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La classe ouvrière va au paradis

Titre original : La classe operaia va in paradiso
  • 1971
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 5min
NOTE IMDb
7,6/10
4,4 k
MA NOTE
La classe ouvrière va au paradis (1971)
Drama

Un ouvrier d'usine consciencieux perd un doigt dans une machine. Bien que le handicap physique ne soit pas grave, cela l'entraîne à s'impliquer de plus en plus dans des groupes politiques et... Tout lireUn ouvrier d'usine consciencieux perd un doigt dans une machine. Bien que le handicap physique ne soit pas grave, cela l'entraîne à s'impliquer de plus en plus dans des groupes politiques et révolutionnaires.Un ouvrier d'usine consciencieux perd un doigt dans une machine. Bien que le handicap physique ne soit pas grave, cela l'entraîne à s'impliquer de plus en plus dans des groupes politiques et révolutionnaires.

  • Réalisation
    • Elio Petri
  • Scénario
    • Elio Petri
    • Ugo Pirro
  • Casting principal
    • Gian Maria Volontè
    • Mariangela Melato
    • Gino Pernice
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,6/10
    4,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Elio Petri
    • Scénario
      • Elio Petri
      • Ugo Pirro
    • Casting principal
      • Gian Maria Volontè
      • Mariangela Melato
      • Gino Pernice
    • 10avis d'utilisateurs
    • 23avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 7 victoires et 4 nominations au total

    Photos56

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    Rôles principaux35

    Modifier
    Gian Maria Volontè
    Gian Maria Volontè
    • Ludovico 'Lulù' Massa
    Mariangela Melato
    Mariangela Melato
    • Lidia
    Gino Pernice
    Gino Pernice
    • Syndacalist
    Luigi Diberti
    Luigi Diberti
    • Bassi
    Donato Castellaneta
    • Marx
    Giuseppe Fortis
    • Valli
    Corrado Solari
    Corrado Solari
    • Tarcisio Mena
    Flavio Bucci
    Flavio Bucci
    • Worker
    Luigi Uzzo
    • Worker
    Nino Bignamini
    Nino Bignamini
    • Salvatore Quaranta
    • (as Giovanni Bignamini)
    Ezio Marano
    • Chief Worker
    Adriano Amidei Migliano
    • Technichan
    Antonio Mangano
    Lorenzo Magnolia
    • Magnolia
    Federico Scrobogna
    • Arturo
    Guerrino Crivello
    • Timekeeper
    Alberto Fogliani
    Alberto Fogliani
    • Sicilian Worker
    Carla Mancini
    Carla Mancini
    • Worker
    • Réalisation
      • Elio Petri
    • Scénario
      • Elio Petri
      • Ugo Pirro
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs10

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    Avis à la une

    8claudio_carvalho

    Fight of Classes and Reactionay Mass

    The efficient and productive Lulu Massa (Gian Maria Volontè) is an exemplary and beloved worker for his employers and hated by his coworkers. During a period of turbulence in the factory between the union and the radical students against the owners, Lulu accidentally loses one of his fingers. He changes his behavior and joins the movement of the students that wants to stop the factory with a strike as part of the fight of classes while the union wants a partial strike to reclaim benefits to the working class. When Lulu is fired, and gets confused with the new situation. But the union includes his readmission as a subject to be discussed with the owners and Lulu is hired again.

    When I saw "La Classe Operaia Va in Paradiso" in the movie theaters many years ago, the fight between capitalism and socialism was in the top in the world and this movie depicted actually the fight between ideology, represented by the movement of radical students, and the reactionary mass without political conscience and formed by explored workers. Lulu represents the servitude of the working class to the monopoly of the capitalist class. Presently this important movie is dated and youngsters may not understand its importance in the 70's. My vote is eight.

    Title (Brazil): "A Classe Operária Vai ao Paraíso" ("The Working Classe Góes to Paradise")
    Fritte-3

    man, life and factory as a one absurd condition

    The movie has a great power, first of all he gives to Lulu a mechanical soul, the camera follows his unhuman movements caused by too much work and let us understand something strange like madness. Then we have the political part: outside the factory people are pemanently screaming verses against owners like another machine that creates words, but the real impressing moment is inside the factory where man and machine became the same things so that the camera let us see the hidden mechanical part and the human movements togheter; the music too (by Ennio Morricone) adds a sense of robotic condition.
    6Bezenby

    The Workers control the means of cutting their fingers off

    This film is both fantasy and complete reality at the same time. Gian Marie Volonte plays an extremely efficient worker doing piecework in a factory, not even sure what the parts he produces are used for. At the same time, Volonte's precise rhythm and total concentration make him an object of hate amongst his fellow workers, all of him are continually time managed by snidey supervisors who mostly hide behind a yellow screen in an observation box. A large hand, index finger pointing down oppressively, is printed on the wall above the workers.

    Volonte is a good worker but not good at anything else. His son lives with his ex-wife and fellow worker. He can't get it up for his girlfriend, and her little boy spends his time totally consumed by television. Exhausted from working all day, Volonte's only break from routine is to visit and colleague who has ended up in an asylum. Soon enough, Volonte begins to think that what this man is saying is making sense...

    Outside the factory, radical communists screams slogans through megaphones and clash with the unions as the workers trudge in to start their shift. Volonte gets to work right away, but his fellow workers are grinding him down, and a lapse in concentration means that Volonte loses a finger and his whole world outlook changes.

