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La chienne

  • 1931
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 35min
NOTE IMDb
7,5/10
5,2 k
MA NOTE
Michel Simon in La chienne (1931)
Drame juridiqueTragédieCriminalitéDrameRomance

Un employe solitaire ne devient lui-meme que lorsqu'il s'adonne a sa passion pour la peinture et qu'il s'arrache ainsi a la mediocrite de son existence. Une prostituee surgit dans sa vie, qu... Tout lireUn employe solitaire ne devient lui-meme que lorsqu'il s'adonne a sa passion pour la peinture et qu'il s'arrache ainsi a la mediocrite de son existence. Une prostituee surgit dans sa vie, qui le dupe, le vole et se moque de lui.Un employe solitaire ne devient lui-meme que lorsqu'il s'adonne a sa passion pour la peinture et qu'il s'arrache ainsi a la mediocrite de son existence. Une prostituee surgit dans sa vie, qui le dupe, le vole et se moque de lui.

  • Réalisation
    • Jean Renoir
  • Scénario
    • Georges de La Fouchardière
    • Jean Renoir
    • André Girard
  • Casting principal
    • Michel Simon
    • Janie Marèse
    • Georges Flamant
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,5/10
    5,2 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Jean Renoir
    • Scénario
      • Georges de La Fouchardière
      • Jean Renoir
      • André Girard
    • Casting principal
      • Michel Simon
      • Janie Marèse
      • Georges Flamant
    • 28avis d'utilisateurs
    • 44avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos60

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    Rôles principaux23

    Modifier
    Michel Simon
    Michel Simon
    • Maurice Legrand
    Janie Marèse
    Janie Marèse
    • Lucienne Pelletier dite Lulu
    Georges Flamant
    Georges Flamant
    • André Jauguin dit Dédé
    Roger Gaillard
    • L'adjudant Alexis Godard
    • (as Gaillard)
    Romain Bouquet
    • Henriot - le patron de la bonneterie
    Pierre Desty
    • Gustave Brocheton
    Mlle Doryans
    • Yvonne
    Lucien Mancini
    • Wallstein
    • (as Mancini)
    Jane Pierson
    Jane Pierson
    • Philomène - la concierge
    Christian Argentin
    Christian Argentin
    • Le juge d'instruction Desrumaux
    • (as Argentin)
    Max Dalban
    • Bernard - le collègue
    • (as Dalban)
    Jean Gehret
    • Monsieur Dugodet
    • (as Gehret)
    Magdeleine Bérubet
    • Adèle Legrand
    • (as Magdelaine Berubet)
    Claude Allain
    • Petit rôle
    • (non crédité)
    Ghislaine Autant-Lara
    • Petit rôle
    • (non crédité)
    Colette Borelli
    • La petite Lily
    • (non crédité)
    Agnès Capri
      Marcel Courmes
      • Le colonel
      • (non crédité)
      • Réalisation
        • Jean Renoir
      • Scénario
        • Georges de La Fouchardière
        • Jean Renoir
        • André Girard
      • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
      • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

      Avis des utilisateurs28

      7,55.1K
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      Avis à la une

      8ElMaruecan82

      Putting the 'Noir' in "Renoir"

      The film opens with Guignol theater à la "Punch and Judy", the first hand-puppet presents a tale of social relevance, the second interrupts him by stating that this is a story making a moral statement about men's behavior but they're all contradicted by the third one, the master of ceremonies who insists that there's no hero, no villain in this story, it's just a sordid "love" triangle involving a "He", a "She" and "The Other Guy": a streetwalker named Lulu (Janie Marese), her boyfriend-pimp Dédé (George Flamand) and Maurice Legrand, the sucker, played by Michel Simon. What a gallery painted in black and white and infinite shades of human complexity by the great Jean Renoir, son of painter and impressionist pioneer Pierre-Auguste Renoir.

      Maybe like his father, Renoir cared more for 'impressions' than actual realities, there are no villains not because they don't exist but because the perception is so fuzzy in the first place and the roles are switched as the plot moves forward, Legrand is a meek bookkeeper and Sunday painter of intellectual superiority but mocked by his peers and constantly bullied by his wife, a nagging and controlling shrew reminding him everyday that he's not the soldier hero her late husband was. Legrand has surrendered to mediocrity until he fell in love with Lulu, a light of hope. He took her as a muse while she was a leech, sucking out his love, dignity and money for her domineering pimp. Not personal but strictly business, unless by 'personal' we mean that she did it because she loved Dédé. That everyone is driven either by money or lust foreshadows the dark shortcomings of the film, the notion that everything has a price, and they'll all pay for their actions.

