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Loulou

Titre original : Die Büchse der Pandora
  • 1929
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 49min
NOTE IMDb
7,7/10
13 k
MA NOTE
Loulou (1929)
Regarder Trailer
Lire trailer1:02
1 Video
99+ photos
Romance tragiqueTragédieCriminalitéDrameRomance

L'ascension et l'inévitable chute d'une jeune femme immorale et naïve à la fois, dont l'érotisme insouciant inspire le désir et la violence autour d'elle.L'ascension et l'inévitable chute d'une jeune femme immorale et naïve à la fois, dont l'érotisme insouciant inspire le désir et la violence autour d'elle.L'ascension et l'inévitable chute d'une jeune femme immorale et naïve à la fois, dont l'érotisme insouciant inspire le désir et la violence autour d'elle.

  • Réalisation
    • Georg Wilhelm Pabst
  • Scénario
    • Frank Wedekind
    • Ladislaus Vajda
    • Joseph Fleisler
  • Casting principal
    • Louise Brooks
    • Fritz Kortner
    • Francis Lederer
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,7/10
    13 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Georg Wilhelm Pabst
    • Scénario
      • Frank Wedekind
      • Ladislaus Vajda
      • Joseph Fleisler
    • Casting principal
      • Louise Brooks
      • Fritz Kortner
      • Francis Lederer
    • 113avis d'utilisateurs
    • 72avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:02
    Trailer

    Photos180

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    + 174
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    Rôles principaux11

    Modifier
    Louise Brooks
    Louise Brooks
    • Lulu
    Fritz Kortner
    Fritz Kortner
    • Dr. Ludwig Schön
    Francis Lederer
    Francis Lederer
    • Alwa Schön
    • (as Franz Lederer)
    Carl Goetz
    Carl Goetz
    • Schigolch
    Krafft-Raschig
    Krafft-Raschig
    • Rodrigo Quast
    Alice Roberts
    Alice Roberts
    • Gräfin Geschwitz
    Daisy D'Ora
    Daisy D'Ora
    • Charlotte Marie Adelaide v. Zarnikow - braut Dr. Schöns - Dr. Schön's Bride
    • (as Daisy d'Ora)
    Gustav Diessl
    Gustav Diessl
    • Jack the Ripper
    • (as Gustav Diesel)
    Michael von Newlinsky
    Michael von Newlinsky
    • Marquis Casti-Piani
    • (as Michael v. Newlinsky)
    Sig Arno
    Sig Arno
    • Der inspizient - the Stage Manager
    • (as Siegfried Arno)
    Karl Etlinger
    Karl Etlinger
    • Verteidiger
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Georg Wilhelm Pabst
    • Scénario
      • Frank Wedekind
      • Ladislaus Vajda
      • Joseph Fleisler
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs113

    7,712.6K
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    Avis à la une

    Bucs1960

    This will leave you breathless!

    No beauty has ever graced the screen like that of Louise Brooks. No film has ever validated that beauty like "Pandora's Box". It took Pabst to recognize that this wild, uninhibited American flapper could turn in a performance like Lulu in this film. It is for the ages and time has not dimmed it at all. She brings Lulu to life with such joie de vivre and also such poignancy, that it hurts to watch it....especially when you realize that Brooks' career would soon turn into a shambles when she returned to Hollywood. If you don't have an appreciation of silent films, you need to watch this one and you will see the true art form that existed before "talkies" came into vogue. If "Pandora's Box" does not convince you, you can't be convinced.
    10tprofumo

    A natural in action

    Louise Brooks may have never studied acting, but every actor should study her. How much they can learn is questionable though. This dancer/chorus girl turned film star was one of those rare creatures who probably couldn't have told you what she was doing, even if she thought long and hard about it (and Brooks was an intelligent, articulate woman.)

    Like a great natural athlete, she simply could do it, and do it better than almost anyone else. Pandora's Box is the greatest existing record of her technique and remarkable talents.

    On the surface, a run of the mill story of a femme fatale who destroys the men around her, this G. W. Pabst film is complicated, dark, moody, and seemingly packed with contradictory messages. Well acted and well directed by Pabst, it nonetheless would have been forgotten decades ago, had it not been for its star.

    Brooks was one of the most beautiful, most photogenic woman to ever appear on the screen. From some angles, her face is so remarkable it almost doesn't seem real.

