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Le retour du soldat

Titre original : The Return of the Soldier
  • 1982
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 39min
NOTE IMDb
6,7/10
758
MA NOTE
Alan Bates, Julie Christie, and Glenda Jackson in Le retour du soldat (1982)
Kitty Baldry is a haughty society queen with a tunneled view of life. Her complacency is rocked when her husband, returns from the front during World War I shell-shocked and suffering amnesia.
Lire trailer1:05
2 Videos
16 photos
Drame

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueChris returns from WWI unable to recognize his wife Kitty. He wants to reunite with Margaret, his former lover. Kitty hires a psychiatrist to address Chris's feelings for Margaret and cousin... Tout lireChris returns from WWI unable to recognize his wife Kitty. He wants to reunite with Margaret, his former lover. Kitty hires a psychiatrist to address Chris's feelings for Margaret and cousin Jenny, but sees the man she knew is gone.Chris returns from WWI unable to recognize his wife Kitty. He wants to reunite with Margaret, his former lover. Kitty hires a psychiatrist to address Chris's feelings for Margaret and cousin Jenny, but sees the man she knew is gone.

  • Réalisation
    • Alan Bridges
  • Scénario
    • Rebecca West
    • Hugh Whitemore
  • Casting principal
    • Ann-Margret
    • Alan Bates
    • Emily Irvin
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,7/10
    758
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Alan Bridges
    • Scénario
      • Rebecca West
      • Hugh Whitemore
    • Casting principal
      • Ann-Margret
      • Alan Bates
      • Emily Irvin
    • 22avis d'utilisateurs
    • 7avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nomination aux 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:05
    Trailer
    The Return Of The Soldier: I Thought It Was Quite Perfect
    Clip 3:31
    The Return Of The Soldier: I Thought It Was Quite Perfect
    The Return Of The Soldier: I Thought It Was Quite Perfect
    Clip 3:31
    The Return Of The Soldier: I Thought It Was Quite Perfect

    Photos15

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 10
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    Rôles principaux45

    Modifier
    Ann-Margret
    Ann-Margret
    • Jenny
    Alan Bates
    Alan Bates
    • Chris
    Emily Irvin
    • Young Jenny
    William Booker
    • Young Chris
    Elizabeth Edmonds
    Elizabeth Edmonds
    • Emery
    Julie Christie
    Julie Christie
    • Kitty
    Hilary Mason
    Hilary Mason
    • Ward
    Jeremy Kemp
    Jeremy Kemp
    • Frank
    John Sharp
    John Sharp
    • Pearson
    Valerie Aitken
    • Ballerina
    Edward de Souza
    Edward de Souza
    • Edward
    Amanda Grinling
    • Alexandra
    Nicholas Frankau
    Nicholas Frankau
    • Young Civilian Gentleman
    Robin Langford
    • 1st. Young Officer
    Stephen Finlay
    • 2nd. Young Officer
    Llewellyn Rees
    • Lord Lieutenant
    Jeremy Arnold
    • Ballerina's Boyfriend
    Allan Corduner
    Allan Corduner
    • Pianist at Party
    • (as Alan Corduner)
    • Réalisation
      • Alan Bridges
    • Scénario
      • Rebecca West
      • Hugh Whitemore
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs22

    6,7758
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    Avis à la une

    Kirpianuscus

    admirable work

    first, for the story who seems be a poem about vulnerabilities. than, for admirable performances. and for the great science of detail and for the lights who become second skin for each actor. a film about management of past. soft, nostalgic, seductive, bitter. about the war between two women for a man. a film in which each character is more than a presence but word from the experiences of the viewer. a special film. for the atmosphere and for the great art. for landscapes like translations of the states of the characters and for remarkable Glenda Jackson. for the science of exploration the nuances who define characters and impose each of them as the hero. a film who propose the dreamed Eangland from a lost age.
    10trpdean

    Unforgettable

    This is superb - the acting wonderful, sets, clothes, music - but most of all the story itself.

    I am amazed there aren't more reviews of this movie - certainly one of the best of the 1980s.

    It's also a wonderful movie to see in tandem with the great "Random Harvest" which has much the same opening crisis

    -- a middle aged, unknown English W.W.I officer is in a hospital toward the close of the war, suffering from shell shock and complete amnesia without any idea of his name, origin, or anywhere he belongs - he proves to be a very wealthy established man - when he "recovers", he will not remember the years before the war --

    But there the movies' resemblances end.

    My warmest thanks to all who participated in the movie - particularly the actors Ian Holm, Alan Bates, Ann Margret (what a great and surprising casting choice), Glenda Jackson, Julie Christie.

