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Thérèse Raquin

  • 1953
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
2K
YOUR RATING
Thérèse Raquin (1953)
CrimeDramaRomance

A truck driver kills the husband of the woman he loves, and becomes the object of blackmail.A truck driver kills the husband of the woman he loves, and becomes the object of blackmail.A truck driver kills the husband of the woman he loves, and becomes the object of blackmail.

  • Director
    • Marcel Carné
  • Writers
    • Émile Zola
    • Marcel Carné
    • Charles Spaak
  • Stars
    • Simone Signoret
    • Raf Vallone
    • Jacques Duby
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Marcel Carné
    • Writers
      • Émile Zola
      • Marcel Carné
      • Charles Spaak
    • Stars
      • Simone Signoret
      • Raf Vallone
      • Jacques Duby
    • 23User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Photos18

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    Top cast22

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    Simone Signoret
    Simone Signoret
    • Thérèse Raquin
    Raf Vallone
    Raf Vallone
    • Laurent
    Jacques Duby
    • Camille Raquin
    Maria Pia Casilio
    Maria Pia Casilio
    • Georgette, la bonne
    Marcel André
    • Michaud
    Martial Rèbe
    • Grivet
    • (as Martial Rebe)
    Paul Frankeur
    Paul Frankeur
    • Le contrôleur
    Alain Terrane
    • Un camionneur
    Bernard Véron
    • Le postier
    Jean Sylvère
      Francette Vernillat
      • Françoise, la bossue
      • (as Françoise Vernillat)
      Lucien Hubert
      • Le chef de gare de Dijon
      Jacques Hilling
      Jacques Hilling
        Jean Rozenberg
        Madeleine Barbulée
        • Madame Noblet, une cliente
        • (as Madeleine Barbulé)
        Danielle Dumont
          Nerio Bernardi
          Nerio Bernardi
          • Le médecin
          Roland Lesaffre
          Roland Lesaffre
          • Riton, le matelot maître-chanteur
          • Director
            • Marcel Carné
          • Writers
            • Émile Zola
            • Marcel Carné
            • Charles Spaak
          • All cast & crew
          • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

          User reviews23

          7.42K
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          Featured reviews

          8dbdumonteil

          The last great Carné.

          People generally think that Carné's heyday comes to an end with "les portes de la nuit" (1946)And it's sure that- whatever the new wave's view on the matter-these thirties and forties movies are among the very best French cinema gave to the world("le jour se lève" "quai des brumes""les enfants du paradis" and "hôtel du nord" ,to name but four are the crème de la crème ,easily equalling the best of Renoir)One always tries to minimize Carné's importance,mentioning the actors (Gabin,Arletty,Simon,et al)and Jacques Prévert's screen plays.One often forgets that Carné did direct these masterworks and he always chose the right actors,decorators(Alexandre Trauner who was to work in Hollywood later),musicians,with mind-boggling results.

          "Therese Raquin" (1953)came before the new wave but Carné 's credibility was sinking fast and he was given the coup de grace by his young "nouvelle vague" colleagues -before being restored to favor after 1980,actually after he stopped directing ."Therese Raquin is a fine mixing of pre and post -war elements

          Pre-war:the lovers' impossible dream,fate -here represented by a young sailor-,scumbags who cannot stand true love-the scene on the train between Raf Vallone and Jacques Duby recalls the famous one between Jean Gabin and Jules Berry in "le jour se lève" (1939) particularly when Vallone screams"are you gonna shut your mouth?"(the lines are almost the same).

          Post-war:the influence of the film noir-which was influenced by Marcel Carné's work mainly "le jour se lève"-who cares if it's a Zola adaptation?:the scenarists have transposed the action to the fifties,to the era of the making of the movie,and James Cain could have written it as the story reminds the spectator "the postman always rings twice:more than Tay Garnett's excellent version(1946),"Therese Raquin" is actually closer to Luchino Visconti's (Ossessione,1942),because of the Italian Raf Vallone's presence.

          But in spite of the transposition,Zola's spirit remains intact:the stifling petit bourgeois milieu in which Thérèse (Simone Signoret)lives is meticulously depicted:the notions store ,the walk on the Rhone banks,the ludicrous board game,the dreadful mother-in-law(Sylvie is absolutely extraordinary;after she suffered an attack after her son's death,she's completely paralyzed ; only her eyes (her frightening eyes) are alive,accusing her daughter-in-law:Cain's eye in the Bible.In her over possessive part of a mother who has turned her only child into a poor guy,a sissy,Sylvie surpasses the excellent Signoret and Vallone.

          No,Carné's career was not over in 1946,but after "Thérèse Raquin",the slump began:""les tricheurs" (1958)tried to catch up with the nouvelle vague with mixed artistical results,but has remained watchable."Trois chambres à Manhattan" (1965)was moderately interesting,thanks to its stars ,Maurice Ronet and Annie Girardot.After,it's downhill:"les jeunes loups" (1967)is a would be "a la mode" bomb,"les assassins de l'ordre"(1971) tried André Cayatte's style ,not exactly the right move and "la merveilleuse visite"(1973) failed dismally(as in "les visiteurs du soir",(1942),Satan sent two people,it's God's turn who send an angel!)

