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Miss Europa

Titolo originale: Prix de beauté (Miss Europe)
  • 1930
  • 1h 33min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,9/10
696
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Louise Brooks in Miss Europa (1930)
DrammaRomanticismo

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaLucienne, typist and gorgeous bathing beauty, decides to enter the 'Miss Europe' pageant sponsored by the French newspaper she works for. She finds her jealous lover Andre violently disappro... Leggi tuttoLucienne, typist and gorgeous bathing beauty, decides to enter the 'Miss Europe' pageant sponsored by the French newspaper she works for. She finds her jealous lover Andre violently disapproves of such events and tries to withdraw, but it's too late; she's even then being named M... Leggi tuttoLucienne, typist and gorgeous bathing beauty, decides to enter the 'Miss Europe' pageant sponsored by the French newspaper she works for. She finds her jealous lover Andre violently disapproves of such events and tries to withdraw, but it's too late; she's even then being named Miss France. The night Andre planned to propose to her, she's being whisked off to the Miss... Leggi tutto

  • Regia
    • Augusto Genina
  • Sceneggiatura
    • René Clair
    • Georg Wilhelm Pabst
  • Star
    • Louise Brooks
    • Georges Charlia
    • Augusto Bandini
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,9/10
    696
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Augusto Genina
    • Sceneggiatura
      • René Clair
      • Georg Wilhelm Pabst
    • Star
      • Louise Brooks
      • Georges Charlia
      • Augusto Bandini
    • 24Recensioni degli utenti
    • 11Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto71

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    Interpreti principali13

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    Louise Brooks
    Louise Brooks
    • Lucienne Garnier
    Georges Charlia
    Georges Charlia
    • André
    Augusto Bandini
    • Antonin
    • (as H. Bandini)
    André Nicolle
    • Le secrétaire du journal
    • (as A. Nicolle)
    Mark Tsibulsky
    • Le manager
    • (as M. Ziboulsky)
    Yves Glad
    • Le maharajah
    Alex Bernard
    Alex Bernard
    • Le photographe
    Gaston Jacquet
    Gaston Jacquet
    • Le Duc
    Jean Bradin
    Jean Bradin
    • Prince de Grabovsky
    Henri Crémieux
    Henri Crémieux
    Fanny Clair
      Hélène Regelly
      • Lucienne
      • (voce)
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Raymonde Sonny
        • Regia
          • Augusto Genina
        • Sceneggiatura
          • René Clair
          • Georg Wilhelm Pabst
        • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
        • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

        Recensioni degli utenti24

        6,9696
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        Recensioni in evidenza

        tprofumo

        A stunning piece of work

        Cult icon Louise Brooks was never better than she is in this early French talkie, which turned out to be her last staring role.

        While Brooks' two German films, "Pandora's Box" and "Diary of a Lost Girl" are far better known in the US, "Prix" is clearly just as good a film, in my view much better than the butchered "Diary."

        "Prix" tells a simple story of a working class French girl who dreams of a better life and sets out to get it by entering a beauty pageant. Rising all the way to the position of "Miss Europe," she then gives it all up for the working class man she loves. But she finds that life as a housewife in a dreary walk up flat is killing her soul, as is her jealous husband, and eventually she walks out when she gets a chance at a film contract. But her husband won't let her go and the film builds to a tragic ending that is still considered one of the best climatic scenes in film history.

        This film features strong direction, extremely exciting location photography by famed cinematographer (and later director) Rudolph Mate and an intelligent,Spartan script by Rene Clair.

        But the wonder of the film is Brooks herself. Although her voice is dubbed by a French actress (Brooks didn't speak French) the film was initially planned as a silent and in large chunks of it, her character doesn't speak, anyway. But Brooks' fortune was her face and what she could do with it and there are few in film history who could do more. While there are some echos of silent film technique in her work, she was so far ahead of her time that most of her performance seems as fresh today as it did in 1929. Whether she is the unhappy girl being dragged by her boyfriend through a working class mob at a carnaval, or the depressed housewife staring into a canary's cage and feeling just as trapped, Brooks is a revelation.

