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IMDbPro

La poison

  • 1951
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
La poison (1951)
LA Poison: Crime Scene
Play clip1:19
Watch LA Poison: Crime Scene
1 Video
99+ Photos
ComedyCrime

Through a series of circumstances and plot twists an enterprising man manages to get away with murdering his wife, even though he cheerfully admits his guilt in court.Through a series of circumstances and plot twists an enterprising man manages to get away with murdering his wife, even though he cheerfully admits his guilt in court.Through a series of circumstances and plot twists an enterprising man manages to get away with murdering his wife, even though he cheerfully admits his guilt in court.

  • Director
    • Sacha Guitry
  • Writer
    • Sacha Guitry
  • Stars
    • Michel Simon
    • Jean Debucourt
    • Jacques Varennes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sacha Guitry
    • Writer
      • Sacha Guitry
    • Stars
      • Michel Simon
      • Jean Debucourt
      • Jacques Varennes
    • 13User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    LA Poison: Crime Scene
    Clip 1:19
    LA Poison: Crime Scene

    Photos130

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    Top cast55

    Edit
    Michel Simon
    Michel Simon
    • Paul Louis Victor Braconnier
    Jean Debucourt
    Jean Debucourt
    • Maître Aubanel
    Jacques Varennes
    Jacques Varennes
    • Le procureur
    Jeanne Fusier-Gir
    Jeanne Fusier-Gir
    • La fleuriste
    Germaine Reuver
    Germaine Reuver
    • Blandine Braconnier
    • (as Madame Reuver)
    Pauline Carton
    Pauline Carton
    • La mercière
    Albert Duvaleix
    • L'abbé Méthivier
    • (as Duvaleix)
    Henry Laverne
    • Le président
    Jacques de Féraudy
    • Jean Brun
    Jacques Derives
    • Jules
    Louis de Funès
    Louis de Funès
    • André
    Luce Fabiole
    • Amélie - la servante du curé
    Yvonne Hébert
    • Julie
    Roger Poirier
    • Un geôlier
    • (as Poirier)
    André Dalibert
    André Dalibert
    • Le gendarme
    • (as Dalibert)
    Max Dejean
    • L'épicier
    • (as Dejean)
    Michel Nastorg
    • Le brigadier
    • (as Nastorg)
    Nicolas Amato
    • Victor
    • (as Amato)
    • Director
      • Sacha Guitry
    • Writer
      • Sacha Guitry
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    7.41.7K
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    Featured reviews

    6richard-1787

    A minor masterpiece

    This is a minor masterpiece. It is Guitry at his most cynical - and that's saying a great deal. Michel Simon's wife, presented as a perpetual drunk, has no redeeming qualities whatsoever. The fact that she buys rat poison to do away with her husband, who appears to have no grievous faults, doesn't help her case any. Michel Simon delivers a truly first-rate performance as the husband. You don't feel that he's justified in killing his wife, but you certainly don't feel any regret that he does. Guitry's script, which treats husband-wife relations as a joke to be ridiculed, is delightful in an extremely cynical way. Misanthropy at its finest - whatever that may be.

    ----------------------------------------

    I watched this movie again tonight, and I marveled - and laughed - at the cynical genius of so much of it. The script is often brilliant, yes, but it is Michel Simon who makes it all work. His every scene is wonderful, but the scene with the lawyer after he has killed his wife, and then the trial scene, are devastatingly marvelous. This is a movie that could have great success as an American remake, updated - but who now could play the Michel Simon part?

    If you can deal with so realistic and cynical a view of human nature, you owe it to yourself to see this masterpiece. You may think you're cynical, but you will realize you have nothing on Sacha Guitry when it comes to cynicism.
    8kurosawakira

    The Chimera and The Clown

    One is perfectly justified to see this as social satire, but for me Guthry's "La poison" (1951) is, above all, an easygoing, darkly humorous and witty pastiche on acting in all its forms – taking on roles in marriage, in society, in one's own eyes, in others' eyes, and of course, in a film. The opening introductory credit sequence sets the mood perfectly, as there we are explicitly shown that we will witness a performance that has been carefully planned, all actors, actresses and staff selected. I don't think this is just a stylistic whim of exuberance, it's an actual set-up for us. There are several references to theatre with exits and entrances through doors, and space is handled with confines, scenes as separate entities, spaces as separate entities. And then there's the central scene in the lawyer's office, where they literally create a fabrication that when inverted becomes the desired reality for Simon's character. Reconstruction, deconstruction, all of this means the same in this wonderful scene.

