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Le mangeur de citrouilles

Original title: The Pumpkin Eater
  • 1964
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
Anne Bancroft in Le mangeur de citrouilles (1964)
Official Trailer
Play trailer3:26
1 Video
84 Photos
Psychological DramaTragedyDrama

Beautiful mother of five Jo leaves the banality of her marriage to second husband Giles to wed her passionate screenwriter lover, Jake Armitage. As her suspicion of Jake's philandering grows... Read allBeautiful mother of five Jo leaves the banality of her marriage to second husband Giles to wed her passionate screenwriter lover, Jake Armitage. As her suspicion of Jake's philandering grows, Jo's sanity spirals.Beautiful mother of five Jo leaves the banality of her marriage to second husband Giles to wed her passionate screenwriter lover, Jake Armitage. As her suspicion of Jake's philandering grows, Jo's sanity spirals.

  • Director
    • Jack Clayton
  • Writers
    • Penelope Mortimer
    • Harold Pinter
  • Stars
    • Anne Bancroft
    • Peter Finch
    • James Mason
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    3.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jack Clayton
    • Writers
      • Penelope Mortimer
      • Harold Pinter
    • Stars
      • Anne Bancroft
      • Peter Finch
      • James Mason
    • 51User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 6 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Pumpkin Eater
    Trailer 3:26
    The Pumpkin Eater

    Photos84

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    Top cast56

    Edit
    Anne Bancroft
    Anne Bancroft
    • Jo Armitage
    Peter Finch
    Peter Finch
    • Jake
    James Mason
    James Mason
    • Conway
    Janine Gray
    Janine Gray
    • Beth
    Cedric Hardwicke
    Cedric Hardwicke
    • Jo's Father
    Rosalind Atkinson
    • Jo's Mother
    Alan Webb
    Alan Webb
    • Jake's Father
    Richard Johnson
    Richard Johnson
    • Giles
    Maggie Smith
    Maggie Smith
    • Philpot
    Eric Porter
    Eric Porter
    • Psychiatrist
    Cyril Luckham
    Cyril Luckham
    • Doctor
    Anthony Nicholls
    Anthony Nicholls
    • Surgeon
    John Franklyn-Robbins
    John Franklyn-Robbins
    • Parson
    John Junkin
    John Junkin
    • Undertaker
    Yootha Joyce
    Yootha Joyce
    • Woman in Hairdressers
    Lesley Nunnerley
    • Waitress at Zoo
    • (as Leslie Nunnerley)
    Gerald Sim
    Gerald Sim
    • Man at Party
    Frank Singuineau
    Frank Singuineau
    • The King of Israel
    • Director
      • Jack Clayton
    • Writers
      • Penelope Mortimer
      • Harold Pinter
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews51

    7.13.1K
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    Featured reviews

    10mmitsos-1

    Realistic and Disturbing Portrait of a Bad Marriage

    This is my absolute favorite film of all time, and Anne Bancroft's performance is her best. Made in 1964 and set in London, this film tells the story of a woman who is in the middle of her third marriage, to a screenwriter, played by Peter Finch. Her character, Jo Armitage, is a woman who truly seems to find her self-worth and happiness only when she is pregnant and raising children. Once her children become even only slightly older, she seems to lose her sense of purpose, and allows herself to become quite isolated in the world. Her current husband, the screenwriter, doesn't make matters any better for her either.

    This is definitely Anne Bancroft's film all the way, and she is breathtakingly beautiful in it as well. Her portrayal of Jo Armitage paints a very lonely, depressed, lost, and in many ways pathetic character...but it is also strangely my favorite performance of Bancroft. Look also for wonderful supporting performances by James Mason and Maggie Smith. This film weaves a disturbing yet very realistic portrait of a bad marriage (some might just say "marriage"), and it should be studied for its acting and its writing. In addition, Georges Delerue's musical score is superb, and I am always searching for the film's soundtrack, but have had no luck. Thanks to beautiful art direction by Edward Marshall, their home interior is also gorgeous...'60's chic. I've seen this film at least 60 times, and never tire of it. It's a quiet little masterpiece.
    9bookwoman-3

    overlooked gem

    I came upon this movie on late night t.v. a few years back. I really love Anne Bancroft and I think that she is, not underrated, but more correctly, overlooked as a great actress. This film is a wonderful study of a marriage in trouble and Ms. Bancroft and the great Peter Finch are so believable as lovers and as a married couple that I wondered why I had never even heard of the film before. I felt their pain - wait, sorry . . . I think someone else named Clinton coined that phrase. But seriously, Anne Bancroft is able to really convey heartbreaking loneliness that you just want to cry or help her in some way. I love movies that engage you thoroughly. If you enjoy movies that make you think and also have a viewpoint about human relations, please try to find this film. An added bonus is a wonderful appearance in a small role by Maggie Smith - certainly a very early one in her career. I really like finding gems like this!
    10dmwhite50

    Brilliant Study Of A Marriage

    There are scenes from this movie that have been burned into my memory for years-- Anne Bancroft being accosted a crazed and lonely housewife while in a beauty parlor, her nervous breakdown in the middle of Harrod's in London, James Mason revealing her husband's infidelity to her cruelly while having tea at the zoo-- The Pumpkin Eater is one of my favorite movies. Anne Bancroft never gave a better performance-- she is startlingly good-- plus the excellent Harold Pinter screenplay and the brilliant direction of Jack Clayton-- this film is an eloquent essay on isolation and emptiness among other things. I recommend this film to all serious students of acting, writing, and directing. What a brilliant performance by the great Anne Bancroft. She won many awards for inc,, and should have won the Oscar Award also.
    10rockstar74