    Be warned, this film has so many scenes of people screaming into microphones, or crowds of people screaming at each other, that if you're not careful you'll end up with a headache. I'm guessing that might be part of intention of the film to a certain extent. With the loss of the finger Volonte loses his urge to be the best worker and starts to see how his life in the factory may not be a life at all, but all those folk screaming about smashing the system or how unity can get better rights, are they any less self-serving than those in charge at the factory?

    Petri does everything he can to make the factory look like some sort of prison, continually filming through bars and even doing the same thing later with a school. Ennio Morricone's soundtrack also enforces the idea of some kind of industrial trap where the self is wiped away in place of production. The film is run down and grey on purpose, but there are a few bits of Petri's weird visuals here and there - like the strange diagram Volonte faces while getting psychologically tested.

    The main reason for watching this is for Gian Marie Volonte, who comes across as a guy who isn't that smart, a man who makes an arse of everything and in losing the only thing he was good at starts unravelling. In the Italian language version you can hear how fragile and hysterical Volonte sounds. He seems to mess up just about every conversation and even when he thinks he's made the wrong choice, it dawns on him that he's not the only one that's shallow.

    Good film this. Nearly two hours long though!
    ItalianGerry

    Sane world, insane world.

    "The Working Class Goes to Heaven" stars Gian Maria Volonté, who appeared in earlier Elio Petri films like "We Still Kill the Old Way" and "Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion." The Marxist director's critique of capitalist society is at play in this movie as in so many of his others. Volonté plays Lulù Massa, a lathe-operator in a Milan factory which pays by piece work. Lulù is a fast worker, the pride of the management and the bane of the workers who consider him a threat. The work is a nightmare of monotony, and the workers are continually timed and fined for underproduction. "Even a monkey could do this work," Lulù says.

    Like the comic tramp in Charlie Chaplin's 1935 "Modern Times," he feels dehumanized, exploited, empty. His relationship with his mistress and her TV-mesmerized son is strained. He asks an older friend in an insane asylum, "How did you know you were going mad? A man has a right to know what he is doing, what he's useful for."

    At the end of the conversation with his mad friend (Salvo Randone) at the asylum, the man begins to leave and Lulù inadvertently remains. The insane asylum seems normal, while the factory, the "real" world, appears insane.

    Lulù ignores the worker movement and strikers until he loses a finger in an accident while carelessly overworking. He becomes a symbol for the ills of the factory, and a radicalization process ensues until he is fired for taking a stand against the managers.

    Eventually re-hired and given a demeaning assembly-line job, he daydreams enviously of his friend in the madhouse.

    Gian Maria Volonté gives the beleaguered hero a pathetic and comic dimension which is always convincing, performing with bold strokes rather than by subtle illumination. Petri's directorial technique uses a similar approach. A highlight is an uproarious scene of lovemaking in a Fiat with co-worker Mieta Albertini.

    The film won the grand prize at Cannes in 1972. It runs two hours in its full version and 1½ hours in a truncated version peculiarly called "Lulu the Tool." It is a major Italian film from the 1970s.
    7Bunuel1976

    The Working Class Goes To Heaven (Elio Petri, 1971) ***

    The Spirit of Social Justice of the May '68 uprisings is still very much alive in this heavy-going but compelling parable of the rise and fall in the fortunes of an Italian factory worker dubbed Lulu (Gian Maria Volonte'): starting out as the Boss' darling for being the exemplary employee and pacesetter of the company, the loathing of his co-workers (who despise him for how his excessive zeal makes their own lackluster performance look bad in the eyes of the manager) and his female companion Mariangela Melato (who never gets any piece of the action at night because of his constant fatigue) eventually gets to him one day – with the result that he loses his concentration at work and suffers the loss of a finger in an accident. This changes his whole outlook on life as he becomes engrossed in an extremist workers' union, finally makes love in his car to a virginal female co-worker/union member he is obsessed with, is quitted by his consumerist hairdresser companion and his surrogate son and, when he is given the sack at work and is on the point of selling off his belongings, another more moderate workers' union comes to his aid by winning him his old job back. Although there is obviously much footage here of socio-political discussions, scenes of picketing and police riots, confrontations between diverse unions, etc., the film also has that winning whimsical streak promised by its title and exemplified by amusing episodes in a mental institution (where Volonte' visits his cracked-up ex-colleague Salvo Randone), the quasi-surreal sequence of Volonte' taking it out on all his useless possessions (including a giant inflatable doll of Scrooge McDuck!), and the concluding description at the assembly line of the titular incident itself which Volonte' had in a dream the previous night. Ennio Morricone's inventively 'metallic' music underscores the robotic gestures of the factory workers who, despite slaving eight hours a day at their machines, are not even aware what becomes of the parts they produce! While the film may seem overdone and dated in today's apathetic age, it clearly hit a nerve at the time of its release winning a handful of international awards including the Palme D'Or at the Cannes Film Festival.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Elio Petri's "La classe operaia va in paradiso" shows a very subtle cameo of Ennio Morricone, who also composed the original score of this film, awarded with a Palme d'or in the 1972 Cannes Film Festival. The Italian Maestro appears in close-up for almost one minute as the anonymous--and obviously uncredited--blue-collar who actions the cart, with both hands up and down, at the end of the assembly line in the factory. His repeated gesture immediately activates the "mechanical" music that announces the end titles.
    • Citations

      Lulù Massa: If you want my food, take it. I'm not hungry, I've a rift in my stomach.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Italian Gangsters (2015)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is The Working Class Goes to Heaven?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 31 mai 1972 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Italie
    • Langue
      • Italien
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Working Class Goes to Heaven
    • Lieux de tournage
      • San Pietro Mosezzo, Novara, Piedmont, Italie(factory)
    • Société de production
      • Euro International Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      2 heures 5 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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