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Le locataire

  • 1976
  • 16
  • 2h 6min
NOTE IMDb
7,5/10
50 k
MA NOTE
Roman Polanski in Le locataire (1976)
A bureaucrat rents a Paris apartment where he finds himself drawn into a rabbit hole of dangerous paranoia.
Lire trailer1:04
1 Video
99+ photos
DrameThrillerComédie noireThriller psychologique

Un bureaucrate loue un appartement à Paris où il plonge dans une dangereuse paranoïa.Un bureaucrate loue un appartement à Paris où il plonge dans une dangereuse paranoïa.Un bureaucrate loue un appartement à Paris où il plonge dans une dangereuse paranoïa.

  • Réalisation
    • Roman Polanski
  • Scénario
    • Roland Topor
    • Gérard Brach
    • Roman Polanski
  • Casting principal
    • Roman Polanski
    • Isabelle Adjani
    • Melvyn Douglas
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,5/10
    50 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Roman Polanski
    • Scénario
      • Roland Topor
      • Gérard Brach
      • Roman Polanski
    • Casting principal
      • Roman Polanski
      • Isabelle Adjani
      • Melvyn Douglas
    • 225avis d'utilisateurs
    • 111avis des critiques
    • 71Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 2 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:04
    Official Trailer

    Photos529

    Voir l'affiche
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    Voir l'affiche
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    + 523
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    Rôles principaux40

    Modifier
    Roman Polanski
    Roman Polanski
    • Trelkovsky
    Isabelle Adjani
    Isabelle Adjani
    • Stella
    Melvyn Douglas
    Melvyn Douglas
    • Monsieur Zy
    Jo Van Fleet
    Jo Van Fleet
    • Madame Dioz
    Bernard Fresson
    Bernard Fresson
    • Scope
    Lila Kedrova
    Lila Kedrova
    • Madame Gaderian
    Claude Dauphin
    Claude Dauphin
    • Husband at the accident
    Claude Piéplu
    Claude Piéplu
    • Neighbor
    • (as Claude Pieplu)
    Rufus
    Rufus
    • Georges Badar
    Romain Bouteille
    • Simon
    Jacques Monod
    Jacques Monod
    • Cafe Owner
    Patrice Alexsandre
    • Robert
    Jean-Pierre Bagot
    • Policeman
    Josiane Balasko
    Josiane Balasko
    • Viviane - Office Worker
    Michel Blanc
    Michel Blanc
    • Scope's Neighbor
    Florence Blot
    • Madame Zy
    Louba Guertchikoff
    • Wife at accident
    • (as Louba Chazel)
    Jacques Chevalier
    • Patron
    • Réalisation
      • Roman Polanski
    • Scénario
      • Roland Topor
      • Gérard Brach
      • Roman Polanski
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs225

    7,549.9K
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    Avis à la une

    8Steffi_P

    "What right has my head to call itself me?"

    After his classic film noir homage Chinatown Roman Polanski returned to the themes that had given him his greatest hits in the 60s with this creepy psychological horror which, like Repulsion and Rosemary's Baby, deals with the paranoia and claustrophobia generated by apartment living.

    Claustrophobic environments are the ones which Polanski is best at creating, and this has to be the most suffocating and confined picture he ever created. The emphasis on side walls and distant vanishing points is greater than ever, and even in the small number of exterior scenes the sky is rarely glimpsed. But The Tenant is not just confined spatially, but also in the intensity with which it focuses on its protagonist. Trelkovsky, played by Polanski himself is not only in every scene, he is in virtually every shot. When he is not on screen more often than not the camera becomes Trelkovsky's point of view. And of course almost everywhere he looks he sees his own reflection staring back at him in a mirror.

    I can't think of any film that is more about the internalisation and solitude of one character. Some psychological thrillers, like M or Peeping Tom, manipulate us into feeling sorry for the mentally ill protagonist. Others, like Psycho, attempt in-depth scientific analysis of his mental condition. The Tenant fits into neither of these categories – it simply immerses us completely inside Trelkovsky's experience without demanding we actually understand or appreciate what is going on inside his head. We feel his paranoia and obsession even though it is constantly revealed to us that they are irrational.

