La belle équipe
- 1936
- 1 घं 40 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
7.5/10
1.5 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंFive unemployed penniless workers win 100,000 Francs with the national lottery. Instead of sharing the money, they buy a ruin and build an open-air cafe. But difficulties come to split their... सभी पढ़ेंFive unemployed penniless workers win 100,000 Francs with the national lottery. Instead of sharing the money, they buy a ruin and build an open-air cafe. But difficulties come to split their friendly group apart.Five unemployed penniless workers win 100,000 Francs with the national lottery. Instead of sharing the money, they buy a ruin and build an open-air cafe. But difficulties come to split their friendly group apart.
Rafael Medina
- Mario
- (as Raphaël Medina)
Marcel Maupi
- Un copain
- (as Maupi)
Fernand Charpin
- Le gendarme
- (as Charpin)
Georges Bever
- Un voisin
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
10Grégory
Absolute classic masterpiece. Julien Duvivier's usual thematic (everyone's bad) is here, but stronger and faster. I have seen the two ends - optimist (not very interesting) and pessimist (very hard to find, with german undertitle, but it was the one that Duvivier wants) and the second one broke all my hopes in human race. You must absolutely find the second one, a message from an old time when french cinema was the best in the world.
I am adding to this commentary in June 2016 to point out to any fans of this film that, almost unbelievably after waiting such a long time, it is now actually available in France (since June 1st) on Blu-ray and DVD. This is an issue by Pathé, together with certain others of Duvivier's films and notably the (in)famous "Voici Le Temps Des Assassins". The set comprises a Blu-ray (Zones A B C) plus a DVD (Zone 2 - Europe Only), the film has been remastered and is with French Language Audio AND a choice of French or English Subtitles). This should bring a lot of pleasure to a lot of people who have been awaiting this reissue for many years : shot in 1936 on the Banks of The Marne river some 5 miles from Paris, La Belle Equipe constituted a milestone in French Cinema. Coinciding with the advent of the " Front Populaire ", the film is today remembered for the scenes in the guinguette and the beautiful valse musette " Quand on s'promène au bord de l'eau " sung by actor Jean Gabin and accompanied by roving accordionist Albert Deprince. The film is about a group of factory workers who win the lottery and club together to construct a guingette ( dance hall ) on the banks of the Marne between Nogent and Joinville. All starts well but quarrels develop and women get in the way ! There are in fact two endings, a happy one reluctantly made by director Duvivier to please the public,and a pessimistic one which was the director's own personal choice. For some strange reason the pessimistic ending is always subtitled in German !!! The new issue of the film includes both the pessimistic and the optimistic endings.You may visit today by riverboat the area where the film was shot and until a few years ago could see the actual remains of the "guinguette" built specially for the film !!
The film that became the emblem of the Popular Front does not really present its ideology, on the contrary. Duvivier asserts social determinism, cuts down on solidarity, as if any social dream were impossible. Duvivier keeps the freshness, not the ideal. It doesn't matter if he uses shortcuts that are not very credible. What remains are the shots on the Marne.
"The camaraderie we five shared was, I don't know...it was like the smell of bread."
"I'm your cake. It's better!"
They Were Five, or in the French title, The Beautiful Team, has a group of five down-on-their luck friends win a share of the lottery, enabling them to open up a guinguette, which is a riverside open-air restaurant. The five have an easy camaraderie with one another, though they were also a little annoying early on, expecting their landlord to put up with not paying their rent and demanding improvements. The film is directed by Julien Duvivier and stars Jean Gabin so it's certainly a quality production, but to be honest it was Viviane Romance playing Gina who was the best part for me.
Gina is separated from her husband (Charles Vanel), but upon hearing of his windfall, turns up to get 2,000 francs out of him. "I'll pay you for it," she tells him with a smile, meaning she'll toss some sex into the deal. When Gabin goes to get the money back at her apartment, one adorned with an array of nude photos of herself on the wall, she opens her robe and, smiling flirtatiously, says "Can't you see I'm in my undies?" and more suggestively, "Anything else you'd like? Go ahead. Help yourself." He of course does. Viviane Romance is fantastic here, even if the character is pretty flimsy (if not offensive).
