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IMDbPro

O Juiz e o Assassino

Título original: Le juge et l'assassin
  • 1976
  • 2 h 8 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,3/10
2,5 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
O Juiz e o Assassino (1976)
Assistir a Bande-annonce [OV]
Reproduzir trailer2:10
1 vídeo
42 fotos
CrimeDramaHistória

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAn unstable former French Sergeant commits many atrocities. A judge considers how this case could benefit or damage his career.An unstable former French Sergeant commits many atrocities. A judge considers how this case could benefit or damage his career.An unstable former French Sergeant commits many atrocities. A judge considers how this case could benefit or damage his career.

  • Direção
    • Bertrand Tavernier
  • Roteiristas
    • Jean Aurenche
    • Bertrand Tavernier
    • Pierre Bost
  • Artistas
    • Philippe Noiret
    • Michel Galabru
    • Isabelle Huppert
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,3/10
    2,5 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Bertrand Tavernier
    • Roteiristas
      • Jean Aurenche
      • Bertrand Tavernier
      • Pierre Bost
    • Artistas
      • Philippe Noiret
      • Michel Galabru
      • Isabelle Huppert
    • 12Avaliações de usuários
    • 9Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 3 vitórias e 4 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 2:10
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Fotos42

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    + 35
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    Elenco principal39

    Editar
    Philippe Noiret
    Philippe Noiret
    • Le juge Emile Rousseau
    Michel Galabru
    Michel Galabru
    • Joseph Bouvier
    Isabelle Huppert
    Isabelle Huppert
    • Rose
    Jean-Claude Brialy
    Jean-Claude Brialy
    • Le procureur De Villedieu
    Renée Faure
    Renée Faure
    • Mme Rousseau
    Cécile Vassort
    Cécile Vassort
    • Louise Lesueur
    Jean-Roger Caussimon
    Jean-Roger Caussimon
    • Le chanteur des rues
    Jean Bretonnière
    Jean Bretonnière
    • Le député
    François Dyrek
    • Le cheminot libéré
    Monique Chaumette
    Monique Chaumette
    • La mère de Louise
    Yves Robert
    Yves Robert
    • Professeur Degueldre
    Jean Amos
    • Le gardien-chef
    Gilbert Bahon
    • Un roulant
    Arlette Bonnard
    • La fermière à la soupe
    Liza Braconnier
    • La religieuse de l'hôpital
    Jean-Claude de Goros
    • Dr. Dutourd
    • (as Jean-Claude de Gorros)
    Yvon Lec
    Yvon Lec
    • Le supérieur mariste
    Jean-Pierre Leroux
    • Radeuf
    • Direção
      • Bertrand Tavernier
    • Roteiristas
      • Jean Aurenche
      • Bertrand Tavernier
      • Pierre Bost
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários12

    7,32.5K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8JuguAbraham

    Less about the "assassin" and more about real life judges and other rich individuals who "judge" others

    A very cursory appraisal of the film would term it as a tale of a true murderer and rapist who killed, raped and sodomized over a dozen shepherd women in rural France before being captured and guillotined. The film is much more than that. The film is more about the respected, educated judges of France who sit in judgement of the evils of less privileged evil-doers, while they are more evil in their actions and scoff at the writings of Emile Zola, that strikes a chord with the average French citizens. One judge is called "Judas" by prisoner who has been tricked, another commits suicide as he reflects on his own past actions that mirror the actions of another. Religion plays a major but discrete role--free lunches for the poor and illiterate are free only if petitions that serve the rich are signed. A judge helps a sibling of an Asian he has condemned to death by ensuring the sibling becomes a Christian and serves him for the rest of his life. Anti-Jewish posters are pasted on outer church walls. Social comments include unwritten restrictions of a Frenchwoman being allowed to marry an Asian. A judge's mother of higher classes, providing cherries in brandy to a lower-class worker but not readily approving her to be the daughter-in-law marked by a silent disapproval when she is brought home. A judge avoids visiting his girlfriend's daughter in hospital but brings flowers for the sick person. The film is less about the "assassin" and more about real life judges and other rich individuals who "judge" the less privileged.

    The film is top-notch French cinema, with notable direction and casting, a superb screenplay, good cinematography and fine performances. Tavernier and Noiret made a great team, ever since Tavernier's debut film "The Clockworker of St Paul." It is a pity that this work of Tavernier is rarely discussed and appreciated.
    9dbdumonteil

    Then came Tavernier!

    And with him,the French cinema regained all that it had lost with the nouvelle vague:magnificent cinematography(I urge everybody to see this film in a movie theater),elaborate screenplays,Clouzot's Renoir's and Duvivier's bite ,all that made once the French cinema great."Le juge et l'assassin " is his sophomore effort ,after "l'horloger de Saint- Paul",but it was one which firmly and finally placed Tavernier among the greatest,most ambitious artists of the French cinema.

