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La femme du boulanger

  • 1938
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 13m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
2.6K
YOUR RATING
Raimu in La femme du boulanger (1938)
A small village rejoices at the arrival of a new baker. But when his young wife runs off with another man, he is unable to keep baking and the village is thrown into disarray.
Play trailer1:35
1 Video
24 Photos
ComedyDrama

A small village rejoices at the arrival of a new baker. But when his young wife runs off with another man, he is unable to keep baking and the village is thrown into disarray.A small village rejoices at the arrival of a new baker. But when his young wife runs off with another man, he is unable to keep baking and the village is thrown into disarray.A small village rejoices at the arrival of a new baker. But when his young wife runs off with another man, he is unable to keep baking and the village is thrown into disarray.

  • Director
    • Marcel Pagnol
  • Writers
    • Jean Giono
    • Marcel Pagnol
  • Stars
    • Raimu
    • Ginette Leclerc
    • Fernand Charpin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    2.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Marcel Pagnol
    • Writers
      • Jean Giono
      • Marcel Pagnol
    • Stars
      • Raimu
      • Ginette Leclerc
      • Fernand Charpin
    • 18User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:35
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    Photos24

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    Top cast21

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    Raimu
    Raimu
    • Aimable Castanier
    Ginette Leclerc
    Ginette Leclerc
    • Aurélie Castanier
    Fernand Charpin
    Fernand Charpin
    • Le marquis Castan de Venelles
    • (as Charpin)
    Robert Vattier
    Robert Vattier
    • Le curé
    Charles Blavette
    Charles Blavette
    • Antonin
    Robert Bassac
    • L'instituteur
    Marcel Maupi
    • Barnabé
    • (as Maupi)
    Alida Rouffe
    Alida Rouffe
    • Céleste, la bonne du curé
    Odette Roger
    • Miette, la femme d'Antonin
    Yvette Fournier
    • Hermine
    Maximilienne
    • Melle Angèle
    • (as Maximilienne Max)
    Charblay
    • Arsène, le boucher
    Julien Maffre
    • Pétugue
    • (as Maffre)
    Adrien Legros
    • Barthelemy
    Jean Castan
    • Esprit, un berger
    Marius Roux
    • Un messager
    Tyrand
    • Un messager
    Gustave Merle
    • Le Papet
    • Director
      • Marcel Pagnol
    • Writers
      • Jean Giono
      • Marcel Pagnol
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    7.52.5K
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    Featured reviews

    10Peekie

    The best of the Pagnol films

    My favourite of all the Pagnol films, including the recent ones, due to the timeless, moving performance by the great Raimu as the lovelorn baker. The French stars of that period have never been surpassed as character actors, and for this film the writer was a great character author.
    10brogmiller

    Give us this day our daily bread.

    Such a pity that over eighty years on this undisputed classic from the Golden Age of French cinema has attracted so few reviews but glad to see that most of them are appreciative and full of praise.

    Before an unfortunate rift in their professional relationship Marcel Pagnol and Jean Giorno enjoyed one of the most fruitful partnerships in the history of film.

    The most renowned of their collaborations is undoubdtedly 'The Baker's Wife' which Pagnol has adapted and considerably enlarged from an 'episode' in Giorno's novel 'Blue Boy'. The casting of Raimu who had already immortalised César in Pagnol's Marseilles trilogy is the icing on the cake.

    The story is simply told. Aimable the baker is married to a much younger Aurelie. She runs off with the local hunk and Aimable refuses to bake any more bread until she returns. Faced with this crisis the villagers set about getting her back. Husband and wife are eventually reconciled in one of the greatest scenes ever put on film and Aimable resumes baking 'le pain extraordinaire'.

    Raimu's performance as Aimable transcends the art of acting and voluptuous Ginette Leclerc is perfect as Aurelie. She went on to excel in 'Le Corbeau' but thereafter her career suffered from accusations of collaboration. Great supporting cast notably Fernand Charpin and Robert Vattier.

    This film was a resounding success in America, not only winning the New York Film Critics Circle for Best Foreign Film but clocking up a record-breaking seventy-five week run in New York alone.

    The rich characterisations plus the combination of comedy and pathos make this one of the handful of films that can truly be called sublime.

    Let us leave the final words to Albert Einstein: 'It is the finest, the most human film that I have ever seen'.
    9ecapes

    French comedy full of joy and feeling

    I was not aware of this warm-hearted comedy, but I am so glad I watched it. Made in France in 1938, it is full of genuine characters who would never have passed by the Hayes Code censors in the United States at the time. A small French village has suffered through first a poor baker, and then no baker at all. Now the villagers rejoice at the arrival of a new and talented baker, along with his young and very pretty wife. Disaster strikes in less than a week, when the baker's young wife suddenly runs away with a handsome young shepherd. The baker is devastated, and worse from the point view of the villagers, he loses the will to bake.

    While pivotal to the plot, the wife of the title is only one minor character in a film full of delightfully exaggerated characters. There are those who carry on cordial feuds that have lasted generations, on the assumption that "there had to be a good reason", while others are quick to start new ones. There is the agnostic schoolteacher, the earnest young priest, the entitled local landowner, the judgmental spinster, the long-winded storyteller, and so forth. None of these characters are presented with anything less than good-natured affection and delight. In a different film, the mockery some of the characters aim at the distressed baker could easily have tipped into cruelty, but meanness is never felt.