    Polanski was also a master of the slowly unfolding horror film. Often in his horrors there is an ambiguity as to whether there is actually anything sinister going on, but they are among the most effective at frightening audiences. Why? Precisely because they unfold so slowly and invest so much time in painstakingly setting up situations that they immerse the viewer in paranoia. A much later Polanski horror, The Ninth Gate is a bit of a mess plot-wise but at least it still manages to achieve that creeping sense of dread.

    This is a rare chance to see Polanski himself in a major role. His talent in front of the camera was as good as behind it, and he is absolutely perfect as the meek Trelkovsky. Another standout performance is that of the all-too-often overlooked Shelley Winters as the concierge. In actual fact it is rather a stellar cast, although many of the familiar faces look out of place in this strange, Gothic European movie. Also sadly many of the French actors in supporting roles are atrociously dubbed in the English language version.

    The Tenant is more polished and less pretentious than Repulsion, but it lacks the suspense and the character that make Rosemary's Baby so engrossing and entertaining. The Tenant is good, with no major flaws, and Polanski was really on top form as a director, but it's not among his most gripping works.
    10melissacasting-org

    Oh the pleasures of horror!

    How can I be so devoted to this film? I'm a fairly ordinary person with a very regular life, so, why am I drawn to this darkness. "The Tenant", "Rosemary's Baby", "Kiss Of The Spider Woman", "Apartment Zero" are films I've seen many, many times. All of them terrifying in their own way. Last night, I saw "The Tenant" again for the nth time. I was as riveted and unsettled as I was the very first time I saw it. There is something about playing with our inner-fears without actually confirm or deny anything that makes it a genre of its own. A provocation of sorts. If Polansky is unique behind the camera he is also remarkable in front of it. His performance here is a tragic-comic creation of the first order. For film lovers all over the world, this is a real must see!
    8Jonny_Numb

    Paranoid Polanski in peril

    What can be said, really... "The Tenant" is a first-class thriller wrought with equal amounts of suspense and full-blown paranoia. It's an intricately-plotted film--every detail seems included for a reason--even though the plot seldom makes sense, and much of it is never even addressed in an objective manner. Therefore we are left with the increasingly unstable Trelkovsky (Polanski)--a meek Polish man who has obtained an apartment due to the previous tenant's suicide--to guide us through a world of escalating fear and uncertainty. After an apartment-warming party thrown by a group of obnoxious coworkers, Trelkovsky comes under increased, seemingly inexplicable scrutiny by the fellow occupants in his building; the rest of the film chronicles his mental deterioration and gives us a thorough mindfu*k on par with the later efforts of David Lynch. "The Tenant," however, is more brooding and sinister, laced with unexpected comic relief, fine performances, and a truly haunting score. It's a movie that's better experienced than described, so hop to it.
    tedg

    Front Window

    I'm a pretty old dude, old enough to remember the taste of Oreos and Coke as they were 50-55 years ago, when every taste for a kid was fresh. I wish I have somehow set some aside then is some magical suspended locker, so that I could taste those things today. This magical locker might even have adjusted the fabric of the food to account for how I've drifted, physically and otherwise, a sort of dynamic chemistry of expectations. Over the half century, they would have had to adjust quite a bit, because you see I would have known that I set them aside. Eating one now would be a celebration of self and past, and story, and sense that would almost make the intervening years an anticipated reward.

    I didn't have enough sense to do that with original Coke. And I couldn't have invented one of those magical psychic lockers — not then. But I did something almost as good. In the seventies, I really tuned into Roman Polanski. He was a strange and exotic pleasure — you know, movies smuggled out of the Soviet block. Movies so sensitive to beauty that you cry for weeks afterward. Movies that make you want to live with Polish women, one, and then deciding that they would be the last to get it.

    Here's what I did. I took what I knew would be my favorite Polanski movie and set it aside. I did not watch it. I deferred until I thought I would be big enough to deserve it. Over the years, I would test myself, my ability to surround beauty and delineate it without occupying it. There probably are few Poles who have worked at this, practicing to deserve Chopin. Working to deserve womanness when I see it. Trying to get the inners from the edges.

