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Le testament d'Orphée ou ne me demandez pas pourquoi

  • 1960
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 17m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
4K
YOUR RATING
Le testament d'Orphée ou ne me demandez pas pourquoi (1960)
BiographyFantasy

The Poet looks back over his life and work, recalling his inspirations and obsessions.The Poet looks back over his life and work, recalling his inspirations and obsessions.The Poet looks back over his life and work, recalling his inspirations and obsessions.

  • Director
    • Jean Cocteau
  • Writer
    • Jean Cocteau
  • Stars
    • Jean Cocteau
    • Françoise Arnoul
    • Claudine Auger
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jean Cocteau
    • Writer
      • Jean Cocteau
    • Stars
      • Jean Cocteau
      • Françoise Arnoul
      • Claudine Auger
    • 28User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
    • 75Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos10

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    Top cast34

    Edit
    Jean Cocteau
    Jean Cocteau
    • Self - the Poet
    Françoise Arnoul
    Françoise Arnoul
    • Elle-même
    • (uncredited)
    Claudine Auger
    Claudine Auger
    • Minerve
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Aznavour
    Charles Aznavour
    • Le Curieux
    • (uncredited)
    Lucia Bosè
    Lucia Bosè
    • Une amie d'Orphée
    • (uncredited)
    Yul Brynner
    Yul Brynner
    • L'huissier
    • (uncredited)
    María Casares
    María Casares
    • La princesse
    • (uncredited)
    Françoise Christophe
    Françoise Christophe
    • L'infirmière
    • (uncredited)
    Michèle Comte
    • La petite fille
    • (uncredited)
    Nicole Courcel
    Nicole Courcel
    • La mère maladroite
    • (uncredited)
    Henri Crémieux
    Henri Crémieux
    • Le professeur
    • (uncredited)
    Edouard Dermithe
    Edouard Dermithe
    • Cégeste
    • (uncredited)
    Luis Miguel Dominguín
    • Un ami d'Orphée
    • (uncredited)
    Guy Dute
    • Le premier homme chien
    • (uncredited)
    Michael Goodliffe
    Michael Goodliffe
    • English Narrator
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    Daniel Gélin
    Daniel Gélin
    • L'interne
    • (uncredited)
    Alice Heyliger
    • Eurydice
    • (uncredited)
    Philippe Juzan
    • 1st Man-Horse
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jean Cocteau
    • Writer
      • Jean Cocteau
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    7.23.9K
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    Featured reviews

    9Ziggy5446

    Jean Cocteau brilliantly evokes memories of his past triumphs!

    French national treasure Jean Cocteau's last film is as personal and private as it's title suggest. Le Testament d'Orphee is a fond farewell to cinema with it's free-flowing, spirited collection of images and scenes that includes characters from Cocteau's past films and personal friends. One would hardly imagine a cinematic poet like Jean Cocteau would be so crass as to make something like a mere sequel to his acclaimed Orpheus/Orphee (1950). And instead what Cocteau does is to give us perhaps cinema's first meta-film. The film itself is an autobiographical fantasia of his whole life. Playing various versions of himself, Cocteau glides through the film as a time traveler in search of his place in the universe. He called it an active poem.

    The film was shot on location at Les Baux in the South of France, a landscape whose rough limestone canyons appealed to Cocteau even more than Greece. Francine Weinweller and the main crew put up at that gourmet's mecca, the Hostellerie de la Baumaniere. Francine had a costume part in the film as La Dame qui s'est trompe d'epoque. All the icons out of Cocteau's past were woven into the visual testament - mirrors, horses, flowers, tapestries, and many of his friends - Dermit, Marais, Yul Brynner, Picasso and his wife, among others, appeared.

    Unfortunately for Cocteau, public and critics, weaned on the literature of commitment popularized by Sartre and Camus, turned their backs on Le Testament d'Orphee, finding it a self-serving celluloid relic, oddly out of step with the times. One voice, however, and an important one, praised the film. Young Francois Truffaut, winner of a large prize for his film Les Quatre Cents Coups, had turned the money over to Cocteau to help finance Le Testament. Truffaut liked the finished product, which he considered a remake, thirty years later, of Le Sang d'un Poete. Truffaut was not alone in seeing Cocteau, judged by his previous films, as one of the main precursors of New Wave filmmakers.

    Le Testament d'Orphee is a misunderstood masterpiece. Brilliant!!!!
    7Spondonman

    The Last Laugh And Testament of Jean Cocteau

    Ever since I first saw Orphee decades ago I thought it one of world cinema's Greats, a work of Art and underplayed panache that literally transcends Time. That was Part 2 of Jean Cocteau's Orpheus cycle in 1949 – in 1932 Part 1 Le Sang D'un Poete set the scene in a whimsical primitive way, and Testament was the convoluted Part 3 which became his final film released in 1960. First thing – if you enjoyed Orphee I recommend not watching this immediately afterwards, it's a contrast between gold and brass. Second thing - if you don't like pretentious art films this is a special case, it's still by far the best pretentious film I've ever seen and worth watching for its self-confidence. If you do like pretentious art films then to come clean I'm one of the denser people so disparaged by the previous exalted commenter therefore I have nothing I can impart to you. I've always considered this only as Cocteau's Testament – it's all about him and his thoughts of posterity at 70.