    My Favorite Film

    I love Mortimer's book and Pinter's script follows it closely. Bancroft has always been my favorite actress and I think this is her greatest performance. I'm glad she flew to England and convinced Jack Clayton to hire her. It is no wonder her talent has been compared to Magnani! Finch and Mason are flawless but it is definitely Bancroft's film. She is so convincing it is as though you can read her character's every thought through her facial expressions. She was robbed of the Academy Award. Yootha Joyce is excellent in a bit part during a beauty parlor scene. The actors in this film are all so good that I feel like I am peering into the lives of real people. Anyone who has been in a relationship with someone who has been unfaithful can relate to this film. I love Clayton's use of flashback to tell Jo's story. I think he was an underrated director. The score by Georges Delerue is beautiful and I wish it were available in his cd catalog.
    8blanche-2

    Scenes from a Marriage

    "The Pumpkin Eater" is the story of a bad marriage and a character study of the wife, Jo Armitage (Anne Bancroft) and a partial study of the husband, Jake (Peter Finch). Directed by Jack Clayton and with a screenplay by Harold Pinter, the film has a good deal that is unspoken; it's obtuse at times and can leave the viewer with a lot of questions. It's not a film for everyone, as it moves slowly - I can't see audiences of today going for it - it's totally character driven.

    Jo is a woman whose fulfillment comes from children and pregnancy. We first see her standing in her home with a stunned look on her face and reminiscing about different facets of her life. One facet is as a happy young woman living in a barn and being introduced to fledgling screenwriter Jake by her second husband. In the next flashback, she's with Jake and discussing the upcoming marriage with her father (Cedric Hardwicke). He's blunt - she has too many kids - so he offers to pay to send the two oldest boys to boarding school, and he also leases a house for them.

    The film is not entirely in flashback. It switches back and forth and finally settles in the present. Quite early on, we return to Jo today standing in the house. She goes to Harrod's and has a nervous breakdown.

    Jo is in love with a man who loves her as best he can, but it's not enough for her. They have a child together, and though he loves and is good to all of the children, they get in the way of his relationship with Jo. He invites her to a film set in Morocco; she doesn't go. She becomes pregnant again; he tells her that he thought at this point, with the money they have, that they would be free to travel. Now they're back where they started. We suspect when we meet a young woman, Philpot (Maggie Smith) who stays with the family for a time because she's been put out of her flat, that Jake cheats. Jo suspects it; he denies it. Then she gets some devastating news from an odd friend (James Mason).

    One is really left with a bad feeling about marriage, and as someone on this board pointed out, it's easy to see both sides of the situation. The psychiatrist Jo sees asks her, can she only justify having sex if she becomes pregnant? When the psychiatrist tells her he's going away for two weeks and can't see her, he tries to make future appointments and she says she can't make it. She evidently feels rejection very easily. Jo needs to be needed and wanted, and she loves the honeymoon -the new man, the new baby - but she can't handle much of the aftermath.

    The film doesn't take sides. It's a fascinating story of what two people can do to one another and what people attract into their lives.

    Anne Bancroft is one of the greatest actresses of all time and one of the most ravishingly beautiful. You'll never see her name in a list of top beauties because even with her huge, luminous eyes, her classically sculpted face, her thick hair and her gorgeous smile and her husky voice, she was never about her looks. She was always about a great, committed performance. Bancroft does more with her eyes and facial expressions here than most actresses can do with a ton of dialogue. The camera doesn't love her, it adores her, and here closeups are used to great advantage. Her performance is quietly stunning, quietly shattering, just like her face. She devastates the viewer here in a different way from her more overt performance in "The Miracle Worker," but she still devastates. What a loss to film and the theater.

    Peter Finch is excellent as Jake - very handsome and sexy, warm with the children - you could really see why he was so adored by women, and I for one didn't understand why Jo wasn't on every film set with him all day, every day. He's two men, really - he's a husband who does love his wife, but he's emotionally childish as well and takes his frustrations and anger out by sleeping with other women.

    "The Pumpkin Eater" is one of those films that you might not even care for while watching it. You might not even totally get what's going on all the time, but it will stay with you. You'll go over it in your head, and you won't forget it. In this way, it reminds me of two brilliant movies, "Damage" and "In the Bedroom" - like those films, "The Pumpkin Eater" is a harrowing experience.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This movie never explains its title, which refers to a traditional children's rhyme: "Peter, Peter, pumpkin eater/Had a wife, but couldn't keep her/So he put her in a shell/And there he kept her very well." This serves as the epigraph of Penelope Mortimer's original novel.
    • Goofs
      In the shot after Jake pours out his drink on Conway, the film is being run backwards for some reason, as the smoke from the cigarette clearly indicates.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Jo Armitage: Yes. I'll have one.

    • Connections
      Featured in James Mason: The Star They Loved to Hate (1984)

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 15, 1964 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Pumpkin Eater
    • Filming locations
      • Turville, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(Cobstone Windmill - the Armitage's country house with views of town below)
    • Production company
      • Romulus Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 58m(118 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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