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IMDbPro

L'idiot

  • 1946
  • 1h 41m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,6/10
264
MA NOTE
L'idiot (1946)
Drama

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMuichkine, a young Russian prince, returns home to St. Petersburg from a mental institution, determined to spread decency and kindness in the harsh and cruel world. He becomes betrothed to a... Tout lireMuichkine, a young Russian prince, returns home to St. Petersburg from a mental institution, determined to spread decency and kindness in the harsh and cruel world. He becomes betrothed to an innocent young girl while trying to save a less-innocent woman from her own travail, but... Tout lireMuichkine, a young Russian prince, returns home to St. Petersburg from a mental institution, determined to spread decency and kindness in the harsh and cruel world. He becomes betrothed to an innocent young girl while trying to save a less-innocent woman from her own travail, but jealousy and his own naivete conjoin to bring about unimaginable tragedy.

  • Director
    • Georges Lampin
  • Writers
    • Fyodor Dostoevsky
    • Charles Spaak
    • Georges Raevsky
  • Stars
    • Edwige Feuillère
    • Lucien Coëdel
    • Jean Debucourt
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,6/10
    264
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Georges Lampin
    • Writers
      • Fyodor Dostoevsky
      • Charles Spaak
      • Georges Raevsky
    • Stars
      • Edwige Feuillère
      • Lucien Coëdel
      • Jean Debucourt
    • 10Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 2Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Photos1

    Voir l’affiche

    Rôles principaux21

    Modifier
    Edwige Feuillère
    Edwige Feuillère
    • Nastasia Philipovna
    Lucien Coëdel
    Lucien Coëdel
    • Rogogine
    Jean Debucourt
    Jean Debucourt
    • Totsky
    Sylvie
    Sylvie
    • Madame Ivolvine
    Gérard Philipe
    Gérard Philipe
    • Le prince Muichkine
    • (as Gérard Philippe)
    Nathalie Nattier
    Nathalie Nattier
    • Aglaé Epantchine
    Jane Marken
    Jane Marken
    • Naria
    • (as Jeanne Marken)
    Maurice Chambreuil
    • Le général Epantchine
    • (as Chambreuil sociétaire de le Comédie Française)
    Michel André
    Michel André
    • Gania Ivolvine
    Elisabeth Hardy
    • Sophie Ivolvine
    Roland Armontel
    Roland Armontel
    • Louliane Timofeievitch Lebediev l'ivrogne
    • (as Armontel)
    Mathilde Casadesus
    • Adélaïde Epantchine
    Janine Viénot
    • Alexandra Epantchine
    Tramel
    Tramel
    • Ivolvine
    Marguerite Moreno
    Marguerite Moreno
    • La générale Elisabeth Prokovievna Epantchine
    Danielle Godet
    Danielle Godet
      Rodolphe Marcilly
      • Bit part
      • (uncredited)
      Maurice Régamey
        • Director
          • Georges Lampin
        • Writers
          • Fyodor Dostoevsky
          • Charles Spaak
          • Georges Raevsky
        • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
        • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

        Commentaires des utilisateurs10

        6,6264
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        Avis en vedette

        dwingrove

        Gorgeous Romantic Kitsch - Dostoevsky Would Throw a Fit!

        Stiffly directed, clumsily edited, weighed down with pointless shots to show off Leon Barsacq's sumptuous sets of 19th century Saint Petersburg, this is still a scorching and hypnotically beautiful romantic melodrama thanks to the sheer magic of its two lead actors. In his first major film role - as the pious Prince Myshkin - Gerard Philippe radiates the most sexualised saintliness you are ever likely to see on screen. As Natasha Filipevna, the doomed courtesan he falls in love with, Edwige Feuillere is at once meltingly sensual and hard-as-nails - a romantic dominatrix in luscious Escoffier gowns, who falls victim to her own finer instincts.

        Mind you, I've no idea how this film will play to fans of Dostoevsky. (Personally, I have always loathed his work, finding it an exercise in boring pseudo-spiritual navel-gazing.) Yet for the same crowd of doomed romantics who adored Garbo in Anna Karenina or Omar Sharif and Julie Christie in Doctor Zhivago (and may not give a toss for Tolstoy or Pasternak) this is one film to track down at all costs. Admirers of 'deep' Russian fiction will most likely be apoplectic, but don't they all just love to be miserable anyway?
        9brogmiller

        A Knife in the Bible.

        Fyodor Dostoyevsky possessed an amazing sense of drama, an ability to build his stories to thrilling climaxes and to create unforgettable characters that live and breathe. This makes his novels ideal for the medium of film. In the astonishing absence of a definitive Russian version of 'The Idiot' (I personally find Pyriev's film of 1957 extremely dull) one must look farther afield. Kurosawa's magnificent version came in 1951 preceeded three years earlier by the film under review. Director Georges Lampin and scenarist Charles Spaak have managed to reduce the novel to ninety minutes of screen time. This means that lots of characters have been diminished but we are able to focus on the triangle of the tantalising but unstable Nastasia Filippovna, the brutish, passionate Rogozhin and the saintly, compassionate Prince Myshkin. Their scenes together are electric. Nastasia is one of the author's greatest creations and the divine Edwige Feuilliere gives one of her most astounding performances. Lucien Coedel is mesmerisingly menacing as Rogozhin and Gerard Philippe is totally convincing as a man whose simplicity and goodness are in stark contrast to the cynicism and selfishness around him. Good support from Jean Debucourt, Marguerite Moreno and Natalie Nattier. Superlative score, production design and cinematography with great direction by Lampin whose finest hour this was to be. He returned to Dostoyevsky with a modern dress version of 'Crime et Chatiment' in 1956 and although that film has merit none of his other films alas comes close. Amazing as it may seem Dostoyevsky is not everyones cup of tea but this excellent film serves to remind us of his genius.
        10benoit-3

        A romantic masterpiece - More French than Russian...