    This one stays with you forever.
    robert-temple-1

    A magnificent, sad, moving film about a soldier's return from World War One

    Everything about this film is brilliant, and it is one of the finest films to come out of England in the 1980s. Alan Bates, Glenda Jackson, and Julie Christie, all give some of the most glowing and inspired performances of their entire careers. The film is based upon a haunting novel by Rebecca West (undoubtedly based on real situations she had encountered when she was young), with an excellent script by Hugh Whitemore. The film's evocative atmosphere is immensely powerful, aided greatly by the excellent musical score by Richard Rodney Bennett, which brings out the flavour of the film as salt, garlic and rosemary bring out the flavour of roast lamb. The editing is particularly good, by Laurence Méry-Clark. Ian Holm, Frank Finlay, and Jeremy Kemp are all very good in their supporting roles, which are relatively small. A surprise is Ann-Margret as Cousin Jenny, a major role. For a good-time American girl involved with the Rat Pack in Las Vegas, to play a repressed English spinster of 1918 to perfection was no mean achievement, and shows she was a real actress. Such versatility, and it is a pity she did not do more of that. The direction by Alan Bridges is exquisitely sensitive and nearly perfect. His other major achievements were directing THE HIRELING (1973, see my review), and THE SHOOTING PARTY (1985). He ceased working as long ago as 1990. He was a truly inspired director, most of whose output was of quality television which is not available to see today. This tragic tale concerns an English soldier, Captain Baldry (Alan Bates), who has returned from the First War with shell shock. He cannot remember the last twenty years of his life. Such cases did occur, and all this is not just made up. Julie Christie (who in real life is a sweetie) plays the horribly snobbish, vain, unfeeling wife of Bates who takes personal offence that he cannot remember her and does not find her attractive. She has little concern for his welfare or mental heath but keeps trying to force herself and his former life back on him, inviting neighbours to dinner the night after he returns home, with the opposite results to what she intended, of course. Her insensitivity to others is exceeded only by her self love. Bates under-plays his role, which makes it all the more effective. He cannot believe the vacuity of his former existence, and after asking Christie to tell him what their life together had been like and what they used to do all day, he says pathetically: 'Is that all?' They live in a grand house in the country and are exceedingly rich, with their house full of servants. All he can think of is his first great love, when he was twenty, a girl named Margaret (Glenda Jackson). She is found and meets him again after twenty years. She is married, as he is, and we eventually learn that each has a lost a child of the same age in the same year. In a wonderful and poignant scene with Cousin Jenny, Jackson says mournfully of the two lost children: 'It's as if each had only half a life.' Jackson is still in love with Bates and had never ceased to be. They lost touch because of circumstances when young, and now their love has come back. Bates keeps telling her he loves her, and acts like a boy of twenty again when he is with her. Christie seethes with rage but can do nothing, as all her attempts to insult Jackson are water off a duck's back, and merely drive her herself further into irrelevance. Cousin Jenny is wholly in sympathy with Bates but is exposed as hopelessly ineffectual. She lives a wan existence in the huge household, as a family retainer with no future of her own. The subtlety with which all this is enacted and portrayed is what could be called 'the best of English tact'. Every touch is delicate, countless nuances are allowed to drift in the enchanted air of the isolated domain of the great house. Everyone dresses for dinner, and having to put on white tie every evening to come down to dine with one's wife and cousin is shown for the empty ritual it is, accepted, however, as part of a tradition which cannot be openly questioned. After all, in that long-vanished society, formality was the badge of belonging, and if you did not wear your white tie to private dinners with your own wife at home you were no longer 'one of us'. With his recent memory erased, Bates comes perilously close to experiencing exclusion from polite society because he cannot remember anyone and, through his innocence acquired courtesy of an enemy shell against his head, dares to question what he never dared to examine before. As his psychiatrist Ian Holm says, bringing someone like that back to 'normality' might merely mean bringing him back to unhappiness. Without having read the original novel, I can sense beneath the surface of this story a savage attack on the manners and mores of the privileged elite of the time. Presumably Rebecca West was not the girlfriend of socialist H. G. Wells for nothing, and they would have shared an agenda of attacking the root of privilege. Here this is done with immense but devastating subtlety through what in the end becomes a fable thrown like one of the German bombs against the fortress of the elite, as epitomised by the odious character of the voraciously selfish and spoilt Julie Christie. By contrast, Jackson leads a relatively impoverished life in Wealdstone (a location viciously mocked by Christie), married to a boring man, wrapped up in her baking and housework. Appallingly dressed, Christie calls her 'the dowd'. But Bates loves her madly, and ignores Christie. This film will remain a genuine and enduring classic.
    8JohnDishwasher

    Faithful to the Novella

    I just finished the novel today and watched this on YouTube and am only writing this to say it is amazingly faithful to West's novella. You rarely see a movie that stays so true to a book and then succeeds as a film as this one does.
    7Sylviastel

    Glenda the Great!

    Before she went into politics or public service, Glenda Jackson was one of Britain's finest film actresses. This film displays her talent despite having a supporting role in a stellar cast that includes Julie Christie as Kitty, the wife of a British Royal Captain who has lost his memory of the last 20 years, and Jenny played by American Ann-Margret in an almost unrecognizable role as the doting sister. Alan Bates plays the captain who suffers from memory loss triggered by the shell shock during World War I. Sir Ian Holm has a smaller role as the doctor treating him. You see familiar faces like Sheila Keith, Patsy Byrne, and Frank Finlay. You can't help but watch Glenda play a dowdy housewife and the first true love of the Captain but they came from different classes. It's not the greatest movie but it's good to see Glenda's amazing talent. She is still a fantastic actress, comedy or drama. She makes Margaret Grey into a likable character and you see why a regal captain fell in love with her.

    Centres d’intérêt connexes

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Ann-Margret seemed to some reviewers to be oddly cast as a reserved English spinster of the First World War period. Julie Christie was full of praise for her performance and also said that the film couldn't have been made without her - suggesting that backers required the insurance of an American star in one of the leads before they put up the money.
    • Connexions
      Referenced in Liberty Street: Return of the Soldier (1995)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Return of the Soldier?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 1 janvier 1983 (Royaume-Uni)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Return of the Soldier
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Selston, Nottinghamshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(location)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Barry R. Cooper Productions
      • Brent Walker Pictures
      • Skreba Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 39min(99 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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