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Le messager

Original title: The Go-Between
  • 1971
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
6.9K
YOUR RATING
Alan Bates and Julie Christie in Le messager (1971)
DramaRomance

A tale of torrid and forbidden love between a couple in the English countryside.A tale of torrid and forbidden love between a couple in the English countryside.A tale of torrid and forbidden love between a couple in the English countryside.

  • Director
    • Joseph Losey
  • Writers
    • Harold Pinter
    • L.P. Hartley
  • Stars
    • Julie Christie
    • Alan Bates
    • Dominic Guard
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    6.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph Losey
    • Writers
      • Harold Pinter
      • L.P. Hartley
    • Stars
      • Julie Christie
      • Alan Bates
      • Dominic Guard
    • 64User reviews
    • 34Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 10 wins & 11 nominations total

    Photos102

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    Top cast18

    Edit
    Julie Christie
    Julie Christie
    • Marian Maudsley - Lady Trimingham
    Alan Bates
    Alan Bates
    • Ted Burgess
    Dominic Guard
    Dominic Guard
    • Leo Colston
    Margaret Leighton
    Margaret Leighton
    • Mrs. Maudsley
    Michael Redgrave
    Michael Redgrave
    • Older Leo Colston
    Michael Gough
    Michael Gough
    • Mr Maudsley
    Edward Fox
    Edward Fox
    • Hugh Trimingham
    Richard Gibson
    Richard Gibson
    • Marcus Maudsley
    Simon Hume-Kendall
    • Denys
    Roger Lloyd Pack
    Roger Lloyd Pack
    • Charles
    Amaryllis Garnett
    • Kate
    • (as Amaryllis Garnet)
    Keith Buckley
    Keith Buckley
    • Stubbs
    John Rees
    • Blunt
    Gordon Richardson
    • Rector
    Jim Broadbent
    Jim Broadbent
    • Spectator at Cricket Match
    • (uncredited)
    Carl Dane
    • Coachman
    • (uncredited)
    Joshua Losey
    • Boy in Village
    • (uncredited)
    Arnold Schulkes
    • Servant
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Joseph Losey
    • Writers
      • Harold Pinter
      • L.P. Hartley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews64

    7.26.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8kijii

    Another Pinter-Losey Masterpiece

    This movie is the third joint venture paring writer Harold Pinter and director Joseph Losey. The other two are The Servant (1963), and Accident (1967). This venture, combined with a top-notch cast, makes for a great film: No. 56 of the BFI's Top 100. Yet sadly, the movie has not been restored, in its original aspect ratio for DVD, and I had to see it on VHS in the full screen pan-and scan version.

    I've a feeling that this is one of those films that MUST be seen in its original wide screen format, since the photography of the English countryside setting is crucial to the movie, and anything less does not tell the movie's whole story!

    Michael Redgrave tells the story, in retrospect. It begins as a 12-year- old boy, Leo (Dominic Guard), comes to spend the summer of 1900 at a large English country estate. He is a guest there, and his relationship to the family is never made clear. We don't learn much about his background except what we overhear: that his mother is a widow from the city. As he is introduced at the family dinner table, he tells them that he knows magic and has conjured up curses on people, but this seems a game between him and the other boy his age on the estate, Marcus.

    As the two boys play, the rest of Marcus' family starts to emerge as Marcus tells Leo about them while pointing them out. We view their lazy hot summer's life as they attempt to occupy themselves with conversation, nature, art, culture, and games. Leo attempts to fit in with the family led by its matriarch, Mrs. Maudsley (Margaret Leighton). Leo also becomes attracted to Marus' older sister, Marian (Julie Christie), and develops a puppy love for her. (At one point he proclaims that he would do almost anything for her.) She, in turn, shows an admiration for him.

    One day as the family goes out for a swim, they encounter their lower- class neighbor, Ted Burgess (Alan Bates), who is trespassing on their property by swimming in their lake. Leo later meets Ted and is gradually taken into his confidence. At Ted's coaxing, he starts to secretly deliver notes to Marian, and she, in turn, returns notes to Ted, through Leo.

    Feeling 'out of the loop,' Leo wants to know more. He eventually asks Ted to tell him about sex ('spooning'). At almost thirteen and with no father to guide him, Leo has never been told the facts of life. Yet, he senses that he should know more and that Ted will explain it to him-- though he never really does. When Marian becomes engaged to an upper- class gentleman, Ted seems displeased. However, after a brief break off in communications; Ted and Marian begin their secret exchanges again with Leo still acting as their dutiful Mercury-like 'go-between.' Then, on Leo's thirteenth birthday, he suddenly learns the shocking nature of his carried missives.

    This film, accented by Michel Legrand's score, has a mysterious, almost Gothic, feel about it. There seems to be something always missing, just out of view, waiting to be discovered. But, just as Leo is never made part of the secret, neither is the audience--until the surprising ending.
    8fwhichard-344-426261

    The Past is a Different Country. They do things differently there.

    I recently watched this film after having seen it as a teenager. Both experiences touched me but in significantly different ways. Not unlike the storyline in the film ironically.

    The film is beautifully crafted and almost perfect in every way. All the actors are brilliantly cast and do a great job at hiding only slightly their true emotions and motivations. Those who know and love The Age of Innocence will appreciate the way the story unfolds.

