À nous la liberté
- 1931
- Tous publics
- 1h 23min
NOTE IMDb
7,4/10
5,1 k
MA NOTE
Cherchant une vie meilleure, deux condamnés s'échappent de prison.Cherchant une vie meilleure, deux condamnés s'échappent de prison.Cherchant une vie meilleure, deux condamnés s'échappent de prison.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nommé pour 1 Oscar
- 3 victoires et 1 nomination au total
Paul Ollivier
- L'oncle
- (as Paul Olivier)
Albert Broquin
- Le marchand de primeurs
- (non crédité)
Alexander D'Arcy
- Le gigolo
- (non crédité)
Marguerite de Morlaye
- Une invitée au diner
- (non crédité)
Maximilienne
- Une invitée au diner
- (non crédité)
Eugène Stuber
- Un gangster
- (non crédité)
‘Snow White’ Stars Test Their Wits
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhen Charles Chaplin's Les Temps modernes (1936) premiered, the original distribution company of À nous la liberté, Tobis, wanted to sue. Director René Clair refused to join such a suit, saying that he considered it a compliment if Charles Chaplin based his film on René Clair's, but the suit went ahead nevertheless. Tobis, sued United Artists and Charles Chaplin for plagiarism. The suit, with separate segments in France and in the US, went on for more than a decade, right through WWII. Charles Chaplin, at the request of his lawyers, finally settled, but never admitted to the charge. René Clair stayed aloof from the affair, and he and Charles Chaplin, whom he greatly admired, remained friends.
- Versions alternativesIn 1950 director Rene Clair re-edited and shortened the film based on existing prints (the Nazis had destroyed the negative). Some excisions include the singing flowers and the scene at the Luna Park, the sequence depicting Émile's date with Jeanne.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Fejezetek a film történetéböl: A francia lírai realizmus (1989)
- Bandes originalesÀ nous la Liberté !
Music by Georges Auric
Lyrics by René Clair
Performed by Henri Marchand and Raymond Cordy
Commentaire à la une
It was striking watching this film shortly after having attended a very fine museum exhibit on American Precisionist painting, a style in vogue at the time this film was made. As in Precisionism, the imagery here is concerned with the industrialization of society. Every facet of social life, not just the work-place, but the school and the prison-system seems to director Rene Clair to have been turned into a factory. The film features some extremely clever editing making the connection between industrial production and the production of passive subjects of capitalism clear.
The difference between Clair and the Precisionists is that most of the latter saw in industrialization a utopian promise. What few who didn't, such as George Ault , understood industrialization in apocalyptic terms. In either case, it represented for the Precisionists an absolute transformation of life from which there was no turning back.
For the filmmaker's part, Clair clearly understood modernity in sinister terms, industrialization bringing about the mechanization of the subject, but his humanism made it impossible for him to see the modernist challenge to humanity as insurmountable. For Clair, human dignity could be salvaged just by forsaking the materialist temptations of capitalism for the simple pleasures of life. Exploiter and exploited could return to a loving, communal relationship by embracing poverty and freedom.
Art historians have proposed that the utopianism of Precisionist art was abolished by the horrific realizations of WWII. That would, it seems to me, to apply equally to the humanist utopia of Clair's cinema.
- treywillwest
- 30 avr. 2018
- Permalien
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 23 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.20 : 1
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By what name was À nous la liberté (1931) officially released in Canada in English?
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