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La Traversée de Paris

Original title: La traversée de Paris
  • 1956
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
4.6K
YOUR RATING
La Traversée de Paris (1956)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer2:45
1 Video
76 Photos
Period DramaComedyDramaWar

Two men carry at night four suitcases of contraband meat across German-occupied Paris during WWII. Their opposite personalities and strange encounters provoke different adventures - until th... Read allTwo men carry at night four suitcases of contraband meat across German-occupied Paris during WWII. Their opposite personalities and strange encounters provoke different adventures - until they are arrested by the police.Two men carry at night four suitcases of contraband meat across German-occupied Paris during WWII. Their opposite personalities and strange encounters provoke different adventures - until they are arrested by the police.

  • Director
    • Claude Autant-Lara
  • Writers
    • Marcel Aymé
    • Jean Aurenche
    • Pierre Bost
  • Stars
    • Jean Gabin
    • Bourvil
    • Jeannette Batti
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    4.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Claude Autant-Lara
    • Writers
      • Marcel Aymé
      • Jean Aurenche
      • Pierre Bost
    • Stars
      • Jean Gabin
      • Bourvil
      • Jeannette Batti
    • 24User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 2:45
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos76

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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Jean Gabin
    Jean Gabin
    • Grandgil
    Bourvil
    Bourvil
    • Marcel Martin
    Jeannette Batti
    • Mariette Martin
    Georgette Anys
    Georgette Anys
    • Lucienne Couronne, la patronne du cafe Belotte
    Robert Arnoux
    Robert Arnoux
    • Marchandot
    Laurence Badie
    Laurence Badie
    • La serveuse du restaurant
    Myno Burney
    • Angèle Marchandot
    Germaine Delbat
    • Une cliente du restaurant
    Monette Dinay
    Monette Dinay
    • Madame Jambier
    Jean Dunot
    Jean Dunot
    • Alfred Couronne, le patron du cafe Belotte
    Bernard Lajarrige
    Bernard Lajarrige
    • Un agent de police
    Jacques Marin
    Jacques Marin
    • Le patron du restaurant Saint Martin
    • (as Jacques Morin)
    Hubert de Lapparent
    Hubert de Lapparent
    • L'otage nerveux
    Hans Verner
    Hans Verner
    • Le motard
    • (as Jean Verner)
    Hugues Wanner
    Hugues Wanner
    • Le père de Dédé
    • (as Huges Wanner)
    Louis de Funès
    Louis de Funès
    • Jambier, l'épicier
    Martine Alexis
      Béatrice Arnac
      Béatrice Arnac
      • La femme arrêtée
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Claude Autant-Lara
      • Writers
        • Marcel Aymé
        • Jean Aurenche
        • Pierre Bost
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews24

      7.34.5K
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      Featured reviews

      10raskimono

      A true masterpiece

      Claude Aurent-Lara was one of the best directors France ever produced. A good director takes a similar harmless story and elevates to high art. A bad one cannot. It is in the way he frames a shot, builds the tension and especially the transition shots that define one. In that case, Aurent-Lara ranks up there with the likes of Eisenstein and Hitchcock. The man was an ultimate craftsman who understood cinema. Shame on Truffaut who just showed his ignorance for slamming him and his movies. This movie also known as four full bags teams two of France's biggest stars of the era, Jean Gabin and the one name Bourvil in a delicious comedy with a human heart. It is WWII and occupied France is running short of pigs thus creating a black market for it. Bourvil's job is to get the already killed pig's carcass aka pork in four cases and deliver it to the seller who will take it to the market. He meets and enlists the "homeless" Gabin to assist. They must outwit scared Parisiens and Nazis on the night watch to achieve this deceitfully simple task. That is all you need to know to enjoy this war time romp. The laughs come at a clip a minute, mainly from the garrulous and belligerent Gabin with Bourvil, the straight man in their Lawrence and hardy relationship. Before the night is over and daylight comes, we shall meet dogs, drunks, experience the fear of an occupied people who hope for a better tomorrow all done with a airy touch. And the last scene will make any cinema lover and human being rejoice. I love this movie so much, I think though it is not as complex as Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove shares its agony and eccentricity of the nature of war.
      8Horror-yo

      No overreaction here but just: a very good film

      It's interesting how quality is just quality. It doesn't matter that you might be a millennial watching this film from France, from the 50's, it's just as good as any more contemporary or culturally relevant top drawer picture.

      The best feature in this is efficiency. It's short and sweet (just about 1hr20min), no scene ever stalls the movie, no line in the dialogue branches out into its own thing. It's tight, focused, and efficient. It knows exactly what it's about.

      It's both fantastical in its concept and terribly realistic at the same time. Both lead actors were perfect for the cast and play their roles perfectly, while Louis de Funes is also excellent in a more secondary but not any more quiet role.

      The film dishes out bits of life lessons here and there, forces a bit of thought and perspective, but never feels self-complacent or happy about itself. It delivers the goods, with a super simplistic plot, a bit of humor, a bit of wisdom, a bit realism, a bit of fantasy; it's a little tragic, but also quite light... and it does it damn well.
      9pzanardo

      Funny and profound; a gem of French cinema

      "La traversee de Paris" is a brilliant and often profound blend of comedy and drama. The story is rather uncommon and told in a most anti-rhetoric way. During World War II, in Paris occupied by the Nazis, two men have to deliver four cases filled with pork meat, for the black market. They cross the city overnight, trying to avoid French cops and German soldiers, as well.

