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Tous les matins du monde

  • 1991
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 55min
NOTE IMDb
7,5/10
8,3 k
MA NOTE
Guillaume Depardieu and Jean-Pierre Marielle in Tous les matins du monde (1991)
Regarder Bande-annonce [OV]
Lire trailer1:45
1 Video
21 photos
BiographieDrameL'histoireMusiqueRomanceDrames historiques

Fin XVIIe siècle, le joueur de viole de gambe Monsieur de Sainte Colombe s'isole du monde après la mort de sa femme, jusqu'au jour où un jeune homme, Marin Marais, vient le voir avec une dem... Tout lireFin XVIIe siècle, le joueur de viole de gambe Monsieur de Sainte Colombe s'isole du monde après la mort de sa femme, jusqu'au jour où un jeune homme, Marin Marais, vient le voir avec une demande particulière: apprendre à jouer de la viole.Fin XVIIe siècle, le joueur de viole de gambe Monsieur de Sainte Colombe s'isole du monde après la mort de sa femme, jusqu'au jour où un jeune homme, Marin Marais, vient le voir avec une demande particulière: apprendre à jouer de la viole.

  • Réalisation
    • Alain Corneau
  • Scénario
    • Pascal Quignard
    • Alain Corneau
  • Casting principal
    • Gérard Depardieu
    • Jean-Pierre Marielle
    • Anne Brochet
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,5/10
    8,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Alain Corneau
    • Scénario
      • Pascal Quignard
      • Alain Corneau
    • Casting principal
      • Gérard Depardieu
      • Jean-Pierre Marielle
      • Anne Brochet
    • 60avis d'utilisateurs
    • 20avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 9 victoires et 8 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:45
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos21

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 13
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    Rôles principaux17

    Modifier
    Gérard Depardieu
    Gérard Depardieu
    • Marin Marais
    Jean-Pierre Marielle
    Jean-Pierre Marielle
    • Monsieur de Sainte Colombe
    Anne Brochet
    Anne Brochet
    • Madeleine de Sainte Colombe
    Guillaume Depardieu
    Guillaume Depardieu
    • Marin Marais jeune
    Carole Richert
    • Toinette de Sainte Colombe
    Michel Bouquet
    Michel Bouquet
    • Lubin Baugin
    Jean-Claude Dreyfus
    Jean-Claude Dreyfus
    • L'abbé Mathieu
    Yves Gasc
    • Caignet
    Yves Lambrecht
    • Charbonnières
    Jean-Marie Poirier
    • Monsieur de Bures
    Myriam Boyer
    Myriam Boyer
    • Guignotte
    Violaine Lacroix
    • Madeleine jeune
    Nadège Teron
    • Toinette jeune
    Caroline Silhol
    Caroline Silhol
    • Madame de Sainte Colombe
    • (as Caroline Sihol)
    Philippe Duclos
    Philippe Duclos
    • Brunet
    • (voix)
    Yves Gourvil
    • Lequieu
    • (voix)
    Gilles Loutfi
    • Le messager
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Alain Corneau
    • Scénario
      • Pascal Quignard
      • Alain Corneau
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs60

    7,58.2K
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    Avis à la une

    8AlsExGal

    a paean to music, pure and simple

    This movie is a take on what does music mean. Monsieur de Sainte Colombe (1640-1700), in a wonderfully sensitive performance by Jean-Pierre Marielle, was devastated by the loss of his wife. This inspired him to compose what might have been the first real "soul" music (from the gut) to see the wider audience (i.e. Surviving to this day). His most famous student was Marin Marain (1656-1728), played by Gerard Depardieu (both pere and fils). He was accepted as student but told perhaps a bit too dismissively that although he played well he was most fit for public squares and perhaps the Court, the latter held in deep contempt by Sainte-Colombe.

    Subsequently we indeed do see Marain bouncing a pole on the the Royal floor (apparently they way they conducted back then) leading a group of Court musicians in what was simply the music of the age, i.e., pomp and circumstance, but within the context of the story hopelessly dull and inartistic. Can the story mean simply that music should have feeling? Or is there more? A prevailing cliche is when there are no longer words to describe, that's where music starts. Is that good enough? What would Monseiur de Sainte Colombe say about that?