    Even in a cast full of delightful over-the-top characters, the lead Raimu, as Aimable the baker, stands out in every scene. He is the good-natured everyman, playing a comedic character who also remains fully believable. His genuine pain and disbelief at the unexpected disappearance of his wife is always felt, even while the film shows us the humour in every situation. The scene in which Aimable and his wife finally come face-to-face again is masterfully played. I intend to search out other films made by this French star.

    This joyful film is a not just fun to watch, but will leave you with both a smile on your face and a warm spot in your heart.
    10planktonrules

    incredibly charming story

    I really liked this movie a lot--especially because it had such a great ensemble cast. This movie was absolutely stuffed to the brim with characters from this community to give the movie great life and charm. In particular, the acting by Raimu as the baker was dynamite. He is a one-namer (like "Cher") that looks like a slightly skinnier Oliver Hardy and manages to use a wide variety of facial expressions and body language to convey so much emotion. When his heart is broken by his philandering wife, you really find yourself feeling for the guy! Overall, it was extremely well-acted and well-written and I strongly recommend it. However, be forewarned that the videotape by Interama Video Classics is VERY poor quality AND they use white subtitles that are often very hard to read. I don't know why, but almost EVERY French film from the 1930s I have tried to watch on video is almost unwatchable due to the degradation of the print. I'm not sure why this is, but it could easily turn people away from classics like this movie, and that would be quite a loss, as Marcel Pagnol who wrote this film was a true artist and master of his medium.
    10sb-47-608737

    Beautiful poem on screen

    It is an incredibly romantic poem that has been made into a silver screen story. In Urdu, there is a type of poem - Ghazal - the song that lovers sing when they are apart. This movie is one which could be equated to it.

    It is a village - a very small one - in which no two persons - either gender - sees eye to eye - and that includes the two who should - the Vicar and the teacher - who greatly dislike each other, and of course there is a great sinner there, the marquis of the territory, who has four 'nieces' living with him. Of course all know, and he too doesn't hide the fact about the relationship between him and his supposedly nieces. But he is incorrigible despite all the exhortation by the vicar (and he does explain why, and one can sympathise with his human - well one can call frailties).

    In this village arrives a middle age and not too handsome baker (Raimu) with his lovely and young (enough to be his daughter, as he tells her later) wife, Aurelie (Ginette Leclerc). Her love/romance-less life is awakened by a young and handsome shepherd Dominique (Charles Moulin) and she elopes with him. It all happens quickly and the rest of the movie deals with the suffering of the husband and the behaviour of the villagers. First natural, contemptuous and contemptuously sarcastic towards the cuckolded husband, the matters change, when they find that the baker has stopped baking. With the 'daily Bread' now gone, the only way is to search and bring the wife back to him, and in this effort all the enemies (including the Vicar and the teacher) bury their enmity. However that, and the ending is only consequential. The main thing that makes this exquisite is the pain and suffering of the cuckolded husband - and his feeling towards the wife that has betrayed him (and his still care, and support for her) - and even though he expresses his bitterness - in the end, allegorically, but not hidden to the audience - on or off screen - but still he is ready to forgive and forget - despite the wound inflicted - unlike any of the others - including the Vicar, who does preach the 'First stone' principle, but prefers that it - the confession and pardon of the sinner-ess, if caught - takes place in some one else's vicarage, not his. Only one who probably understand and really sympathises is the devil's disciple of the area, the Marquis, but as he has hinted, he too suffered from the affliction, or may be lack of it - though it is mentioned as love of flesh by Vicar - but really it was much more subtle and beautiful. The story, a few times might seem moving slow - especially at may places where it was almost monologue of the husband - but really can't be sped up - else it would lose the poetic quality - and added to it, it has some very witty dialogues - a few could be (and was, by the Vicar), blasphemous. Came across the movie just by chance - and I wonder why this doesn't figure in the "Movies before you die" lists.

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    Related interests

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    Comedy
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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      After WWII, Orson Welles came to see director Marcel Pagnol, told him he saw the movie and he would like to meet Raimu, "the greatest actor in the world" according to Welles. Pagnol answered Raimu recently died and Welles burst into tears. (Source: "Confidences" by Pagnol.)
    • Goofs
      During the shepherd's serenade his hands don't play the guitar in correlation to the chords heard.
    • Quotes

      Pétugue: I'm not speaking to Casimir either.

      L'instituteur: Why?

      Pétugue: Oh, it goes way back. My father and his father weren't speaking. And our grandfathers were already feuding. Mine didn't even know why. It went even further back. He figured there had to be a good reason.

      L'instituteur: This is a village of idiots.

      Pétugue: Not at all! Just a village where people have their pride.

      L'instituteur: A bunch of nobodies, none of you speaking.

    • Connections
      Featured in Les cent et une nuits de Simon Cinéma (1995)

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 7, 1938 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • The Baker's Wife
    • Filming locations
      • Le Castellet, Var, France
    • Production company
      • Les Films Marcel Pagnol
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,991
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 13m(133 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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