      The fun is mainly based on the duets between the two "heroes", Grandgil (Jean Gabin), and Martin (Bourvil), supported by a first-rate witty script. These two characters are drawn with psychological depth. Grandgil is somehow a mysterious man. Sometimes he seems to be a sort of thug. He despises and bullies innocent by-standers. He wants to cheat and steal the pork meat, following a sort of selfish anarchism. But many clues make the viewer feel that all this should be a Grandgil's joke. On the contrary, Martin is proud to be a decent person, and to keep honest and correct even working for the black market. The unavoidable quarrels arising between the two men build a non-standard but deep friendship. Extraordinary is the actors' job. Jean Gabin is deservedly a cinema legend, and never disappoints the audience. Here the always excellent Bourvil is on a par with his great partner.

      On the background we have the masterly rendered atmosphere of those bleak years. French people is oppressed by deprivations and lack of food. Patriotism and heroic resistance are far from being appreciated. People are widely depressed by French defeat on the battle-field, and just wait for the end of the war and of German invasion. The first scene sets the tone of the movie. A blind beggar plays the Marseillese with his fiddle. Martin is displeased. What's the point of vainly provoking the Nazis? However he gives a coin to the beggar. And even a German officer gives money to the blind man. As a matter of fact, German soldiers do not appear as cruel barbarians. The officer who questions Grandgil and Martin is even nice. But when something wrong happens (namely, an attack against a German colonel), then the inhuman ferocity of Nazism shows his face. And the French hostages blame the partisans for that! Meanwhile, the swashbuckler Grandgil, always ready to despise other people's cowardice, realizes that in tragic circumstances one must care only for himself and his own life. There is a lot of depth in these scenes, believe me.

      It is not surprising that this excellent movie was reviled by French audiences and critics when released. This anti-heroic, even petty representation of French people at war-time, was surely hard to swallow.

      A magnificent nocturnal photography and artistic camera work, together with a first-rate direction by Autant-Lara, add further value to this superb movie.

      The final scene may appear somehow stuck to the movie. But it contains an important message. Life has won, life continues. Common, simple, decent people survived. Barbarians have lost, doomed to destruction by their own infernal wickedness.

      "La traversee de Paris" is a gem of French cinema. Highly recommended.
      searchanddestroy-1

      One of the most famous French movie ever

      I guess all over the world, moviegoers know this film, for its cast and dialogues. Typical French cinema at its peak, far far better than LES VISITEURS crap made in the nineties. Jean Gabin, Bourvil and Louis De Funès - then still a supporting character, not very well known yet - are absolutely unforgettable in those fantastic roles. The story takes place in Paris, under German occupation, during WW2. You can easily watch this film without getting tired, you can watch it over and over again, you enjoy it more and more. Like a good wine, the more you wait to watch it between your movies sessions, the better it is. One scene in particula, between Gabin Bourvil and De Punès is particularily terrific and funny in the same time, a concentration of talent of the most important actors that French movie industry has ever had. An absolute must see. Claude Autant Lara's masterpiece, and best know, worldwide known film.
      jameswtravers

      Bourvil and Gabin at their funniest

      The bringing together of two great comic actors of the calibre of Jean Gabin and Bourvil could not fail to be a great success, but this film surpasses the audience's expectations by several hundred kilometres. For both actors, this is a real tour de force. Bourvil is the hapless stooge to Gabin's outrageously forceful character, and the double act is unbelievably funny. One can't help but have pity for the poor unemployed Parisian as his night-time trudge across Paris is turned into his worst nightmare.

      Whilst much of the humour is in the performance of its two stars (joined by Louis de Funes in that amazing cellar scene near the start of the film), the script is well-written and genuinely funny in places. The menace of the Nazi threat is there all the same, and this is heightened by the darkened sets representing a deserted Paris, resounding with the distant tread of the German patrols. The last twenty minutes of the film is a distinct contrast to what preceded it, and the humour appears to fade very quickly into drama. Luckily, our heroes emerge unscathed (possibly), but the threat of what might have been substantially changes one's view of the film.

      Needless to say, when this film was released in 1956, scarcely 10 years after the end of the Second World War, it was widely reviled. It presented a view of the occupation that, whilst honest and accurate in retrospect, had never before been seen in French cinema and which was simply too much for many to stomach. Gabin's character was a particular target for scorn, representing a cynical free-thinking attitude that could only be regarded as dangerous and anti-Republican. The film's director, Claude Autant-Lara, should be credited with immense courage in presenting to the French people his perception of the war, unadulterated by the constraints of convention. That he should achieve this through one of the funniest of French films is a remarkable achievement.

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        Filmed in color but processed in black and white.
      • Goofs
        Crew is seen in the mirror when Grandgil pass the door of Martin's home.
      • Connections
        Featured in Louis de Funes intime (2007)
      • Soundtracks
        La Marseillaise
        Composed by Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle

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      FAQ17

      • How long is The Crossing of Paris?Powered by Alexa

      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • October 26, 1956 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • France
        • Italy
      • Languages
        • French
        • German
      • Also known as
        • The Crossing of Paris
      • Filming locations
        • Rue Poliveau, Paris, France
      • Production companies
        • Franco London Films
        • Continental Produzione
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $18,297
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $9,997
        • May 26, 2013
      • Gross worldwide
        • $18,297
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 25m(85 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.37 : 1

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