    The chimera and the clown, death and joy – that's what the film is also about. This contrast of tragedy and comedy, its light-hearted darkness, presents itself also in the title, playing with the meaning of poison ("le poison" in French, with the masculine article) and the mocking identifier "la poison" (with the feminine article) given to… well, by all means watch the film and you'll find out.
    10skriptaparis

    further precisions

    To complete the previous comment (which I agree), I will add that Michel Simon's (clever) machiavelism is to visit the lawyer PRIOR the killing of his wife(pretending he already did it),in order to know how to commit the "perfect" murder without being sentenced as much as possible; smart!

    Maybe Sacha Guitry's most cynical movie about marriage. The famous Director/writer was an active womanizer and we may think that he was deceived by the female gender at this time (close to his death)and wished some revenge through this film (his young last wife -Lana Marconi- was supposedly interested in his money only and eventually sold his late husband's house in Paris to speculating promoters, only a couple of years after his death (the house was destroyed immediately to build a new building of no interest, whereas Guitry's last deep wish was to open a comedian's museum to exhibit his rarest manuscripts, costumes, theater memorabilia, etc.). What a pity!
    7vostf

    Sacha Guitry: 3/10, Michel Simon: 10/10

    Sacha Guitry is not a movie director, let alone a screenwriter. Guitry claims so in the opening credits sequence: "I daresay this is stage play." As for me this kind of heavy-handed foreword is out of place in a movie. "L'auteur, bien entendu" shows off and introduce us to the whole cast starting with a grand praise of Michel Simon. The monologue is good but Guitry is insufferably pedantic while we're supposed to get in the movie. Yet I admit this clunky device worked for Le Roman d'un tricheur, but only because 1/Guitry was the lead 2/he played a lifelong cheat and 3/he told us his life in a series of flashbacks.

    Now La Poison would have been really poor indeed were it not for Michel Simon's talent. Once Sacha Guitry lets the movie start it rolls up pretty good. The satirical tone tends to be heavy but with Michel Simon playing at times borderline dramatic that sets a good balance... until the movie gets clunky again. Michel Simon has a very good scene with his presumptive lawyer followed by an awfully serious one involving the lawyer and the visiting general attorney. There you can see that the movie needs Michel Simon as a driving force (and Germaine Reuver as the main resulting force of course) : that's a very low and overstretched point made just before the climax. The Climax: Guitry shoots it quite on the nose but the scene is so meaningful it doesn't require much more.

    The problem is after the climax the movie has nowhere to go. The satirical tone? It was good enough for the setup but it keeps playing like it's a light comedy (I'm sorry but satirical tone + murder doesn't necessarily make a dark comedy). So the people from the village keep playing the regular types they were assigned to and the trial is totally farcical. There you can only regret that the lawyer's part had been so blatantly undersized. As for Michel Simon if you let him become too strong a character he will overshadow everyone in the scene. And that's what happens: from the climax down to its end La Poison errs and cannot make up for Guitry's poor cinematographic vision.
    6gridoon2025

    Pitch-black comedy

    In an opening credits segment that's certainly original, writer-director Sacha Guitry appears in front of the camera and personally greets the actors and the rest of the crew who worked in this film. At one point, he mentions that he still sees film as theater (where he began his career), and you can tell - there are long scenes with two people sitting opposite each other talking, which on one hand allows you to admire the wit of the dialogue (the more French you pick up, probably the better), on the oher hand it makes the film feel sometimes talky and belabored. With that said, in other aspects "La Poison" is definitely ahead of its time - especially in the uncompomising, merciless blackness of its comedy. I doubt anyone in Hollywood could get away with this type of ending in 1951 (they could, for a while, before 1934 and the Code). Look out for a young Louis de Funès with plenty of hair! **1/2 out of 4.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Because the actor did not like doing retakes, Guitry accomodated Michel Simon by filming all of his shots in only one take.The actor later said in an interview, that La Poison was the most enjoyable experience he had making a movie in his entire long career.
    • Crazy credits
      There are no normal opening credits, director Sacha Guitry introduces everyone in the film.
    • Alternate versions
      There is an Italian edition of this film on DVD, distributed by DNA srl, "HO UCCISO MIA MOGLIE (1951) + IL FU MATTIA PASCAL (1926)" (2 Films on a single DVD), re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
    • Connections
      Featured in Monsieur de Funès (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Et la Vie est en Fête
      Music by Louiguy

      Lyrics by Sacha Guitry

      Performed by Lucienne Delyle

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 30, 1951 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Paul Braconnier
    • Production company
      • Gaumont
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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

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