    First of all,he did with Michel Galabru -who used to play in mediocre comedies - what Claude Chabrol did with Jean Yanne ("le boucher" "que la bete meure") :this actor is playing his lifetime part,revealing a talent which one would never expect from him.

    France,end of the nineteenth century;anti-Semitism is rampant :twice ,a poster appears :"La croix (the cross): a paper against the Jews as no one can";Brialy's character:"we all need an outlet for our bad deeds:I have chosen the Jews,because it's safe";Renée Faure,the judge's good mother,serving the "mercy bouillon" to the Poor,provided that they sign a petition against captain Dreyfus .After the 1870 war,France was humiliated and the song a buck officer sings speaks volumes about the loss of Alsace and Lorraine.A world which Zola -whose books were burned- depicted ,where 2,500 children died in the coal mines... The killer killed 12 of them..

    This is not a serial killer who comes out of the blue.Tavernier takes time to describe his mind :he was bitten by a rabid dog (or more like as one scene in a church tells us ,he was raped by a priest),he served in the army but was discharged,and mainly the girl he loved did not want him anymore.He tried to kill her and to take his own life but he failed twice,and in the asylum,they wrecked his brain.Although he is a killer,he is actually a political prisoner:he realized that as far his crimes were concerned ,the blame had to be put on a criminal society:in a remarkable scene ,the judge's mother reads the reports concerning the awful crimes as if she 's reading the tittle-tattle of the town.The serial killer identifies himself with Jesus and Joan of Arc ...

    In direct contrast to hîm,we have the judge :admirably portrayed by Tavernier's favourite actor ,Philippe Noiret,he epitomizes the bourgeoisie,the man who wants to keep the world as it is;this is a very complex opaque character:nearing 50,he stills lives with his mother,and he's got nasty habits (see the scene when he buggers Isabelle Huppert).

    There are a lot of things to say about "le juge et l'assassin":the film successfully recreates the atmosphere of the period,not only by its hints at Dreyfus,at a country which is bent on revenge ,at a Church which feels its power slip away (the priest thundering against "school without God" ,about 10 years after Jules Ferry instituted secular education,and about 10 years before the separation of the Church and the State in France).But it even recreates it with its original songs ,which is quite a feat.We really feel we are in the time machine,and that's the main reason why Tavernier's movie is so precious:no one can find echoes of the seventies in France,which would have dated and marred the film.Even if the socialists appear at the end of the movie,there's no connection with their impending coming in the eighties.

    A masterpiece ,Tavernier's best film along with "la vie et rien d'autre".
    8DukeEman

    Political wit.

    A French provincial town in the late 1890's where a Judge attempts to advance his political power by trying to prove that a soldier was not insane at the time of committing murder, which means soilder gets the guillotine and not the mad house. A movie that is more about the social turmoil in France.
    7dromasca

    a serial killer story in the time of Dreyfuss

    Director Bertrand Tavernier and actor Philippe Noiret collaborated in 9 films. The 1976 'Le juge et l'assassin' is the third film they made together and is a remarkable film in many ways. The story takes place in the last decade of the 19th century, in a France that is still living through the trauma of the Paris Commune and the defeat in the Franco-Prussian war, a country deeply divided by the Dreyfuss case, crushed by social inequalities that gave impetus to the socialist movement but also encouraged anarchist groups and terrorist attacks. Against this background, Bertrand Tavernier together with Pierre Bost and Jean Aurenche wrote the screenplay of a film describing the case of a serial killer, a kind of French Jack the Ripper, focusing on the characters of the criminal and of the judge who does everything to catch and condemn him.

    Sergeant Joseph Bouvier is a veteran of the wars of France. He loves a young woman who rejects him, and in desperation he decides to kill her and commit suicide. Neither the assassination nor the suicide succeed, he is declared irresponsible, but after a few years the doctors consider him cured and release him. Adopting a vagabond life, prey to chronic physical and mental suffering and a morbid mysticism, he crosses France from North to South, killing and raping 12 victims on his way, most of them children or teenagers. Judge Emile Rousseau leads a typical bourgeois life in a provincial town, with a possessive mother and a mistress of lower social status. The Bouvier case gives him an opportunity to stand out, but to do so he must secure a conviction, prevent the serial killer from being declared insane, and turn him into a symbol of all that is rotten in France. Sort of a serial killer Dreyfuss. The confrontation between the two is not just a meeting between an accuser and a criminal. Rousseau has on his side not only the intelligence and cunning that will enable him to win Bouvier's confidence, but also a whole legal and political machine at the service of a social class that fears the changes that will sooner or later take place . In the end it is a confrontation between two faces of France, both corrupt and destructive.

