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Les enfants terribles

  • 1950
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
4.5K
YOUR RATING
Jean Cocteau in Les enfants terribles (1950)
Drama

The dangerously obsessive relationship between a psychologically manipulative brother and sister who isolate themselves and draw others into their mind games.The dangerously obsessive relationship between a psychologically manipulative brother and sister who isolate themselves and draw others into their mind games.The dangerously obsessive relationship between a psychologically manipulative brother and sister who isolate themselves and draw others into their mind games.

  • Director
    • Jean-Pierre Melville
  • Writers
    • Jean Cocteau
    • Jean-Pierre Melville
  • Stars
    • Nicole Stéphane
    • Edouard Dermithe
    • Renée Cosima
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    4.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jean-Pierre Melville
    • Writers
      • Jean Cocteau
      • Jean-Pierre Melville
    • Stars
      • Nicole Stéphane
      • Edouard Dermithe
      • Renée Cosima
    • 32User reviews
    • 46Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 nominations total

    Photos18

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    Top cast16

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    Nicole Stéphane
    Nicole Stéphane
    • Elisabeth
    Edouard Dermithe
    Edouard Dermithe
    • Paul
    Renée Cosima
    • Dargelos…
    Jacques Bernard
    • Gerard
    Melvyn Martin
    • Michael
    Karin Lannby
    • The Mother
    • (as Maria Cyliakus)
    Jean-Marie Robain
    Jean-Marie Robain
    • Headmaster
    Maurice Revel
    • Doctor
    Rachel Devirys
    Rachel Devirys
    Adeline Aucoc
    • Mariette
    Emile Mathys
    • Vice Principal
    Roger Gaillard
    • Gerard's Uncle
    Jean Cocteau
    Jean Cocteau
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    Annabel Buffet
    • Le mannequin
    • (uncredited)
    Pierre Bénichou
    • Young schoolboy (Extra)
    • (uncredited)
    Hélène Rémy
    Hélène Rémy
      • Director
        • Jean-Pierre Melville
      • Writers
        • Jean Cocteau
        • Jean-Pierre Melville
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews32

      6.94.5K
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      Featured reviews

      bobsgrock

      Fate lends a hand to unraveling relationships.

      Jean Cocteau, considered one of the foremost French artists of the 20th century, wrote and narrated this bizarrely familial tale about a brother and sister who have a strong love/hate relationship that expresses itself in high-strung shouting bouts that result in one of them storming out of the room. Clearly, this is a volatile relationship that is only made worse when the elder sister, Elisabeth, marries a young, rich mogul named Mike who unexpectedly leaves his entire fortune to her. Adding to this drama is the brother, Paul, being injured in a snowball fight and forced to rest extensively in Elisabeth's mansion.

      As a young girl and man that are acquaintances of the siblings enter the equation, the drama heats up which leads to serious revelations and underlying feelings coming to the surface. Such a story in the early 1950s had to be seen, even in Europe, as somewhat controversial given the incestuous undertones of Elisabeth and Paul's relationship. Even so, to see classic Cocteau as directed by a young, up-and-coming Jean-Pierre Melville still feeling out his soon to be unique and inspired style.

      Though at times a bit French-flavored melodrama and bizarre psycho- sexual encounters, Les Enfants Terribles still has enough power and creative camera work to engage the viewer up until the blunt conclusion.
      7lasttimeisaw

      Les enfants terribles

      Another KVIFF viewing of Jean-Pierre Melville's tribute section, after LE SAMOURAI (1967, a 9/10). This one is Melville's earlier work, a collaboration with Jean Cocteau, an adaption of Cocteau's internationally famed eponymous novel, which at first glance would seem to be deviated from Melville's comfort zone, the film has a more explicit portrayal of humanity in its darkest corner, and the fodder has a comprehensive penchant to theatricality and character study.

      A quite conspicuous clash comes from the cast, to wit Edouard Dermithe, the leading protagonist as Peter, who would not be Melville's first choice but thanks to Cocteau's relentless insistence (Edouard is said to be his lover at that time), notwithstanding his dandy contour is unable to deliver any conceivable conviction which his role should have embodied, no matter how many close-ups swooping upon his statuesque face, it is certainly beyond the rescue even Melville had exerted himself to the utmost. Nicole Stéphane and Renée Cosima, on the other hand, are the messiahs of the cast, several emotion-eruption takes are right to the point.

      At least Melville still manifests his capacity is other department of the films, the cinematography from DP Henri Decaë infuses very seclude intimacy during the siblings' scenes when a whiff of incestuous ambiguity permeates the whole frame. When the setting moves to the grand apartment in the latter part in the film, the spiderweb of deconstructing an immoral subterfuge foiled with riveting and labyrinthine shots culminates the film with a quite amazing coda, which by no means should be even scarcely credited for Mr. Dermithe.

      So the win-win combo seems not to fire up to one's expectation, and it is a quite qualified candidate needs a remake, then who is the proper person at the helm? I dare to suggest Jacques Audiard if one must be French.
      dwingrove

      Creative Schizophrenia - Two Great Auteurs Don't Mix!

      First, I have to admit that I nearly didn't write this comment at all. I read a rave review of Les Enfants Terribles by an earlier user and agreed with (almost) every word of it. What more was there to add? Then I searched my soul for a day or so, and had to admit that this film REALLY does not work for me - brilliantly directed, skilfully acted, moodily photographed and lyrically scored though it may be.

      For all its many splendours, this Melville film of a Cocteau novel suffers from a malady I can only describe as "creative schizophrenia." It is recognisably a work by two highly individual artists, each of whom creates his own distinctive and magical world. No film by Melville could ever be mistaken for anybody else's. The same is true of Cocteau.

