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La revue des revues

  • 1927
  • 1h 43min
NOTE IMDb
5,6/10
177
MA NOTE
La revue des revues (1927)
Drame

Une petite couturière devient une star du music-hall : se déroulent sous les yeux du spectateur des extraits des meilleures revues des années folles.Une petite couturière devient une star du music-hall : se déroulent sous les yeux du spectateur des extraits des meilleures revues des années folles.Une petite couturière devient une star du music-hall : se déroulent sous les yeux du spectateur des extraits des meilleures revues des années folles.

  • Réalisation
    • Joe Francis
  • Scénario
    • Joe Francis
    • Clément Vautel
  • Casting principal
    • Josephine Baker
    • André Luguet
    • Hélène Hallier
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,6/10
    177
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Joe Francis
    • Scénario
      • Joe Francis
      • Clément Vautel
    • Casting principal
      • Josephine Baker
      • André Luguet
      • Hélène Hallier
    • 7avis d'utilisateurs
    • 4avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos4

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux21

    Modifier
    Josephine Baker
    Josephine Baker
    • Josephine Baker
    André Luguet
    André Luguet
    • Georges Barsac
    Hélène Hallier
    • Gabrielle Derisau
    Pépa Bonafé
    Erna Carise
    Edmond Castel
      Jeanne de Balzac
      Jeanne de Balzac
      Mme. Dehan
      Gretchikine
      The Hoffman Girls
      • Themselves
      John Tiller's Folies Girls
      • Themselves
      • (as Tiller's Follies Girls)
      Mme. Komakova
      Londonia
      Ludovic
      Jelizaveta Nikolská
        Skibinne
        Standford
        Titos
        • Réalisation
          • Joe Francis
        • Scénario
          • Joe Francis
          • Clément Vautel
        • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
        • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

        Avis des utilisateurs7

        5,6177
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        10

        Avis à la une

        7planktonrules

        A lovely film with an atrocious modern musical score.

        Wow, does this film have a horrible musical track on the DVD. Now you can't blame the original film makers--it was up to individual movie houses to provide whatever score they wanted with most silent films. Because of this, when silents are placed on DVD or shown on channels like Turner Classic Movies, they have modern composers create scores so the films aren't totally silent. Unfortunately, in the case of "La Revue des Revues" it has perhaps the most annoying and cacophonous accompaniments I have ever heard. It's like plunging knives into your ears to listen to it, so I was forced to turn off the sound part of he way into the movie. Why is it so bad? Well, part of it is because of the excessive use of electronic music--which just doesn't fit a film made in the 1920s. Another is because much of it sounds like free-form jazz sped up to twice normal speed! Yikes!

        As far as the original film goes, it's quite striking to see such an early film with so much color. While the Pathé Color process was not true color, it was impressive for the time--and, in some ways, more pleasing to the eye than its competitor at the time, the Two-Color Technicolor process. Pathé Color relied on a small army of women with stencils to actually paint in the colors onto the print using rollers--a very, very time-consuming process to say the least. The biggest benefit was the color palette--you could use any color you liked. While the Two-Color Technicolor was a lot easier to use and cheaper and could be used to color the entire film (whereas the other process was usually just used in bits and pieces), it did tend to make films looks too strong of orange and green. It also usually lacked realism unless used selectively (such as in "The Phantom of the Opera"). Of the two, I still prefer the look of Two-Color if used well!

        As far as the story goes, Gabrielle's story is actually just a thin way to try to connect live footage made of various acts of the time from the French stage--such as Josephine Baker. So, if you are looking for a story, keep looking--this is much better seen as a documentary of a bygone era. Overall, I'd give this film a 2 if you watch it with the sound turned on--it's THAT bad. But, without, it is a lovely historical record and a very well made film that deserves your attention and a 7.

        By the way, there is a bit of nudity in this film--which shouldn't surprise you since this IS the Folies Bergère. Topless dancing sometimes was featured and I am a bit surprised more of this was not featured in the film. Since it is not gratuitous and is meant as more of a documentary, I wouldn't have any trouble letting kids see this--though I think most would be bored by it.
        7pppatty

        More a historical record than a movie

        I could not be more pleased that Lobster Films in cooperation with various European cinematheques have seen fit to preserve this footage which is primarily a compilation of acts from the Folies Bergere and other Parisian variety shows. Included are two clips with Josephine Baker who was actually a pretty clunky dancer, but a larger than life personality. The framing story of a young girl hoping to hit it big in the business can be dismissed, as can the sub-plot of her claiming to be robbed in order to attract publicity. However, the early two-strip color filming of the various artistes is not to be missed by any one interested in the development of film techniques. It's a pity however that the orchestral score was so out of keeping with the period.
        7squidexplosion

        Interesting for a few...