    Recently, I achieved something like assurance that it was time to pull this out. I already knew that I was already past the time when this would work optimally, because I had already seen and understood "9th Gate."

    If you do not know this, it is about a man who innocently rents a room in which the previous tenant (about whom the story is named) jumped out the window, to die later after this man (played by Polanski) visits. What happens is that time folds and he becomes this woman. We are fooled into believing that he is merely mad. But the way we follow him, he is not. He merely has flashes that the world is normal, and that the surrounding people are not part of a coven warping his reality.

    The story hardly matters. What matters is how Polanksi shapes this thing, both in the way he inhabits the eye that only makes edges and in inhabiting the body that only consists of confused flesh. The two never meet. There is a dissonance that may haunt me for the next 30 years. Its the idea about and inside and an outside with no edges at all — at all except a redhead wig.

    I know of no one else that could do this, this sketch that remains a sketch, this horror that remains natural.

    To understand the genius of this, you have to know one of the greatest films ever made; "Rear Window." The genius of that film is the post-noir notion that the camera shapes the world; that the viewer creates the story. What Roman does is take this movie and turn it inside out. In Rear Window, the idea was that the on-screen viewer (Jimmy Stewart) was the anchor and everything else was fiction, woven as we watched. Here, the on screen apartment dweller is the filmmaker. We know this. We know that everything we see is true because he is the narrator. We know it is true that bodies shift identity, that times shift, that causality is plastic. We know that the narrator will kill us. We know that the narrator will leave us in a perpetual horror, on that edge that he imputes but never shows us and lets us imagine.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 4 of 3: Every cineliterate person should experience this.
    10alainbenoix

    The Art Of Terror

    Meek, tiny, almost insignificant. Polanski finds the invisibility of his characters and makes something enormous out of it. In front and behind the camera he creates one of the most uncomfortable masterpieces I had the pleasure to see and see and see again. It never let's me down. People, even people who know me pretty well, thought/think there was/is something wrong with me, based on my attraction, or I should say, devotion for "Le Locataire" They may be right, I don't know but there is something irresistibly enthralling within Polanski's darkness and I haven't even mentioned the humor. The mystery surrounding the apartment and the previous tenant, the mystery that takes over him and, naturally, us, me. That building populated by great old Academy Award winners: Melvyn Douglas, Shelley Winters, Jo Van Fleet, Lila Kedrova. For anyone who loves movies, this is compulsory viewing. One, two, three, many, many viewings.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Along with Répulsion (1965) and Rosemary's Baby (1968) this film is part of a loose trilogy by Roman Polanski dealing with the horrors faced by apartment and city dwellers.
    • Gaffes
      When Trelkovsky is unpacking as he moves into the apartment, a crew member is reflected in the small mirror adjacent to the kitchen sink. Two crew members are then reflected in the armoire's mirror as Trelkovsky opens it.
    • Citations

      Trelkovsky: [while looking at himself in the mirror] Beautiful. Adorable. Goddess. Divine. Divine! I think I'm pregnant.

    • Crédits fous
      The film has no end credits; only the Paramount logo.
    • Versions alternatives
      Although the UK cinema version was complete the 1986 CIC video was cut by 6 secs by the BBFC to remove a brief extract of the banned nunchaku scene from Opération Dragon (1973) (seen by Trelkovsky and Stella during a cinema visit). The cuts were fully waived in the 2004 Paramount DVD.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Revans (1983)
    • Bandes originales
      Cour D'Immeuble
      Written and Performed by Philippe Sarde Et Orchestre

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    FAQ

    • How long is The Tenant?
      Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 26 mai 1976 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
    • Langues
      • Français
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • El inquilino
    • Lieux de tournage
      • 39 Rue la Bruyère, Paris 9, Paris, France(Exterior of Trelkovsky's apartment building)
    • Société de production
      • Marianne Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 1 924 733 $US
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 1 924 733 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      2 heures 6 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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