    Cocteau as film maker and poet stands between two worlds accused of being guilty of Innocence and is condemned to Life while his last film makes itself around him. There's a lot more to it, involving going backwards forwards and sideways in Time and Timelessness with or without trick photography, all of the cast large or small spouting cod-heavy aphorisms with gossamer realism or relevance. It gave him a chance to revisit the subject, and as he admitted at the end of the film to give some of his old friends (Casares, Perier, Dermithe etc) a job in the revisiting – after all, he was by now to use his own words from Orphee now "rotten with success" and could get away with murder. He died twice in here – even the Motorcyclists Of Death only wanted his autograph - and he lived and died to tell the tale. I can see where Banksy got his inspiration for his recent Mobile Phone Lovers from. I take away the image of Cegeste's image being saved from backward burning only for the image to be torn to pieces, that cerebral scene was worth the eighty minutes! The twenty minute wordy trial scene gets tiresome as you gradually realise its pointlessness apart from the padding out of the temporal running time. But there's plenty of tremendous imagery and heavy moralising throughout; Cocteau was incredibly talented, big on surrealism the occult and symbolism of all kinds, all more or less intellectual dead ends and as with many other big thinkers full of mumbo jumbo before and since he agonised over the merits and demerits of the Catholic Church, another dead end. Whereas with Orphee he made a film that could be enjoyed over the generations by all kinds of people with various levels of brainpower he created here a film so obscure it only plays like an in-joke raspberry to the world of the end of his life.

    So there you are – I do quite like Le Testament D'Orphee so hopefully Cocteau won't be sad wherever he is, it's just I'm not a poet and have an old nose for Art and Artifice. No matter how unique or interesting this film is to me or even for that matter to those of a higher intellect, he was simply having a laugh.
    9luminous_luciano

    the summit of surreal

    While clearly not the first in its eclectic genre, this classic is definitely a great round-up of all that is surreal - all that the ''mechanics'' of both surrealism as those of dream can be deemed to be all about... Said mechanics fascinated Cocteau, to the point that he had to make this, his final film, a very original ''sequel'' of sorts to his classic ORPHÉE. If only all sequels since had been so original!

    The cameos are indeed plentiful as also unexpected; many great stars of 1959 show up, from all fields as all continents! In this, the movie has a time capsule quality that only adds to its surrealness...

    Most amazing though is the cameo that is not and could have been; Chaplin, who admired Cocteau -and it was mutual- through the language barrier and everything else that separated them... They had met on a cruise and greeted each other as brothers, though unable to exchange a single word almost... Surely he would have accepted to don the clothes of the Tramp one more time for this unique film... What a surreal addition to an already singular film it would have been! Although, on that cruise, through interpreters, Chaplin had confided that he was sad that he had become rich while playing a poor man... Cocteau admired him all the more for that...

    Throughout "Le Testament d'Orphée", the film-goer has the impression of walking through someone else's dream - the director's dream. It is the goal of every film director to have his or her audience view things as if through the director's own eyes - well, I don't think anyone has ever succeeded quite like Cocteau did in this one, his cinematographic swan song as it was as well...

    Le Testament d'Orphée is thus highly recommended for so many reasons; Bergman fans as well as those left unimpressed somehow by "Un Chien Andalou", because it was too short; those few will undoubtedly appreciate the long treatment given to this by the master, Jean Cocteau...!
    Alph-2

    Cocteau's transcendent sense of wonder shines brightly.

    Jean Cocteau's final filmic flight of fantasy is very special indeed.

    Adopting the guise of a poet 'unstuck in time', Cocteau ranges over his life in the world of poetry. It's a phantasmorgorical whirl of imagery, with plenty of humour, pathos and an enormous, transcendent sense of wonder. There's also a trial sequence where the characters from his earlier success 'Orphee' try him for bringing them into existence !

    Some of Cocteau famous friends feature in brief cameos. Look out for Picasso and Bardot.

    You don't have to be a Cocteau fan to enjoy this movie. All you need is an interest in the nature of creativity and an enjoyment of poetry, symbolic art, and the wonderfully cinematic music of Georges Auric, who scored all Cocteau's major films.
    MukilLi

    This movie shows what a movie can be and should be.

    Although the elements involved in the last part of the trilogy (of course it's a trilogy!) are same, the movie is brilliant in the way it deal and approaches with a poet's final years. I loved the self-reference to the earlier versions and to Jean cocteau himself. The film touches A film inside a film, a stage inside a stage, a life inside a life, a body inside a body and ofcourse a world inside a world. This is a "timeless" classic. No pun intended. This just my first viewing, I intend to see it again and again. One interesting thing (a speculation) is the BULLET from the future world. I wonder whether James cameroon got inspired from this idea to come up with "The Terminator".

    Personally, I was always interested by the idea of NO TIME. This movie touches the possible cyclic nature of the time and sometime it even goes even further suggesting that -- ALL TIMES reside within ONE or NONE -- Well we're not supposed to understand it :) I loved the dig at intellectuals.

    I would recommend this movie to all surrealist and anybody who has the eternal question -- WHY?! This movie is not an answer nor it asks question. Just OBEY the natural laws and see the movie :)

    9/10

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    Related interests

    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
    Elijah Wood in Le Seigneur des anneaux : La Communauté de l'anneau (2001)
    Fantasy

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Cocteau's last film.
    • Quotes

      Cégeste: It's no use. An artist always paints his own portrait. You'll never paint that flower.

    • Connections
      Featured in Jean Cocteau: Autoportrait d'un inconnu (1983)
    • Soundtracks
      Orphée et Eurydice
      Composed by Christoph Willibald Gluck

      (1762)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 18, 1960 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Le testament d'Orphée
    • Filming locations
      • Les Baux de Provence, Bouches-du-Rhône, France
    • Production companies
      • Cinédis
      • Les Editions Cinégraphiques
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,977
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 17m(77 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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