    Her personality exceeds her beauty and it was the perfect personality to capture the childish, petulant, self centered, yet sweetly innocent kid who is the embodiment of every pretty girl who wants what she wants, regardless of the consequences.

    Pabst' film, based on two German stage plays, is also a fascinating look at male sexual obsession, at men unable to control their lust who want to destroy the object of that lust before she destroys them.

    Yet all the messages aside, it is simply Brooks totally natural performance that in the end will be remembered here.

    Ironically, Brooks was really no more than a starlet in her American silent film days and it took her three European films to elevate her name above the title. And those films were hardly seen in the U.S. in their day. Yet today, women whose names were household words in America in the silent era, like Coleen Moore and even Clara Bow, are all but forgotten, while the Brooks legend grows stronger each year.

    While Brooks has benefitted from a well written biography and the adoration of much of the press, a close examination of Pandora's Box proves she was much more than just hype.

    This movie is one of the great treasures of the cinema, and Louise Brooks is one of the most talented and most fascinating actresses to ever appear in movies, on either side of the Atlantic.
    Snow Leopard

    Downbeat But Engrossing, Sordid Yet Artistic

    This feature has quite an unusual feel to it - generally downbeat, but engrossing, and filled with sordid characters and settings, yet somehow artistic. Moreover, it's not downbeat or sordid in the pretentious, empty way that characterizes so many recent movies. Rather, despite portraying its characters in a largely unfavorable light, it neither exploits them nor glorifies them. These persons are shown simply to be what they are, and while there is a certain inevitability about many of the things that befall them, there is a thoughtfulness as well. You would not want to be like, or perhaps even meet, most of these characters, and yet you want to wish them better luck.

    Louise Brooks gets most of the attention (both in the movie itself and from those who discuss it). The "Pandora's Box" image for her character is appropriate, in that Lulu is never ill-intentioned nor malicious, and yet she often puts the other characters in difficult situations, just by being who she is and acting naturally. All of the other significant characters are defined largely in terms of their responses to her and relationships with her, and all of the characters (including Lulu) have very evident faults and make some very preventable blunders. The result is an unusual and very interesting movie. Director G.W. Pabst deserves the credit most of all for creating the atmosphere, putting everything together, and making it work so well.
    9gbill-74877

    Great actress, great film

    Things I love about this film:

    • Louise Brooks gives an extraordinary performance, as unaffected and natural as any I've ever seen. She's seductive, but has such a buoyant simplicity about her, and it's not the simplicity or innocence of a girl as in other screen stars who channel this as part of their allure, she's more like an elemental force of nature.


    • The scene in act three when she's backstage with the newspaper publisher (Fritz Kortner) who has decided to end their affair and marry someone else is one example of this. She's refused to go onstage for them, and while arguing, turns her back to him and eventually lies down, the metallic strap of her outfit making a large thin Y on her otherwise bare back. We can just feel his desire to kiss the back of her neck, and after some tussling around, soon he is kissing her. It's at this moment that his son (Francis Lederer) and fiancée (Daisy D'Ora) walk in, and the look that Brooks gives them is just mind-blowing. I cannot imagine better acting; she's defiant and yet bemused, passionate and yet detached.


    • Another great example is in act four, when the son tells her he can't live without her. Her eyes are captured so perfectly by Pabst, who adds a sparkle in their reflection which is almost demonic, and yet she has such tenderness as puts his head in her lap.


    • On the surface it may seem to be a morality tale, but it's not with the way Pabst directed it, and this includes the wise casting of Brooks over Marlene Dietrich (who was apparently literally in Pabst's office when Brooks finally agreed to take the part). Lulu, Brooks's character, is never judged for pursuing pleasure. During her trial it's the prosecutor who likens her to Pandora, but the comparison is hollow, and we don't really believe it. The sexuality of the character is so natural it's presented as a sort of purity, which is a very rare thing in films of the period (or any period).


