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Tagebuch eines Landpfarrers

Originaltitel: Journal d'un curé de campagne
  • 1951
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 55 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,7/10
13.297
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Nicole Ladmiral and Claude Laydu in Tagebuch eines Landpfarrers (1951)
A young priest taking over the parish at Ambricourt tries to fulfill his duties even as he fights a mysterious stomach ailment.
trailer wiedergeben3:59
1 Video
74 Fotos
Drama

Ein junger Priester, der die Gemeinde in Ambricourt übernimmt, versucht, seine Pflichten zu erfüllen, sogar während er gegen eine mysteriöse Magenerkrankung kämpft.Ein junger Priester, der die Gemeinde in Ambricourt übernimmt, versucht, seine Pflichten zu erfüllen, sogar während er gegen eine mysteriöse Magenerkrankung kämpft.Ein junger Priester, der die Gemeinde in Ambricourt übernimmt, versucht, seine Pflichten zu erfüllen, sogar während er gegen eine mysteriöse Magenerkrankung kämpft.

  • Regie
    • Robert Bresson
  • Drehbuch
    • Georges Bernanos
    • Robert Bresson
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Claude Laydu
    • Nicole Ladmiral
    • Jean Riveyre
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,7/10
    13.297
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Robert Bresson
    • Drehbuch
      • Georges Bernanos
      • Robert Bresson
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Claude Laydu
      • Nicole Ladmiral
      • Jean Riveyre
    • 66Benutzerrezensionen
    • 50Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Nominiert für 1 BAFTA Award
      • 7 Gewinne & 3 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 3:59
    Trailer [OV]

    Fotos74

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    Topbesetzung18

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    Claude Laydu
    Claude Laydu
    • Priest of Ambricourt (Curé d'Ambricourt)
    Nicole Ladmiral
    • Chantal
    Jean Riveyre
    • Count (Le Comte)
    Adrien Borel
    • Priest of Torcy (Curé de Torcy)
    • (as Andre Guibert)
    Rachel Bérendt
    • Countess (La Comtesse)
    • (as Marie-Monique Arkell)
    Nicole Maurey
    Nicole Maurey
    • Miss Louise
    Martine Lemaire
    • Séraphita Dumontel
    Antoine Balpêtré
    Antoine Balpêtré
    • Dr. Delbende (Docteur Delbende)
    • (as Balpetre)
    Jean Danet
    • Olivier
    Gaston Séverin
    • Canon (Le Chanoine)
    • (as Gaston Severin)
    Yvette Etiévant
    Yvette Etiévant
    • Femme de ménage
    Bernard Hubrenne
    • Priest Dufrety
    Léon Arvel
    • Fabregars
    Martial Morange
    • Deputy mayor (L'Adjoint)
    Gilberte Terbois
    • Mrs. Dumouchel (Mme Dumouchel)
    Serge Bento
    • Mitonnet
    • (as Serge Benneteau)
    Germaine Stainval
    • La patronne du café
    • (Nicht genannt)
    François Valorbe
    • Bit Role
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Robert Bresson
    • Drehbuch
      • Georges Bernanos
      • Robert Bresson
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen66

    7,713.2K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8millertere

    Fight to keep faith

    This is a deeply religious film. It conveys anguish and despair. It may seem depressing but you find hope. It is a great movie made with a very slow rhythm that fits perfectly with the life and the thoughts of the priest. Each scene fades to black slowly into the next and leaves you waiting with that sense of "nothing" that tortures the priest. It is intense in the dialogs, although you may have to see it several times before you can really "catch" them. The struggle to believe, to persevere, to find, to know is common to all the characters in different ways. "Before me, a black wall" says th priest; I think, we all had similar thoughts, at least once in our lives.
    10FilmSnobby

    Pretty much perfect.