    There is a subplot involving love interest that informs the theme. As indicated above, the young Marain is played by Gerard's son with the latter taking over as the adult. Wow, how often does that happen? Depardieu fils is impressive. There are fairly long music passages that the uninitiated might find a tough go but it is a well-made film, meticulously so. Well worth it for those who hang around.
    7the red duchess

    A dream of a film

    'Tous les matins du monde' opens with remarkable, yet quiet and simple audacity. For ten minutes, over the credits and beyond, the camera holds on the pained face of Gerard Depardieu. This shot, about as minimalist as you can get, manages to suggest so much: the actual scene itself (Depardieu as Marais giving a music lesson in Royal Chambers to a number of inept students), his own life and sense of failure, aging, dissipation of talent and emotional paralysis despite the signs of status and wealth, the intimations of a past and a place so alien to the modern and showy Court as to be on a different plane of time and space altogether. It is brilliant cinema, while seeming not very cinematic at all.

    'Matins' combines two genres I generally find loathsome and redundant, and yet it is very nearly a masterpiece. First of all, it is a biopic; not really of Marais at all, but his one time teacher, Sainte-Colombe, solitary genius of the viol, and possibly the first Romantic artist, someone who composed not for Royalty or riches, but fore himself, from his own soul, alone. The problem with biopics is that they try to cram a whole life into two hours. This clearly doesn't fit, and so only the most superficial precis is possible, with a string of 'key' moments of formative psychological importance. The end result is something like those brief synopses of authors' lives you get at the beginning of books.

    Corneau avoids this trap in a number of ways. There is the general atmosphere of fairy tale - the king and his courtiers; the 'cruel' father and the children he locks up in cellars; the abandoned lover and her jealous sister; the fairy-tale location, with its picturesque fragments of classical splendour, and moonlit tarns; the ghost story intrusion of revenants; the mysterious stranger who overturns the family's lives. This extends to the light, the mysterious blue glow that leaves the narrative in a twilight suspension. Depardieu's narration has the unadorned, measured simplicity of fairy tales, and the unmarked accumulation of events gives a timeless feel, one seperate from the historically verifiable Court.

    Further, the film doesn't try to cram in the whole of Sainte-Colombe's life. The couple of decades it does deal with are marked by seeming repetiton and monotony. When he claims at one point to have an exciting emotional and imaginary life, his interlocutors are shocked, because they can only see the historical, physical, dour image, not the magic of a mind that converses with the dead, or outpours the most ascetically mournful music. There are key events, but these are domestic and personal (eg the death of his wife) that slowly shape his personality and the events of the film, not jarring 'Eureka!'-like moments. It is up to us to interpret the patterns, the reality behind the plain image, the unmovingly stern face, the routine events.

    By the climax, the film stops being a biopic or historical reacreation, and becomes a heightened, spiritual embodiment of ideas about music, family, tradition. This is not to say the film is vague and ahistorical. It is very good about the marginalisation of equally talented women in this world of obsessive male art, where the only useful female is a dead one; and the brief, comical treatment of arbitrary monarchy is as pointed as anything in 'Ridicule'.

    The other genre the film belongs to is the dreaded costume drama, that puffed up fashion parade of bourgeois aspiration, where the allusion to people who used their brains is enough to satisfy audiences who refuse to use theirs; where cufflinks and frills are creamily fetishised, and everything else - plot, character, ideas, subtext - is a mere mannequin. If the average costume drama is marked by bustle and excess, Corneau's film is private and austere. The only lavish costumes are made the object of ridicule - Sainte-Colombe, dressed in black and ruff like Monteverdi, and his daughters, live in sober surroundings, and dress very modestly. The usual period props - big homes, lavish halls, etc. - are stripped bare, become almost cell-like, unmarked by human residue.

    This extends to the shooting style. The camera very rarely moves, framing the 'action' like a painting or a tableau vivant - the film's fertile theatricality extends to hearing feet thudding on the boards. This seeming visual parsimony is not too austere - unlike the films of Ozu, say, the static picture is broken up by regular editing which makes viewing less taxing. Corneau has learned a lesson about period dramas from Stanley Kubrick, director of the greatest period film, 'Barry Lyndon'. It's useless getting hstorical facts right and swamping the plot with detail - the heart and soul of any society is in its culture, and so Corneau, by recreating or alluding to famous paintings, music etc. gets closer to the truth of his characters. And the lighting...!
    cbmunchkin

    Best use of Music in Film

    This is a great movie. It's a stunning look at the nature of music and it's a wonderful example of the relationship between music and film. So often in film, music is the afterthought; it's the last step of the production process and often the least considered through production. Corneau's film really works well to blend the visual medium of film with music and show them working in tandem for a brilliant result.