          "Thérèse Raquin" should not be missed.You won't be disappointed .
          7Hitchcoc

          Contrived, but So Was the Book

          Emile Zola wrote page turners. He focused on the injustices of the great unwashed of France, from miners to prostitutes. His books were incredibly naturalistic and moralistic. His characters seldom came through unscathed but made a statement about the cultural milieu of the time. This is a story about passion. Therese Raquin is the wife of a tiresome mama's boy hypochondriac. She is beautiful and is married to this childish wimp. Along comes the handsome truck driver after she has spent six empty years with this guy. They have tryst and even let the husband know that he is going to lose his wife. Everything changes when, on a train trip to Paris, fate takes over. Granted, there are lots of plot contrivances, but that's the literary style of the period. Also, in the naturalist tradition, the characters often lose control of their destinies. There is a broader moral sense that trumps the likable ending that people are used to in movies made at this time. The writer and the director can't turn their backs on issues like these and so life goes on and the impulsive and evil are punished alike.
          8Hitchcockyan

          Thérèse Raquin

          A riveting modernization of the eponymous Emile Zola novel, THÉRÈSE RAQUIN chronicles the adulterous infatuation between a burly truck-driver and the beautiful, badgered wife of his feeble colleague that results in murder, blackmail and psychological-damnation. Marcel Carné deftly taps into the mechanics of American film-noir of the 1940s with conspicuous blending of plots of two celebrated James M. Cain classics: "DOUBLE INDEMNITY" & "THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE" and skilfully harmonizes it with the drab and monotonous lifestyle of the French bourgeoisie. There are subtle nods to Hitchcock's "BLACKMAIL" and uncanny parallels with Park Chan-Wook's "THIRST" (which in retrospect make perfect sense as Park also borrowed significantly from the Zola novel.)

          Simone Signoret is phenomenal as the titular lead and her transformation from a browbeaten wife trapped in a loveless marriage to a sympathetic femme-fatale is adroitly handled. Her restrained turn might seem too stoic at first but she exudes volumes through her apathetic veneer. Raf Vallone (reminiscent of a brooding Burt Lancaster) is convincing as the impulsive truck driver who's determined on unshackling Thérèse from her oppressive, wretched existence. Roland Lesaffre's addition as the greasy, opportunistic sailor further strengthens the elements of suspense in the story. The naturalistic B+W photography is excellent and maintains a healthy balance between carefully choreographed claustrophobic scenarios and exquisite exterior compositions.

          Thérèse Raquin represents French film-making of the old school where storytelling was paramount and is recommended to connoisseurs of classic film-noir
          8frankde-jong

          The middle part of this film resonates the work of writers like Poe and Dostojevski

          Marcel Carné is mostly known for the films he made before the Second World War (such as "Le quai des brumes" (1938) and "Le jour se leve" (1939)), but also in 1953 he is still able to make an excellent film noir (for a change from the country that invented the name of this genre).

          The somewhat forgotten Roger Hubert is responsible for the beautiful black and white photography and Simone Signoret plays the femme fatale. I always remember Signoret the way she looked in her later years, her appearance thoroughly neglected, and every time I see a movie from her early days I am amazed how beautiful she ones was.

          The film begins rather weak. A young woman is married to a man that is silly in a caricatural way but does have a very attractive friend. There are more subtle ways to indicate that the film will be about adultery.

          Over time however the film goes stronger and stronger. The surprising ending nearly equals that of "Diabolique" (1955, Henri Georges Clouzot), also with Simone Signoret. What was most interesting to me however was the middle part, the confrontation between the woman and the mother in law afer the dead of the husband. In reality these confrontations are confrontations of the woman with her own conscience. This part of the film resonates the work of writers as Poe and Dostojevski.

          To conclude, something for the real filmbuffs. Maria Pia Casilio plays a tiny part as chambermaid in a hotel. From the first second I saw her I thought "I know that girl, she plays Maria in "Umberto D" (1952, Vittorio de Sica)". A little investigation proved that I was right, so I can count myself as a filmbuff.
          8MOscarbradley

          A fine updating of Zola to postwar France.

          Not the best of Marcel Carne by any means but an intelligent, measured if somewhat conventional screen version of Zola's novel, nevertheless. Simone Signoret is "Therese Raquin", the married woman whose affair with truck-driver Raf Vallone leads to murder and blackmail. She is, of course, excellent but this is Vallone's movie; it is an effortless performance of an ordinary man caught up in events over which he has no real control. It's also superbly shot in Lyon by Roger Hubert and the updating to postwar France fits the plot perfectly. In an American setting this could be by James M. Cain though the climatic twist is neater than anything Cain might have given us.

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          Storyline

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          Did you know

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          • Trivia
            Raf Vallone refused to be dubbed in the French version and had his contract amended accordingly. The scenario was also slightly changed to "Italianize" the character of Laurent.
          • Connections
            Featured in Mémoires pour Simone (1986)

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          FAQ16

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          Details

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          • Release date
            • November 6, 1953 (France)
          • Countries of origin
            • France
            • Italy
          • Language
            • French
          • Also known as
            • The Adultress
          • Filming locations
            • Studios de Neuilly, Neuilly-sur-Seine, Hauts-de-Seine, France(Studio)
          • Production companies
            • Paris Film Productions
            • Lux Film
          • See more company credits at IMDbPro

          Tech specs

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          • Runtime
            1 hour 42 minutes
          • Color
            • Black and White
          • Aspect ratio
            • 1.37 : 1

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