        I can agree that this movie now stands more as a historical document than a fully fledged fictional work. While there is a plot it's overwhelmed by the lengthy dance numbers featuring various stars of the day (i.e. Josephine Baker). This will interest anyone in costume history, early 20th century entertainment, dance or those interested in early film techniques.

        It should be noted that the color is not the 2 strip Technicolor process but is either created through hand tinting or more likely through a stencil tinting process called Pathécolor/Pathéchrome. You can that it is a tint versus being a color print as you can see many scenes where the color either doesn't line up the actual outlines of the image or where only certain areas of the screen are tinted.
        TheCapsuleCritic

        The Origin Of A CHORUS LINE...

        ...42ND STREET and Busby Berkeley, the Goldwyn Girls, and any other backstage musical on film that you can think of can be found in LA REVUE. What makes it so intriguing is that this is a SILENT musical. That may sound like an oxymoron but it really isn't. The lavish stagings and the incredible variety of costumes not to mention the performances of Josephine Baker, Stanislawa Welska, Lila Nikolska, and others were meant to be seen as well as heard.

        This being a silent film, it's been provided with musical accompaniment, a brand new score by Taranta-Babu. Unfortunately I found the jazz style used too modern in tone which does not reflect the period and as a result I felt it detracted from the film as a whole but not enough to put me off and the quieter parts were quite effective. The plot is your typical small time girl makes good although here they literally incorporate the story of CINDERELLA as the heroine gets her big break by winning "the smallest foot in France" contest which involves trying on a slipper. Helene Hallier is engaging as the chorus girl but the male lead Andre Luguel is stiff and colorless with too much makeup although to be fair that was typical of that type of part during this period.

        As the title promises though LA REVUE DES REVUES is all about the stagings of which there are over a dozen. Scenes from the Moulin Rouge, the Palais and the Folies Bergere are captured on film for posterity reflecting the Art Deco style and the bizarre tastes of 1927 Paris (see The Orgies and The Golfer numbers). According to the liner notes it took 10 years and over 7 different prints to come up with this version which is tinted and features the Pathe' hand stencilled color process although a lot of it looks as if it were computer colored. As a historical document it's priceless (seeing rows of full figured showgirls going through their paces instead of today's stick figures would make Kate Winslet proud) but as entertainment it won't be everyone's cup of tea.

        The love story is routine and parts of the film are badly paced but when the curtain goes up just sit back and enjoy the show. A must for fans of early musicals, silent films, and 1920s Paris but be warned. Although prominently displayed on the cover (in a costume she doesn't wear) Josephine Baker appears in only 2 numbers with a screen time of less than 7 minutes in an overall running time of 103 so don't buy it just for her...For more reviews visit The Capsule Critic.
        5FerdinandVonGalitzien

        a silent… musical

        This German Count has always boasted of, besides his dissipated and idle life, how transgressive the cinema pioneers could be when they took bold risks and that those talkies you liked so much are not original at all in comparison with the silent films. Here is a great example, "La Revue Des Revues," a perfect illustration of your grandfathers' boldness because this film is a silent… musical.

        Obviously, such directors ignored the customary rules and recognized no barriers to their art.

        It's a simple story: a dressmaker becomes a Parisian music-hall star when she wins a bizarre contest, a kind of "Cinderella" reinterpretation in which the organizers are trying to find a girl with France's smallest feet (MEIN GOTT!!!... another incredible transgression and now with one of the most popular classic stories! We will not, however, take the time here to discuss aristocratic fetishism). This flimsy premise provides a perfect excuse to display a kind of collection of the greatest musical numbers being done during that year at the most important and emblematic Parisian theaters as the "Moulin Rouge", the "Folies Bergere" or the "Palace". These musical sequences are beautifully colored in a film restoration sponsored by "ARTE". We see, among "Art Decó" lavish settings, acrobats and many chorus-girls who wear magnificent and impossible motley and feather dresses. Standing out from all the others is the famous Josephine Baker who stars in two musical numbers.

        Alas though, there are too many musical numbers which makes the film slow and overlong. The director does not seem totally in control and the performances are lifeless.

        And now, if you'll allow me, I must temporarily take my leave because this German Count is remembering his early life and wants to dance a Charleston.

        Histoire

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        Le saviez-vous

        Modifier
        • Anecdotes
          Jelizaveta Nikolská's debut.
        • Connexions
          Alternate-language version of Die Frauen von Folies Bergères (1927)

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        Détails

        Modifier
        • Date de sortie
          • 9 janvier 1928 (Portugal)
        • Pays d’origine
          • France
        • Langues
          • Aucun
          • Français
          • Allemand
        • Aussi connu sous le nom de
          • Parisian Pleasures
        • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

        Spécifications techniques

        Modifier
        • Durée
          • 1h 43min(103 min)
        • Couleur
          • Color
        • Mixage
          • Silent
        • Rapport de forme
          • 1.33 : 1

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