        But it is when she is happy in this film that Brooks simply leaps off the screen at you. In most of the still photos she shot over the years, Brooks doesn't smile, apparently because she'd promised herself not to ever wear one of those pasted on grins found on showgirls on stage. But when called upon in a film to express happiness, no one ever exceeded Brooks, who may be the most magnetic actress in film history.

        While "Pandora's Box" will always be her signature film, "Prix de Beaute" ranks a close second in my mind as the best film work of her career.
        9movingpicturegal

        Nice Camera-work Enhances Silly Beauty Contest Story

        With lots of sunshine, gauzy light and shadow filtering through windows and into rooms, tracking shots moving through crowds with hand-held camera, quick-paced editing and extreme close-ups here and there, the photography is the thing in this interesting, artistically done film.

        The plot of this film starts out as a bit of fluff about a beauty contest. The film begins on a warm Sunday at the local swimming pool, where we meet the lovely Lucienne aka Lulu (played by Louise Brooks) - a bit of a show-off in front of the gawking men by poolside, she soon decides to enter herself to represent France in the Miss Europe beauty contest, much to the chagrin of her very jealous, stick-in-the-mud fiancé (a pretty annoying fellow, really). Strutting down the runway the ten contestants display themselves in swimsuits, while the winner is chosen as the contestant who receives the longest applause (I was wondering, couldn't the girls just walk slower to prolong their length of time - and thus applause - on the catwalk?!). Lulu is soon being chased by a Prince and a Maharaja, but her hot-headed beau doesn't like the attentions paid to her by other men or her adoring public, for that matter (I guess he just wants her in his house, cooking his meals, and staying out of sight, eh?!).

        Louise Brooks is beautiful and charming, her presence helps enhance this film, but it's really the way it is photographed that held my interest the most. A bit distracting is the odd dubbed sound, which is a bit off. The print on this version looked very clear and full of nice contrast though. Watching this I just tried to overlook the sound problems and watch the film visually, and I found the movie to be excellent, well worth seeing.
        Camera-Obscura

        Louise Brooks in Paris

        BEAUTY PRIZE (Augusto Genina - France 1930).

        Louise Brooks' last starring role in a feature, and her only film made in France. It's the story of Lucienne, a high-spirited Parisian typist who leads a mundane life with her fiancé, André, and a number of friends. While André indeed loves Lucienne, he has conventional expectations for their future together. When the Miss Europa beauty contest comes to town, he warns her to "not even dream" of entering it. Lucienne ignores his advice, and from there on, she struggles for independence and happiness, but André is overcome with jealous rage...

        I just watched "Prix de Beauté" in the sound version on the Kino Video DVD-release. The film was shot as a silent and Louise Brooks voice was badly dubbed by a French actress. The post-doctoring of this silent film into a talkie was badly done in the first place, and, on top of it, the transfer to the DVD is pretty shabby as well. Sometimes too light, then too dark, too fast, too slow. It's a mess. A mediocre film that might have worked as a silent but is no comparison to earlier films Louise Brooks made with G. W Pabst, "Pandora's Box" and "Diary of a lost Girl." I watched this for the obvious reason of Louise Brook's last starring role, but it's only worth it for Brooks-aficionados or completists. Watch the silent version or turn of the sound, and make the best of Louise Brooks' intoxicating presence. The five stars are hers.

        Camera Obscura --- 5/10
        8BoYutz

        Outstanding Louise Brooks film

        Louise Brooks gives a wonderful performance in this well-made French melodrama. She plays a typist named Lucienne who, despite being in love with a man named Andre, dreams of rising above her position in life. She sees opportunity in a beauty contest for Miss Europe, but Andre is furious when he discovers that she's entered, then demands that she withdraw. She tries to take back her entry only to discover that she's already been chosen as Miss France and will now go on to the main pageant.

        This is a story of love, loss and decision played out to its passionate end. The movie is very energetically filmed by director Augusto Genina and cinema tographers Rudolf Mate and Louis Nee. The filming style is more like modern movies than the Hollywood flicks of the '30s, and shows the different style employed by Europeans. There are many fast cuts and traveling shots, mostly done with great skill and verve. The high energy of the movie's first third dwindles a bit in the middle but picks up again in the last 15 minutes.