    At its core is the story of how class norms and rigid rules of behavior affect an innocent young boy, at what surely is his most vulnerable time of his life.

    Some may find the pace slow. I did when I first saw it as a teenager. Please give this film time to develop. Resist those swift "5 minutes and I am out" rules so many millennials tend to apply today. Resist please. And above all, give your full attention to this small masterpiece. Watch for the small changes in tone and body language these great actors provide us.

    Then, when young viewers are a little older and life has provided them a few joys and pains, please revisit this film as I did. I sense your emotions may bathe over you as mine did recently.

    Enjoy this film.
    6SnoopyStyle

    moments of great intensity

    It's turn of the century in the English country. Young Leo Colston is spending the summer with his rich school friend Marcus Maudsley's family estate. He is taken with Marcus' older sister Marian Maudsley (Julie Christie). He encounters tenant farmer Ted Burgess (Alan Bates) who recruits him to deliver love letters between Ted and Marian.

    Harold Pinter adapted the screenplay from a novel. It's a rather leisurely stroll through the country especially in the beginning. The plot is not that complicated. The tension is not raised until the introduction of Burgess. There is always a sense of danger beneath the generally loving character. This inherent instability within him is the most compelling part of the movie. Marian has one great scene. It's a two hours costumed romance. It's a bit slow with moments of great intensity.
    7StillNotDigital

    Evocative record of a very hot (and stately) Norfolk summer

    I agree with the previous reviewer that the time-shifts seem unnecessary and serve only to complicate the film. There's also an unlikely implication that the events of the Norfolk summer which Leo experienced 40 years ago were so traumatic that he had become psychologically incapable of getting married.

    But for me, although there's not much that happens in the plot, this film is heavy with nostalgia. It was the first school film I saw on arriving at a Northamptonshire boarding school. Like Leo, I was 13 and didn't understand everything that was going on.

    Would I recommend it to today's youth? Well yes, but I wouldn't expect a large proportion of them to sit the entire way through it. It just doesn't have anything like the pace of today's blockbusters or teen movies. The enjoyment of this film is now largely an intellectual one -- it's about the laughable views of the upper class, and about book-to-film transfers.

    Incidentally, to my knowledge, this film has never been available for sale on DVD. And yet in March 2006, it was given away as a freebie DVD with the UK's Sunday Telegraph. The film industry is seriously undervaluing its back-catalogue. Who knows what next -- Lindsay Anderson's brilliant 'IF' in a packet of cereal??
    7bkoganbing

    Summer with the Maudsleys

    The period piece films of Ivory-Merchant have nothing on Joseph Losey's The Go Between. In fact I'm sure that James Ivory and Ismail Merchant more than likely modeled their own films on the ambience of Victorian England that Losey gave to this fine production.

    Young Domenic Guard is invited to spend his summer with his school chum Richard Gibson's family in their country home. The Maudsleys live in grand style and Gibson's parents are Michael Gough and Margaret Leighton. When Gibson comes down with the measles, the hospitality slack is taken up with his older sister Julie Christie. She's engaged to Edward Fox cricketeer and Boer War hero. They all make Guard feel quite welcome and he has the run of the place.

    The Go Between is set in those more strict and innocent times and it could never work today. But given the lavishness of the sets and costumes you really do feel you're back in the post Boer War days of Queen Victoria. And a young kid like Guard's character at thirteen could really be as innocent as he is. But he is approaching puberty and he's got lots of questions.

    On a family outing he and the rest meet up with farm hand Alan Bates, a rough type. Pretty soon for his new friend Christie young Guard finds himself taking messages back and forth to Bates from Christie and vice versa.

    She may be marrying Fox, but it's Bates that gets her mojo working. Back in those days only Viennese like Sigmund Freud and his colleagues were discussing things like that. Losey with scriptwriter Harold Pinter nailed those Victorian attitudes down quite well.

    I can't believe that The Go Between got no Oscar recognition in either the set or costume design categories. Margaret Leighton did receive an Oscar nomination for her role in the Supporting Actress category. Her scene with young Domenic Guard as she suspects what's going on with her daughter is well played by both.

    The Go Between is a great expose of Victorian manners and morals and a sumptious piece of film making.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The movie was based upon L.P. Hartley's novel of the same name. The opening line of the novel has become somewhat well-known: "The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there." That same line--spoken by the voice-over narrator--opens this movie.
    • Goofs
      For a film partly set in 1952, many of the vehicles are of a much later period. As Leo gets in his hired car at Norwich Thorpe station, a late 1950s Ford Consul saloon and a BMC 1800 saloon from around 1969 are seen. Also, the village scenes include a 1962 Austin A35 van.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Older Leo Colston: The past is a foreign country. They do things differently there.

    • Connections
      Featured in Aquarius: Come Lancing/Joseph Losey (1971)
    • Soundtracks
      Le Messager (The Go-Between) (Thème Du Film)
      Written and Performed by Michel Legrand

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 18, 1971 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Go-Between
    • Filming locations
      • Melton Constable Hall, Melton Constable, Norfolk, England, UK(Brandham Hall)
    • Production company
      • EMI Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,379
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 56 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Alan Bates and Julie Christie in Le messager (1971)
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