      But again, there's no morale. This is just entertainment, a story starting upon the little theater of Paris, like so many others, we're not here to judge anyone but to witness the flow of events that will cause many people to act one against another acting according to their inclination toward greed and lust. This is the year 1931 and while not a revolutionary story, under the confident directing of Jean Renoir, you come to question why it is Orson Welles' "Citizen Kane" that is regarded as such a revolutionary film, even Welles would give Renoir the credit he deserves. The French director emphasized that "noir" syllabus in his name, with a main character who's resigned to a life of relative weakness to such a point it could almost pass as courage or wisdom, and that strength could only be expressed in awkward and disastrous ways.

      Played by Janie Merese, Lulu is the pioneering femme fatale, a speaking version of the Woman from the City in Murnau's "Sunrise". But Renoir, almost defensively, claimed that all he wanted to do was to explore a film about a Parisian streetwalker, a job as respectable as any other because he was always fascinated by prostitutes, in a sort of naturalistic move à la Zola. And he also wanted a vehicle for Michel Simon who was then the rising star of French cinema. By making "The Bitch", he struck the two birds with the same stone and made a masterpiece for the ages, that would later be adapted by Fritz Lang in "Scarlett Street" with Edward G. Robinson.

      But while Lang accentuated the pathos, Renoir conceals the darkness and keeps a certain distance toward the characters, as if he didn't want to overplay the feelings, there's not much pathos in the film, there's even a fair share of comedic moments, as if the whole thing was just tale of tragicomic intensity. He knew the acting of Michel Simon would carry enough emotions not to insist upon them and for his first major talking film, he wanted enough material to explore the actor's versatility. It is ironic that their following collaboration would explore the other side of the coin. Indeed, as Boudu, he'll play a larger-than-life optimistic man who rises above his modest condition because he's just too self-confident.That's the power of Michel Simon who defines the most extreme sides of cinema and can take you from pathetic to sympathetic in a blink of his deformed eyes.

      I must admit I enjoyed Boudu a little more maybe because cinema, for its spectacular debut, needed such grandstanding characterizations, of histrionic waves but "The Bitch" is a superior film, technically and visually. Maybe it is too dark and modern for its own good, no matter how hard Renoir tries to tone it down. Or maybe the knowledge of the tragedy that surrounded the film created an unpleasant bias. Janie Marese died the night of the premiere, in a car accident. In real life, Simon loved the actress who loved Flamand, as lousy a driver as a boyfriend in the film, he wanted to drive his first car and impress his sweetheart, talk about reality being stranger and crueler than fiction.

      Michel Simon later fainted in the actress' funeral, threatening to kill Renoir because he "killed" her. That's how much passion was injected in the film, the people were liars but they were sincere.What a tragic irony that fate revealed itself as ugly and twisted and wicked as the story, working like an antidote against criticism. These things do happen after all and life came to the rescue and give it a taste of tragic credibility, besides cinematic prestige.
      dbdumonteil

      Renoir's wholesale massacre has begun.

      With "la chienne",French cinema enters the pathway to genius.During the thirties,it will be one of the best in the world.In those ancient times,it used to walk from strength to strength,encompassing the most phenomenal innovations the seventh art had ever known.Opening and closing his film with a puppet theater,Renoir predates Mankiewicz's "Sleuth" prologue(1972) and countless others by decades.Punch and Judy,what a derision!

      Renoir has begun his wholesale massacre;the bourgeois society ,the army ,the justice are his main targets.M.Legrand,whose spouse is a shrew,keeps a mistress,Lulu,(la chienne=the bitch)who doesn't care a little bit about him and who has herself another man in her life ,Dédé.This dandy sponges her off.Legrand and Lulu are actually longing for tenderness,but a society in which money and respectability run rampant leaves them with no chance at all.It's when he rebels against it that Legrand will find his way.His wife-shrew always compares him to his first hubby,a warrant officer killed in action during WW1?Never mind that,when the soldier comes back -he was actually prisoner in Germany-,Legrand gets rid of his missus!Now he thinks he can live with Lulu but he finds her in bed with her lover.Now Legrand will despise the rule of the game(that's Renoir's 1939 movie title).

      SPOILERS.SPOILERS.SPOILERS. You've got to follow the pack.Legrand kills Lulu (as the precedent user has pointed it out,the scene is a model of film noir murder:we see nothing of the crime but a knife;the camera stays in the street,focusing on a busker,playing a heartrending tune on her violin,only showing the windows of the house.)When Dédé is accused of the murder,Legrand will not surrender:he used to be a respectable man,and he knows that the society will always be siding with the "moral ",and that it will be happy to condemn a lazy pimp.Renoir allows himself the most immoral ending you can think of,and in 1931,at that!