        Gérard Philipe, in his first screen role, plays an impoverished Russian aristocrat with an angelic face and a kind heart who is condemned to tell the truth in a tsarist society whose corruption won't allow it. He is a saintly figure. Unfortunately, far from performing miracles, his innate frankness tends to make things worse for everyone around him after confronting them with their inner failures. This film boasts incredible production values (costumes by Escoffier, sets by Bakst) and some of the finest dialog of any French movie (by Charles Spaak). Even Maurice Thiriet's idiosyncratic music manages to sound Russian at times. The film's elliptical retelling of the Dostoeivski novel (in 91 compact minutes) cannot be outdone for sheer intelligent and elegant movie-making. The actors, down to the last bit part (Marguerite Moreno, Sylvie, Debucourt, Chambreuil), are superb and would have made a retelling of "The Three Little Pigs" just as fascinating: Philipe as an unstoppable El Cid figure out of his element is halfway between Don Quichotte and Paphnuce (in Anatole France's "Thaïs") and already reveals his genius; Edwige Feuillère has never been more expressive, magical and mysterious; Lucien Coëdel and Nathalie Nattier might as well have been born for their respective parts since this is one of their too few screen appearances. I just saw this film again on Ontario's French channel, TFO, tonight. It deserves to be restored and made generally available on DVD. If only to show the world what actors there were on this planet before Johnny Depp and Leonardo DiCaprio took over.
        7I_Ailurophile

        Mostly enjoyable and well done, but storytelling struggles in the details

        It's a little odd, watching a movie you've been looking forward to in one capacity or another and finding yourself slightly disappointed. It's not that this is bad by any means, but despite a marvelous premise, it's much better in the broad strokes of the plot than in the details that constitute that plot. It lands on the intended emotional beats, but imperfectly in light of how the narrative effectively comes across as seesaws tipping back and forth on a single fulcrum rather than the following of a path - a sense that's particularly odd since there are discernible progressions for characters and the story at large. 'L'idiot' is enjoyable, but less than wholly captivating or essential.

        This is quite well made, to be sure. Georges Lampin shows a deft hand in orchestrating shots and scenes as director; I believe the cast give excellent performances, not least Gérard Philipe as the gentle prince and Edwige Feuillère as fiery Nastasia. While the original music of V. De Butzow and Maurice Thiriet mostly sticks to the background, at select moments it rears its head with ponderous dramatic themes that are rich and enticing. Those behind the scenes turned in fine work all around, with super costume design, hair, and makeup, and terrific production design and art direction adjoining lovely filming locations. Though not specifically striking, the cinematography and editing are splendid, and in all other regards the picture is broadly well done.

        I'm a little stuck on the writing, however. In the wide strokes there's much to love here in the tale of a kind, innocent, somewhat naive man being considered altogether mad amidst the less virtuous goings-on of the figures and world around him, and the unwitting effect that his goodness will have on others for good and for ill. Indeed, the people around him think too much or too little of how he presents, and make assumptions; drama invariably ensues, swirling foremost around assertive, beleaguered Nastasia. Would that the screenplay were fleshed out more, however, to make the push and pull of others' behavior more meaningful than what feels like a child's game of picking petals off a flower (e.g. "He loves me, he loves me not") and putting into motion whatever dichotomous statement arbitrarily comes up last. The sketch is already there, and it needed only to have been developed into a more complete image. Moreover, for as much as the prince's name comes up as having (unintentionally) caused such havoc, he's not in the feature as much as one might suppose without any foreknowledge, and the connections between him and the characters who have had their outlooks altered come across as a tad flimsy.

        I do actually like 'L'idiot,' and I think it's worth watching. Despite strong acting and craftsmanship, however, storytelling that is less than 100% convincing results in division of one's attention. What strengths this film can claim are not so grabbing as to help it to especially stand out, so at length the viewing experience is one that's satisfying and entertaining, but maybe not as much as one might hope from cinema. Do watch this 1946 movie, and perhaps you'll find it a more fulfilling experience than I have. Don't necessarily go out of your way for it, though, and don't expect a revelation.
        dbdumonteil

        Tender and tormented: a lost soul in his own world

        Georges Lampin gets out of his way to sound Russian ,like all the French directors who came before and took classics to the screen ,and they were numerous,mainly in the thirties .Lampin would return to Russia with his own "Crime Et Chatiment"in 1956 in a Frenchified version.

        here ,only a poster in Russian for a concert,the Kopeks ,a brief moment of folk music and the names (with a view on the town,shown to make us comprehend that man's world is that of corruption,selfishness, self-interested motives,and money matches.The stellar cast ,including Marguerite Moreno,Lucien Coedel,Edwige Feuillère ,give their characters substance .But the stand out is Gérard Philippe,the man with the child in his eyes,who is not at the top of the cast and credits because he was relatively unknown (he was also credited as "supporting" in the contemporary "Pays Sans Etoiles").Philippe's last scene is absolutely prodigious and compares favorably with what Hitchcock would do with Anthony Perkins in the last pictures of "psycho" .

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        Détails

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        • Date de sortie
          • 20 novembre 1946 (France)
        • Pays d’origine
          • France
        • Langue
          • French
        • Aussi connu sous le nom de
          • The Idiot
        • Lieux de tournage
          • Studios Eclair, Epinay-sur-Seine, Seine-Saint-Denis, France(Studio)
        • société de production
          • Films Sacha Gordine
        • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

        Spécifications techniques

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        • Durée
          1 heure 41 minutes
        • Couleur
          • Black and White
        • Rapport de forme
          • 1.37 : 1

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