an excellent adaptation of a short novel (it's also a very short film the running time of which does not exceed 70 min).Although they have transposed the action to the 1940s (one of the boys has got a car),the film does not suffer for it (Think of Roger Vadim's farces when he butchered Zola's "La Curée " and Choderlos de Laclos' "Les Liaisons Dangereuses " transposing them to the fabulous sixties!).

Little by little ,Pierre discovers he might possibly not be the son of his father.One cannot praise too highly Gilbert Gil's performance ;he is chiefly remembered for his part of Pierrot in "Pepe Le Moko" ,but Pierre is ,IMHO,his very best role;when he appears he is a true live wire (Louise tells him so:It's you I liked best before),stealing apples in a yard and outshining his bland brother Jean.When the crack appears in the mirror (the scene when he looks at himself in the mirror is revealing),he becomes jealous,hateful ,full of contempt for his aging mother -who did not leave her not-so-handsome husband because of her children though-.

Like this? Try these...

Home from the hill ,Vincente Minnelli,1960

Gringalet,André Berthomieu,1946
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8/10
Brothers Keeper
writers_reign9 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
It's a keeper, it's about brothers; sue me. The one about the male siblings who don't get on is just about the oldest plot there is, traceable back to Cain and Abel and down the centuries it has provided the grist for many a writer's mill, not least Shakespeare who introduced Endmond and Edgar as a subplot in King Lear. Guy de Maupassant may not have been in Shakespeare's league (but then, who is) but he is far from chopped liver and his tale of squabbling siblings has been adapted twice for the big screen and twice for TV so it arguably has something going for it. Despite being eponymous the brothers don't figure prominently until the second half which is not that unusual - in Steinbeck's take on Cain and Abel from the couch, East Of Eden, the brothers didn't appear until the last fifth of the novel - and first we are introduced to mama in the shape of the lovely Renee St Cyr, married to shopkeeper and a bit of a drip Noel Roquevert, who takes one look at doctor Marchat, Jacques Dumesnil and is a gone gosling. Okay, it's melodrama but Andre Cayatte keeps it highly watchable and at the top end of the five films he made for Continental.
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9/10
un dimanche à la campagne
happytrigger-64-39051729 March 2019
"Pierre et Jean" is the third movie directed by André Cayatte, and my favorite in his classic period of the 40, the direction (actors, but also editing and cinematography) is virtuoso, funny in its first part, gripping in the second part. Funny with Noël Roquevert's part of the husband who doesn't see his wife's adventure nearly in front of him. Much less funny when their son Pierre (fantastic Gilberto Gil) discovers the truth about himself, the movie turns in hateful tension. But I wasn't satisfied with the last shot, the opposite of the scenes before, but that's my personal opinion.
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