    When you hear music in this film, you hear it because a character has picked up an instrument to play it. The film then cuts away from character and instrument, but the music remains and turns into a soundtrack that enhances the emotional power of the film. This is source music used as score, and very rarely do you see that in film. Using the music in this way really deepens the experience and strengthens both the images of the film and the emotion of the music. A music student gave me this movie to watch, and I want to pass it on to film students looking to blend the arts of film and music.
    Anonymous-2

    Relaxed pacing and beautifully scored!

    It's as futile to lump 'Amadeus', 'My Brother Vincent', 'Immortal Beloved', and 'Tous les matins du monde' together as it is to indiscriminately group all films about crime or all sci-fi flicks. So with pretentious generalizations on "art films" out of the way, I'd like to point out that 'Tous les matins' masters the art of pacing in a film. The story unravels in a process like the blooming of a flower -- consistent, organic, and fascinating, albeit a shade slow.

    Secondly, any renaissance/baroque music fans should see this film merely for its delightful scoring. Though early European music may be an acquired taste, "Tous les matins" presents the viola de gamba in all its expressive glory, foreshadowing works like Bach's well-known cello suites. If the quasi-deep attempts to address the definition of music bother you (as they occasionally bothered me), the complementation of the music and the film's pacing will captivate you nonetheless.

    And offhand, fans of Julian Sands (especially in 'Impromptu')will get a kick out of comparing him to Guillaume Depardieu as the young Marin Marais...;)
    9bobbobwhite

    For those of us who have suffered

    Les Matins is a film for those who have lived enough of life to know that it is a complex mix of pain and joy, with much of it pain, but much of that pain resulting from the greatest of lost joy. Pain that could even eventually give a form of joy again, if it is introspective and searching enough to move one to realize that devastating pain is merely the other side of ecstatic joy. Interrelated, indivisible, and necessary to each other for the severe lessons they teach us as a result of the strength of their inseparable unity.

    This primary point was driven home time after time in Les Matins to the point where even the most abject hardheart would soon feel the story's full impact, that the shallow and mediocre fluff of life, no matter how rich, no matter how acclaimed, cannot provide an offset to the bitter agony of lost perfect love, sublime adoration that is well understood in this particular case never to come again to Sainte-Columbe and would surely be less welcome to him in his suffering than would tortured death, no matter how sweet that new love might be to another person less soul-stricken. As the story formed fully, it was seen that death would eventually be a comfort to him by finally joining him with his adored lost love and thereby ceasing his intense worldly torture. His would be a death that ended our collective hope in the discovery of more elegiac beauty in any future music he could have written, but it served to force us to appreciate more fully the few soulful and heart rending pieces he painfully but adoringly accomplished while writing at his personal creative zenith, his apogee in, and as a result of, paramount human suffering. This is a common theme told in many stories through the years, yes, but it is as real and stunning in this film as was ever done in any medium.

    Les Matins is the best film story of an artist I have ever seen due to the honesty in which it understands and conveys to the audience the inescapable agony felt by a fatally tortured, artistic genius, and how that agony moved him to write his greatest music.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The soundtrack album of Baroque music outsold Michael Jackson, upon its release in France, and outsold Madonna upon its release in the United States.
    • Gaffes
      Throughout the film the music-making is very poorly mimed.
    • Citations

      [last lines]

      [in French, using English subtitles]

      Monsieur de Sainte Colombe: I'm proud to have been your teacher. Please play me the air my daughter loved.

    • Connexions
      Featured in The 50th Annual Golden Globe Awards (1993)
    • Bandes originales
      Les pleurs
      Music by Sainte-Colombe

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Tous les matins du monde?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 18 décembre 1991 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
    • Site officiel
      • Official site
    • Langue
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • All the Mornings of the World
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Le Château de Bodeau, Rougnat, Creuse, France(Sainte-Colombe's castle)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Film Par Film
      • DD Productions
      • Divali Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 3 089 497 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 39 277 $US
      • 15 nov. 1992
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 3 089 497 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 55min(115 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.66 : 1

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