      How do these two worlds mix together? To put it bluntly, not at all. This is most apparent in the (mis)casting of the androgynous and incestuous brother-sister duo. With his porcelain cheekbones and languid sensuality, Edouard Dhermitte is a classic Cocteau actor. (He was, in fact, Cocteau's lover at the time.) With her politicised Left Bank angst and 'butch' vitality, Nicole Stephane is a classic Melville heroine. (She had starred in his much finer 1947 film Le Silence de la Mer.) These two actors scarcely seem to belong on the same planet, let alone in the same family.

      Still more disheartening is the utter lack of allure of Renee Cosima, a pudgy young ingenue who is cast as the brother's two ambisexual love objects - the sadistic schoolboy Dargelos and the lovelorn model Agathe. Lacking even the tiniest flicker of charisma, whether as a man or as a woman, Cosima makes it difficult for us to empathise with the hero's erotic longings, or to care much about the hothouse melodrama that breaks loose as a result.

      Try as I might to warm to this film, I cannot help imagining it with a different cast. As the brother and sister, Helmut Berger and Dominique Sanda from The Garden of the Finzi Continis. As the androgynous sexual pirate Agathe/Dargelos, maybe Katharine Hepburn from Sylvia Scarlett or Indrid Thulin from The Magician or (why not?) the immortal Anne Carlisle from Liquid Sky. Most important of all - and I know this smacks of heresy - I would much rather Cocteau had directed it himself. One great auteur should be enough for any film.

      David Melville
      6brogmiller

      'Suicide is a mortal sin'.

      Jean Cocteau wrote his novel 'Les enfants terribles' in 1929 whilst in a clinic undergoing a cure for opium addiction. He has entrusted the direction of the film version to Jean-Pierre Melville who freely admits that he made it 'essentially to please myself without much thought of the public'. Therein I think lies the problem for although he has captured the claustrophobic spirit of the original I felt somehow disengaged to the extent that the eventual fates of brother and sister left me unmoved.

      Cocteau had launched the career of Jean Marais but by comparison Edouard Dermithe is alas too bland to be of interest as Paul and it is left to the astonishing Nicole Stéphane as Elisabeth to make up the deficit. Her performance is electric and it is to be regretted that her career was hampered by a car accident.

      Cocteau was deeply hurt by the drubbing the film received and typically referred to its critics as 'completely ignorant.' However, with the passing of time this bizarre, off-beat and disturbing opus has acquired cult status.
      dbdumonteil

      Brother and sister.

      "LES PARENTS TERRIBLES" directed by Cocteau himself : an over possessive mother and her selfish husband destroy their son's life.

      "LES ENFANTS TERRIBLES" directed by Jean -Pierre Melville: a sister and a brother tear each other in pieces .The sister is Nicole Stephane whose performance is quite impressive ,and she rises to the occasion when it comes to portray such a terrifying character (Cocteau lines are mysterious and threatening,"she didn't marry him for love , neither she did for his money but she did it for his death")When we make acquaintance with them,they live under a "carapace" and their mother -soon to die- is no more alive than Mrs Bates in "psycho" .Around them,a young man and a young girl who will be no more than puppets in their hands (mainly Elisabeth's (Stephane))Halfway between cinema and theater -but as when Cocteau himself directed- we never feel we are watching a filmed stage production.The dialogue is weird,now childlike ,now intriguing,often bewildering ,always brilliant with terrific lines like the one I quote above.The voice over ,which is often superfluous in other works -is here thoroughly relevant -and besides it's Cocteau's voice!-

      Children who refuse to grow up?A fraid of the world outside?Youngsters fascinated by death? Incestuous relationship?

      Strange how ,with the staggering exception of "la belle et la bête " ,Cocteau's movies display a gloomy cold atmosphere and a doomed fate :his "l'aigle à deux têtes" and "les parents terribles" as well as Delannoy's "l'éternel retour" and "la princesse de CLèves" or Pierre Billon's "Ruy Blas".

      As for Melville,I always preferred his non-gangsters movies (this one,"le silence de la mer" "Léon Morin prêtre" ,"l'armée des ombres" ) to his thrillers (the likes of "le samouraï " or "le cercle rouge" ) which are no more than rehash of American film noirs with absurd metaphysical pretensions at that.

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Jean Cocteau was allowed a day of shooting, when Jean-Pierre Melville wasn't feeling up to the mark. Cocteau was to follow Melville's instructions exactly or do nothing at all. Eight shots in all, which were supposed to be of a summer's day but were done in midwinter in the rain.
      • Goofs
        The amount of blood on Paul's face changes between when he is in the shop and when he is in the taxi.
      • Quotes

        Narrator: Young people imagine the worst right away, yet the worst seems unreal to them, since they're unable to imagine death.

      • Alternate versions
        The song that Michael sings while sitting at the piano was deleted for the original American release.
      • Connections
        Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une vague nouvelle (1999)
      • Soundtracks
        Concerto in A minor for 2 violins and string orchestra (Opus 3, No. 8; RV 522)
        Written by Antonio Vivaldi

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      FAQ14

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      Details

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      • Release date
        • March 29, 1950 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • France
      • Official sites
        • distributor's official site for individuals
        • Distributor's official site for professionals
      • Languages
        • French
        • English
      • Also known as
        • Jean Cocteau's Les enfants terribles
      • Filming locations
        • Ermenonville, Oise, France
      • Production company
        • Melville Productions
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        1 hour 45 minutes
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.37 : 1

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