    *Diary of a Country Priest* is a nearly perfect film. Made in 1950, this film benefits from Bresson being at the height of his powers. As he aged, the slow, measured, static style became more and more mannered, or more and more intolerable, shall we say. But here he doesn't go overboard: the mood is portentous rather than pretentious. And in any case, it's not as slow as you may think: there are probably hundreds of cuts in the film (this ain't no Carl Th. Dreyer movie). Along those lines, Bresson's method of adaptation -- which is to distill the ESSENCE of the chosen work -- is stringently economical and pared to the bone. In other words, the thing doesn't simply dawdle along. Based on a 1930's novel by a right-wing Euro novelist, *Diary* details the sad experiences of a young priest with health problems who is assigned to a new parish. The villagers treat the young man with hostility and downright scorn. Sensing and resenting the new priest's obvious holiness (everybody hates a saint), they ridicule him, shut him out of their confidences, send threatening anonymous notes ("I feel sorry for you, but GET OUT") . . . to all of which our hero responds with a sort of confused empathy. Meanwhile, Bresson uses a striking narrative device: we see the priest writing in his diary, while VOICING OVER what he's writing, and then there's a cut to a scene which SHOWS the action the priest has just been writing (and narrating) about. This complex, layered style proves to be more than a fair trade-off for the paucity of actual narrative incidents. We're invited to ponder an event's significance -- a lucky thing, because the action is quite often so psychologically complex that we need room to breathe, to think things over. Don't presume to form an opinion of *Diary* until you've seen it at least twice. Sounds like homework, I know, but so does *King Lear*. Great art IS homework.

    Perhaps the film's true value is its delineation of just how stagnant and unpleasant little towns can be. Again Bresson is inventive: rather than simply show us the putrid little village, the director instead opts for an oblique approach, inviting us to IMAGINE just how putrid the village actually is, usually by heightening off-screen sound effects. Quite often, we hear unpleasant things like motorcycles backfiring, rakes running over asphalt, crows screeching, mean-spirited giggling outside a window, iron gates slamming shut, and so on.

    And finally, it must be said that it's surprising how avowed agnostic directors make the most persuasive religious movies. In my view, this film and Dreyer's *Ordet* remain the greatest films about Christianity in the history of cinema (the conversion scene in the middle of *Diary* might prompt you to go to church next Sunday). Anyway, *Diary of a Country Priest* is an unassailable, influential masterpiece that's a MUST-OWN for the true cineaste, and a possible education in art for everybody else. Get the new Criterion edition, watch it twice, and listen to Peter Cowie's commentary. I assure you that it won't be a waste of your time.
    9Asa_Nisi_Masa2

    The kind of integrity and faith so strong and real, it frightens even the church

    A young priest has been assigned his first parish in a village somewhere in the North of France. Right from the first, essential opening shot in beautiful black and white, we instinctively get a sense of his isolation from any other human being. As the final credits rolled by, I don't know why I had the impulse to restart the DVD, and I watched the first 5 minutes of the movie again, realising just how much of a harbinger of extreme loneliness the opening frames are. Diary of a Country Priest is in good part about loneliness - the extreme physical, emotional and intellectual isolation of those who embark on an earnest mission, with an inability to compromise and a sincerity (with its resulting emotional vulnerability) which both frightens and repulses those who aren't ready to receive it. I was especially thankful to Bresson for having left us with a film about a priest which didn't involve his tiresome sexual issues in any shape or form - what a refreshing change! In the role of the young parish priest of Ambricourt, young Claude Laydu was in his debut role here - though he very occasionally shows his inexperience as an actor, he is nonetheless remarkable in the title role, and his sensitive, silently suffering, candid boyish face will remain with me for quite a while. It's extraordinary that such a movie, so completely devoid of any mass appeal or commercial potential, should have found someone willing to fund it. This kind of thing restores one's faith in the integrity and vision of certain cinematic enterprises.
    chaos-rampant

    Purity that clings to self

    This is adapted from a book apparently but seems to be very much a personal diary. A pious young priest, I take this to be Bresson himself, arrives at a remote village during the war. He's idealistic and wants to be of help, is eager to knock on doors and upset normalcy.