This sets in motion a chain of events that spells doom for the guinguette, and it's echoed in other ways that a woman creates trouble for the pals. The first guy leaves after being admonished by Gabin's character for somewhat openly being attracted to one of the other's girlfriend (Micheline Cheirel), in a little bit of foreshadowing and a load of hypocrisy. The man with the girlfriend is hiding from the police, but is given away when she calls out to him, resulting in him being served with a deportation order (though they leave together, blessed by her grandma, so it's not a negative characterization). A third friend dies after falling off the roof, an accident mercifully not caused by a woman, and suddenly They Were Five has become They Were Two. They've gone from a partnership where one proudly proclaims "This is a republic where all citizens are presidents" to being rivals for a "loose" woman, and it seems this fall from grace is laid mostly at the doorstep of the woman. This feeling was cemented when Gabin's character calls her a bitch and hits her in the face, which (ugh, of course) turns her on. "I didn't think you were a man," she gushes with a smile, looking up into his eyes from an inch away.
The lack of nuance in this character aside, the storytelling is solid and the black and white cinematography is beautiful, especially in scenes with the trees by the river. There are also little bits like Gabin singing in a reverie, and the friends cheating to essentially steal items out of an olde time claw machine (the quality of which were considerably higher than the ones in arcades today!). There is also a rather intense ending (I saw the original, pessimistic version), one that's filmed well and has some fine acting from Gabin and Vanel, even if it was a little abrupt.
They Were Five, or in the French title, The Beautiful Team, has a group of five down-on-their luck friends win a share of the lottery, enabling them to open up a guinguette, which is a riverside open-air restaurant. The five have an easy camaraderie with one another, though they were also a little annoying early on, expecting their landlord to put up with not paying their rent and demanding improvements. The film is directed by Julien Duvivier and stars Jean Gabin so it's certainly a quality production, but to be honest it was Viviane Romance playing Gina who was the best part for me.
Gina is separated from her husband (Charles Vanel), but upon hearing of his windfall, turns up to get 2,000 francs out of him. "I'll pay you for it," she tells him with a smile, meaning she'll toss some sex into the deal. When Gabin goes to get the money back at her apartment, one adorned with an array of nude photos of herself on the wall, she opens her robe and, smiling flirtatiously, says "Can't you see I'm in my undies?" and more suggestively, "Anything else you'd like? Go ahead. Help yourself." He of course does. Viviane Romance is fantastic here, even if the character is pretty flimsy (if not offensive).
This sets in motion a chain of events that spells doom for the guinguette, and it's echoed in other ways that a woman creates trouble for the pals. The first guy leaves after being admonished by Gabin's character for somewhat openly being attracted to one of the other's girlfriend (Micheline Cheirel), in a little bit of foreshadowing and a load of hypocrisy. The man with the girlfriend is hiding from the police, but is given away when she calls out to him, resulting in him being served with a deportation order (though they leave together, blessed by her grandma, so it's not a negative characterization). A third friend dies after falling off the roof, an accident mercifully not caused by a woman, and suddenly They Were Five has become They Were Two. They've gone from a partnership where one proudly proclaims "This is a republic where all citizens are presidents" to being rivals for a "loose" woman, and it seems this fall from grace is laid mostly at the doorstep of the woman. This feeling was cemented when Gabin's character calls her a bitch and hits her in the face, which (ugh, of course) turns her on. "I didn't think you were a man," she gushes with a smile, looking up into his eyes from an inch away.
The lack of nuance in this character aside, the storytelling is solid and the black and white cinematography is beautiful, especially in scenes with the trees by the river. There are also little bits like Gabin singing in a reverie, and the friends cheating to essentially steal items out of an olde time claw machine (the quality of which were considerably higher than the ones in arcades today!). There is also a rather intense ending (I saw the original, pessimistic version), one that's filmed well and has some fine acting from Gabin and Vanel, even if it was a little abrupt.
Made at the time when the Popular Front was about to happen,"la belle équipe" perfectly captured the thirties zeitgeist.This was a very optimistic time,and no one could have forecast what would occur in the years to come:1936 Summer saw the first paid vacations .