    • By contrast, it's the male characters who are portrayed as evil, and it's because their pleasures are all tainted by exploitation, greed, or violence. There's the hypocrisy of Kortner's character who carries on with Brooks but tells his son, she's not the kind of girl one marries, and then later asks her to kill herself. Her first 'patron', an old man (Carl Goetz) who likely took advantage of her when she was a child, and who has no moral qualms about her prostituting herself late in the movie. The son, who starts off pure (so much so that Brooks comments "Alwa is my best friend, the only one who never wants anything from me. Or do you want nothing from me because you don't love me?"), but who we later see addicted to gambling, despondent, and not defending her. The trapeze artist (Krafft-Raschig) who blackmails her, and in one scene leans over her ominously with a giant alligator appearing over his head, mounted to the wall in the background. Another acquaintance who tries to sell her to a creepy Egyptian brothel owner, claiming that he's "looking out for her" because the authorities won't think of searching for her in Cairo. And then of course the final man she encounters, who initially is so stunned and touched by her kindness that he shows her real tenderness, though ultimately he can't control himself. It's all pretty damning, and more an indictment of the male of the species.


    • Pabst has lots of great moments too, getting the most out of this story and telling it in a pretty creative way. The scene of the Kortner confronting Brooks on their wedding day when he finds her old patrons and his son playing around with her has the camera drifting ever so slightly in and out of focus, just as we can imagine him reeling from all of his emotions. The accidental shooting, with that beautiful work of art we see first on the left at a dramatic angle, and then in the background. And lastly, the handling of Brooks in that scene at the end, starting with her flashing that radiant smile with a sparkle in her eyes on the way up to her room, then later gazing at the candle with her chin on her hand and looking upward, and finally a remarkable restrained murder scene with just her hand falling away. It's brilliant, and Pabst continuing on with this to see the celebration of Christmas and people singing 'Hark the Herald Angels Sing' really adds contrast and heightens pathos. The feeling conveyed is not one of well, she deserved it for her wantonness, it's sadness that such a pure creature has been so abused and snuffed out.


    • The openness of the lesbian character (Alice Roberts) is refreshing, and in keeping with the lack of moral judgment present in the film. As an aside, from reading 'Lulu in Hollywood', my understanding is that Roberts refused to look at Brooks with the requisite lust, and Pabst had to shoot her looking at him and then cut that in. Regardless, Roberts and Pabst were breaking new ground here.


    • Lastly, aside from the great acting, Brooks is simply iconic in this film. Her short bob and bangs look had considerable influence at the time, and according to TCM's Ben Mankiewicz, was also studied and leveraged by Liza Minelli for Cabaret (1972). She's also very stylish in her wedding dress, at the trial in widow's garb, as well as when her hair is not in bangs to disguise herself while on the run.


    Great actress, great film.
    8markalexandrino

    On point

    Besides the grim fatalist moral lesson, the film is lacking Expressionist ideals, and is more in tune with later Weimar cinema. The fact that it has a female lead certainly separates it from the classic Expressionist works. And shadowing and landscape techniques are much more modernized reflecting Weimar's embrace of technology and immersion into consumer culture. Even today, there are few female actors that represent such a powerful will and dominant presence as Louise Brooks did in her masterful performance. The film was not very popular at its time of production and I wonder how much that has to do with this strong female presence.

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

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    Romance tragique
    Casey Affleck and Michelle Williams in Manchester by the Sea (2016)
    Tragédie
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Criminalité
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    Drame
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Despite being replaced by Louise Brooks at the last minute for the role of Lulu in Loulou (1929), Marlene Dietrich managed to snag another coveted role. Her removal from "Pandora's Box" freed her up to play one of her most iconic roles, Lola Lola in Josef von Sternberg's L'ange bleu (1930).
    • Gaffes
      While the actual identity of Jack The Ripper may never be known he would've most likely been at least sixty years old if he were still alive in 1929.

      The actor playing him is clearly in his early thirties.
    • Citations

      Dr. Ludwig Schön: I'm getting married!

      Lulu: You won't kiss me just because you're getting married?

    • Versions alternatives
      A 133-minute version, distributed by Janus Films from Film Museum München, was broadcast in America on the IFC channel in 2006. It has an unidentified orchestral score, including a 2-minute overture at the start, and it listed the credits in German, some of which were translated into English. With German inter-titles and English subtitles. This version was released on a British Region 2 DVD).
    • Connexions
      Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Fatale beauté (1994)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Pandora's Box?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 22 février 1930 (Japon)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Allemagne
    • Langues
      • Aucun
      • Allemand
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Pandora's Box
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Nero-Film Studio, Berlin, Allemagne(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • Nero-Film AG
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 53 485 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 9 950 $US
      • 18 juin 2006
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 62 971 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 49min(109 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • Silent
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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