    Philippe Noiret is, of course, formidable as always. The role of the cunning, ariviste and morally corrupt judge suits him perfectly. The most remarkable acting performance, however, belongs to Michel Galabru, an actor who until then had only made himself known on screens in comic roles (among them a gendarme from Louis de Funès' troupe in Saint-Tropez). The role of Bouvier allows Galabru to create a complex character, in which madness mixes with passion, mystical fervor with intellectual poetry. The cast also features Isabelle Huppert, who at 23, in the secondary role of Rose, the judge's mistress, was beautiful and already master of that mysterious expression that would mark her great roles to come. Bertrand Tavernier has always known how to collaborate with classy professionals. Pierre-William Glenn's cinematography is impressive, especially in the nature scenes. Philippe Sarde's music plays a very important role. There are several sung scenes in the film - by an officer declaiming a patriotic song about lost Alsace and Lorraine, by a troubadour singing a ballad to the murderer-turned-folk-hero, by working women demonstrating for their rights in the final scene. These, together with the very carefully designed sets and costumes, make 'Le juge et l'assassin' an extremely expressive film in rendering the atmosphere of the era. The biggest problem with the script is the overly obvious rhetoric, which doesn't want to leave any doubt about the political views of the screenwriters and of the director. I didn't think that was necessary. The story itself is quite strong and speaks for itself, and the level of acting plus the Noiret - Galabru duel are expressive enough without being explicit. Bertrand Tavernier could have let the cinema art that he mastered so well tell the whole story. It would have been sufficient.
    9brogmiller

    Justice is not interested in a madman.

    This stupendous film by Bertrand Tavernier is set against the background of the Dreyfus Affair and the workers' struggles which led to the formation of the Confédération Générale du Travail. Under the spotlight here is the abuse of power by institutions and the inequalities of the justice system.

    The two leading protagonists are serial rapist and murderer Joseph Bouvier, based upon real life Joseph Vacher and played to the hilt by Michel Calabru whilst judge Fourquet has here become the unscrupulous Rousseau and is personified by the immaculate Philippe Noiret. His character is not, as an earlier reviewer has suggested, based upon forensic doctor Etienne Lacassagne who is here named Degueldre and is played by Yves Robert.

    Bouvier and Rousseau could be said to represent both sides of the same coin. Bouvier is undeniably a monster but is clearly insane(or is he?) whilst Rousseau is in full possession of his faculties and is determined to have Bouvier guillotined in order to further his own ambition, even to the point of cleverly gaining Bouvier's trust so as to extract a full confession.

    Ambiguity reigns supreme here and who better to play Rousseau than Noiret whose working relationship with Tavernier, numbering nine films, is a marriage made in heaven. Tavernier not only gifted Noiret challenging roles but wisely gave him free rein in performance. It is understandably Michel Calabru's tour de force as Bouvier that earned him a well-deserved César. His is inspired casting for he was mainly known for his appearances in the popular 'Gendarme' series and there was nothing in his cinematic CV that would suggest he was capable of a performance of this magnitude. His tenure throughout the 1950's with the Comédie Francaise undoubtedly stood him in good stead for this demanding role.

    Marvellous support from Jean-Claude Brialy, veteran Renée Faure and moving up the ranks, the twenty-one year old Isabelle Huppert who would again work with Tavernier and Noiret in 'Coup de Torchon' and is here just one year away from her iconic role as 'La Dentelliere'.

    We owe Tavernier a debt of thanks for having brought legendary writing duo Jean Aurenche and Pierre Bost in from the cold and as one would expect from exponents of 'cinéma de qualité', their script is beautifully crafted, intelligent and trenchant. Tavernier's unerring sense of place and period and his eye for detail are in evidence here whilst his preferred cinematographer Pierre-William Glenn ensures gorgeous rural images. Inspired score by another of Tavernier's regulars Philippe Sarde with the final song based upon revolutionary tunes from the Commune.

    The final caption which points out that although Bouvier's unfortunate young victims numbered twelve, no less than twenty thousand children perished in the mines, serves as a stark reminder of how elusive was the concept of 'Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité'.

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    Crime
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight: Sob a Luz do Luar (2016)
    Drama
    Liam Neeson in A Lista de Schindler (1993)
    História

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    • Curiosidades
      This is a fairly straight-forward account of the crimes of Joseph Vacher. "Vacher" and "Bouvier" both mean "cowherd" in French. The names of many of the characters - like Lacassagne - have not been changed.
    • Erros de gravação
      You can see the shadow of the microphone and the boom moving across the wall of the chapel where the priest is giving his sermon about five minutes after the beginning.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Keskiyön auringon kuvat (1987)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      La Complainte de Bouvier l'Éventreur
      Music by Philippe Sarde

      Lyrics by Jean-Roger Caussimon

      Performed by Jean-Roger Caussimon

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    Perguntas frequentes15

    • How long is The Judge and the Assassin?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 10 de março de 1976 (França)
    • País de origem
      • França
    • Idioma
      • Francês
    • Também conhecido como
      • The Judge and the Assassin
    • Locações de filme
      • Ardèche, França
    • Empresas de produção
      • Lira Films
      • Société Française de Production (SFP)
      • France 3
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      • 2 h 8 min(128 min)
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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