      At the end of the movie,Legrand,who now thoroughly refuses the golden rules,has become a tramp.It's a tramp like this who will rise from the gutter to shake the bourgeois society in "la chienne" follow-up,"Boudu sauvé des eaux"(avoid the remake"down and out in Beverly Hills").It's no coincidence if Michel Simon plays Legrand and Boudu.These two works are Renoir at his most ferocious .
      10raskimono

      Jean Renoir examines the tragedy and comedy of life and creates a masterpiece

      I do not know what else to add to the previous two reviews before mine. The movie begins as two puppets argue about the theme of the movie we are about to see. One swears it is a comedy. The other avers that it be a tragedy. Both are slapped out of the way by another who says it is neither. Let us be the judge. The tale of a sad sack bank employee who sweats his whole life in a job he hates and falls for a low-life woman has similarities to the Dietrich classic Blue Angel but this movie has bigger themes and issues on its mind. His hilarious deduction and situational comedy as the man tries to outwit his way out of his marriage and the calamity that befalls him diagnoses the gray line that is life. And the bitter sweet ending endorses that in life, we may not get what we want but we might revel in what we need; and true happiness is a figment of mere necessity. A wonderful movie that must be seem. P.S. For those who appreciate the art of movies, you cannot but marvel at the directional technique of Renoir. The man understands cinema. His transitional shots are sublime and ridiculous in a good way propelling the movie along. And a murder scene is so effectively staged, it reminds that it might have been executed by Hitchcock himself. Long live great cinema and great directors who enrich our empathy for it!!!
      8mehobulls

      Life as a tragedy.

      Plain actors (PC) with presence and talent are dramatic shortcuts.. Harry Baur, Max von Sydow, Gene Hackman, Paul Douglas, Ralph Richardson, Louis Jouvet, Raimu add authority, craziness and humanity to film. It may be ungallant to list women but what about Frances McDormand, Anna Magnani, Olivia Colman. Here, Simon is expressive in part due to his looks. He uses them as an artist in the service of a near-great film.
      9Boba_Fett1138

      A story of all times.

      This 1931 Jean Renoir French movie has a story of all times. It's about a man who falls for the wrong girl and gets deeper and deeper into problems because of it. What can be more lethal than a woman? The drama is complex and multiple layered and mostly works out so well in this movie since the story by no means is a standard formulaic one. The movie does a very good job at remaining an unpredictable one throughout its entire running time and you just never know how the movie is going to end or in which direction its heading to.

      Jean Renoir was one the greatest early French movie directors from the 20th century. With this movie he makes his first 'talkie'. It's notable in parts that this was still all fairly new and all for him and there are some small clumsiness's. He fairly much keeps the same style as movie-making he used for his earlier silent productions. This is mostly notable with the compositions within this movie. Not that this is a bad thing in my opinion. It gives the movie a great look and style that also seems really fitting for this particular movie and its story.

      It's a great looking movie with high production values. The camera-work is just great and the movie in parts also uses some great editing, that shows a scene from different camera angles. It doesn't do this throughout the entire movie though, since like I said before, the movie mostly keeps is made silent-movie style. Perhaps it was an early sign of things that yet had to come for Jean Renoir, when he in 1937 with "La Grande illusion", that used lots of deep focus and camera-movements, something that also heavily inspired Orson Welles, among others, which is also really notable in "Citizen Kane" of course.

      Michel Simon gives away one fine performance as the movie its main character but the rest of the actors in acting within this movie is perhaps a bit uneven. But perhaps this also had to do with the fact that this was Jean Renoir's first sound movie and he had to become yet accustomed to working with dialogs and actors performing them.

      Unfortunately the movie uses some of its speed toward the ending but the movie at all times remains interesting and compelling enough to make you keep watching and just loving this movie right till the very end.

      A great first sound movie from Jean Renoir.

      9/10

      http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/

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      Criminalité
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      Drame
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      Romance

      Histoire

      Modifier

      Le saviez-vous

      Modifier
      • Anecdotes
        Last film of Janie Marèse who was killed in a car accident shortly after filming was completed.
      • Gaffes
        At the beginning of the final scene, when the car pulls up outside the art gallery and Legrand goes to open the door, the reflection of Jean Renoir directing the shot is visible in the glass of the passenger window of the car.
      • Citations

        Lucienne Pelletier dite Lulu: Men are such bores! It's always the same thing.

      • Connexions
        Featured in Cinéastes de notre temps: Jean Renoir le patron, 1e partie: La recherche du relatif (1967)
      • Bandes originales
        Sérénade de Toselli
        Music by Enrico Toselli

        Lyrics by Pierre d'Amor

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      FAQ14

      • How long is The Bitch?Alimenté par Alexa

      Détails

      Modifier
      • Date de sortie
        • 20 novembre 1931 (France)
      • Pays d’origine
        • France
      • Site officiel
        • Les Films du Jeudi (France)
      • Langue
        • Français
      • Aussi connu sous le nom de
        • The Bitch
      • Lieux de tournage
        • Paris Studios Cinéma, Billancourt, Hauts-de-Seine, France(Studio)
      • Société de production
        • Les Établissements Braunberger-Richebé
      • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

      Spécifications techniques

      Modifier
      • Durée
        • 1h 35min(95 min)
      • Couleur
        • Black and White
      • Rapport de forme
        • 1.19 : 1

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