        The performances were very good by all the principals, but that of Louise Brooks is especially memorable. Louise leans heavily on her silent screen skills even though this is a talkie, but because her silent style had a surprisingly contemporary, understated feel, she makes the transition to talkies very well. The long early scene at the fair was especially poignant as Louise used her remarkably expressive eyes to convey her growing sense of misery and alienation, of being trapped in a life she no longer wants. I doubt it's ever been done better.

        The film builds to a superb finale, artfully shot, powerful and stylish. This is really some of the best stuff of the early days of film. And the tragic storyline only underscores the greater tragedy that this is the final starring role for Louise Brooks. She wasn't just a great beauty who looked fantastic in a swimsuit, she really was a major acting talent who basically threw it all away. We are all the poorer for that.

        This movie is less well known than her German films with G.W. Pabst, but I think it's a better one. I think this crew is just better at storytelling than Pabst, and while Prix de Beaute may lack the deep moral complexity of the Pabst films, it's much easier to follow and is overall a more streamlined, focused piece of work. And it doesn't hurt that Louise's singing parts are done by Edith Piaf, either.

        Bottom line, this is a classic Louise Brooks film well worth looking for.
        onolaie

        a beautiful and easy to watch film

        This is a beautiful film, easy to follow the story even in the French language version without subtitles because of the great pantomime performance by Louise Brooks: her facial expressions and reactions to events tell the whole story from beginning to end. She submits her own photographs to the contest sponsored by the newspaper (or magazine) that she works for as a typist, but later tries to withdraw from, but then, surprise, she wins the title of Miss France and and is sent to Spain (wearing an ermine or chinchilla coat) for the bigger event of Miss Europe. Her fiancé for some reason is angry by the attention and misunderstands. When she unwraps the pears for the dinner table she is stunned to see a picture of herself in the crumpled newspaper. A motif that her growing fame is stalking her. There are several scenes with clocks behind Miss Brooks foreshadowing the climax. Very poignant is the scene when he takes her to a photographer for a family picture of them together, she is very sad (but tears are unnecessary and might have made the scene over sentimental). Her ironic scene with the canary is a cinematic allusion to her previous 1928 silent film The Canary Murder Case (in which her character was also murdered, another irony), for which she refused to return to Hollywood to dub her voice ... odd to note that a French speaking actress dubbed her few lines (Miss Brooks says one or two words, but several words in French are rapidly spoken). The most ironic scene of all is the private screening of herself on film. Incidentally, I recognized the unmistakable voice of Josephine Baker as the singing voice for Miss Brooks during three segments. When she sees herself on the screen for the first time her joy and fascination with the cinema version of herself is amazing; she is enraptured as if the beauty belongs to somebody else, and not her real self. When her hand is held by the man sitting next to her in the projection room during this scene, she is aware but her smile is not for him, it is for her screen image that she continues to stare at. This is the climax when her fiancé sneaks pass the guard to find her in the projection room, sees the ecstasy on her face and sees the man next to her holding her hand, which he misunderstands.

        Trama

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        • Quiz
          According to Louise Brooks biographer Barry Paris, Prix de Beaute (Beauty Prize) was made from August 29, 1929 to September 27, 1929. The film was released August 20, 1930; this was Brooks' third and final European film.
        • Connessioni
          Featured in Lulu in Berlin (1984)
        • Colonne sonore
          Je n'ai qu'un Amour, c'est toi
          Music by Wolfgang Zeller

          Lyrics by Jean Boyer and René Sylviano

          Performed by Hélène Regelly

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        Dettagli

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        • Data di uscita
          • 1 agosto 1930 (Francia)
        • Paese di origine
          • Francia
        • Lingua
          • Francese
        • Celebre anche come
          • Beauty Prize
        • Luoghi delle riprese
          • Studios Joinville, Joinville-le-pont, Val-de-Marne, Francia
        • Azienda produttrice
          • Sofar-Film
        • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

        Specifiche tecniche

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        • Tempo di esecuzione
          • 1h 33min(93 min)
        • Colore
          • Black and White
        • Mix di suoni
          • Mono
        • Proporzioni
          • 1.33 : 1

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