Jean Gabin was THE French actor of this era,the one who embodied almost everything the audience was dreaming of.Here he plays an employed man,who,with five mates ,wins on the raffle :they decide to buy a guinguette (a café on the banks of the Seine river where you can drink wine and dance).The guinguettes have now completely disappeared in France but it must have been many a Parisian's dream at least till early sixties:just hear the song Gabin sings (he's not dubbed,he used to cut records all along his acting career)telling about fun "quand on s'promène au bord de l'eau" (when go for a stroll along the riverside).There's an almost identical sung sequence in "sous le ciel de Paris"(1952).The guinguettes are part of the past French cinema:Jean Renoir's "une partie de campagne" described them as if he were a painter;ditto the beginning of Jacques Becker's masterpiece "Casque d'or"(1952)which magnificently captured their atmosphere.In "voici le temps des assassins" (1956),his film noir extraordinaire,Duvivier showed a darker side of the guinguettes .
This dark side is already present in "la belle équipe" .Leftish French critics said that the optimistic ending (the team succeeds)was released in the popular theaters ,and the doomed one(the team fails) was shown in chic ones .Modern historians generally do not agree.Duvivier's choice was certainly the pessimist conclusion:it could not be any other way when you know his work,one of the most somber of the French cinema. It must have been filmed first,then the producers asked him to sweeten the screenplay:they were not completely wrong,on account of the historical background.Nowadays,French TV show the two endings in a row.
"La belle équipe" is brimming with camaraderie,joie de vivre and vie en rose.With its happy end ,it's a true oasis,a truce before the flood.Subsequent works such as "carnet de bal" and "la fin du jour" will blight all hopes.
Jean Gabin was THE French actor of this era,the one who embodied almost everything the audience was dreaming of.Here he plays an employed man,who,with five mates ,wins on the raffle :they decide to buy a guinguette (a café on the banks of the Seine river where you can drink wine and dance).The guinguettes have now completely disappeared in France but it must have been many a Parisian's dream at least till early sixties:just hear the song Gabin sings (he's not dubbed,he used to cut records all along his acting career)telling about fun "quand on s'promène au bord de l'eau" (when go for a stroll along the riverside).There's an almost identical sung sequence in "sous le ciel de Paris"(1952).The guinguettes are part of the past French cinema:Jean Renoir's "une partie de campagne" described them as if he were a painter;ditto the beginning of Jacques Becker's masterpiece "Casque d'or"(1952)which magnificently captured their atmosphere.In "voici le temps des assassins" (1956),his film noir extraordinaire,Duvivier showed a darker side of the guinguettes .
This dark side is already present in "la belle équipe" .Leftish French critics said that the optimistic ending (the team succeeds)was released in the popular theaters ,and the doomed one(the team fails) was shown in chic ones .Modern historians generally do not agree.Duvivier's choice was certainly the pessimist conclusion:it could not be any other way when you know his work,one of the most somber of the French cinema. It must have been filmed first,then the producers asked him to sweeten the screenplay:they were not completely wrong,on account of the historical background.Nowadays,French TV show the two endings in a row.
"La belle équipe" is brimming with camaraderie,joie de vivre and vie en rose.With its happy end ,it's a true oasis,a truce before the flood.Subsequent works such as "carnet de bal" and "la fin du jour" will blight all hopes.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThis film is one of over 200 titles in the list of independent feature films made available for television presentation by Advance Television Pictures announced in Motion Picture Herald 4 April 1942. At this time, television broadcasting was in its infancy, almost totally curtailed by the advent of World War II, and would not continue to develop until 1945-1946. Because of poor documentation (feature films were often not identified by title in conventional sources) no record has yet been found of its initial television broadcast.
- गूफ़When the guys are on the roof during the storm, the wires that are making the shingles fly are visible.
- इसके अलावा अन्य वर्जनThe original ending is bleak and violent. After the movie did poorly in theaters, a new, happier ending was shot. This lighter version is the one that has been seen for decades. The Swiss Cinematheque has a print of the darker version, which has now been shown at The Museum of Modern Art in New York City. The 2015 restoration also uses the darker version.
- कनेक्शनEdited into Mon oncle d'Amérique (1980)
- साउंडट्रैकQuand on s'Promène au Bord de l'Eau
Music by Maurice Yvain
Lyrics by Julien Duvivier
Performed by Jean Gabin
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- They Were Five
- उत्पादन कंपनी
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 40 मिनट
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.37 : 1
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