    The very first line on his diary, he writes on it throughout, delineates a whole worldview here; absolute frankness, the most insignificant secrets of life, life without a trace of mystery, laid bare.

    His intense sincerity is curious to those around him, a local churchman wonders with disapproval if he's not better off becoming a monk, this is a peoples job he says implying people just want to go on as they do with the small of life, not be upset in how they rationalize what they do.

    And this is all so we can find ahead of us a life that retains its confounding mystery, a mystery that conceals hurt. A mother who has been so numbed by the loss of a child she turns a blind eye to suffering in her home. Two girls, both in unhappy homes, one smitten by him, the other comes to revile him because he preaches resignation and she's burning up with a desire to run off from an unhappy life.

    There are several good things here. But I hit a stumbling block as a viewer in the philosophy behind it, I take this to be Bresson's; anguish as deep truth, obstinacy as spiritual fortitude, renounciation of life but his kind only imparts gloom and dejection.

    This is all crude to me. For example the priest has a letter that would exonerate him from a certain wrongdoing being rumored but says nothing about it, the silence gives him strength. But, if we're here to take care of life and lead a way out of suffering, that means taking care of our own selves as well and doing everything we can to dispel illusion. This is just needless ego as purity; how is anyone better off not knowing that she really died in peace?

    It's all essentially coming from Christian notions of grace where the body has to be mortified, the soul atone for sin by dejection, and the resulting anguish as proof of being close to the truth and price paid for it. This is all baggage for me, a romanticism of suffering in place of clear seeing. I know of a more eloquent "resignation" (which he preaches) in Buddhist non-attachment; a cessation of ego that doesn't demand self-mortification.

    Another possible reading is too tantalizing to ignore but would go against the grain of why the film is lauded as pure and deep.

    We see a young man who is well-meaning but a little befuddled in his efforts to be pure; he drives himself to sickness by his ascetic lifestyle and begins gradually to confuse the pain of that sickness with a pious torment of the soul in the course of doing the right thing, a surrogate Christ bearing the sins of mankind. It's only too late that he comes to recognize that love is all, awakened by how it has been wasted in his old classmate's home (a cynical, self- absorbed version of his intellectual self).

    Maybe this was early for Bresson; I find this to be purism that is still beholden to self and preconceived ideas. Maybe his next films shed some light.
    offret87

    Faith in the midst of tribulation

    Robert Bresson's masterfully composed film, Diary of a Country Priest, is in complete alinement with his other work. Bresson was a very spiritual filmmaker, and he weaves the fascinating tale of a young parish priest who sets up shop in a hostile environment with such grave and minimalistic purity. Bresson relied upon naturalistic performances from non-actors. He thrived on this way of film-making, and he was the master of it. Diary of a Country Priest details the sublime detachment between a young priest and his new congregation. His sickness further alienates him from the parishoners, who act in a hostile manner at what they see as his negated passivity. He falls back on his faith as his source of strength, but even it is dwindling. The only person who he is able to commune with is a young girl who confides in him. The film is a touching portrait of the stasis of mankind, whether you feel that religion is key and of necessity, or if you feel it is a farce.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      The hand and handwriting in the film belong to Robert Bresson.
    • Zitate

      [subtitled version]

      Countess: Love is stronger than death. Your scriptures say so.

      Curé d'Ambricourt: We did not invent love. It has its order, its law.

      Countess: God is its master.

      Curé d'Ambricourt: He is not the master of love. He is love itself. If you would love, don't place yourself beyond love's reach.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Geschichte(n) des Kinos: Les signes parmi nous (1999)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 8. April 1952 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Frankreich
    • Sprache
      • Französisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Diary of a Country Priest
    • Drehorte
      • Eglise, Equirre, Pas-de-Calais, Frankreich
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Union Générale Cinématographique (UGC)
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    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 47.000 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 7.674 $
      • 27. Feb. 2011
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 47.000 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 55 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Nicole Ladmiral and Claude Laydu in Tagebuch eines Landpfarrers (1951)
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