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Le souffle au coeur

  • 1971
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Le souffle au coeur (1971)
ComedyDrama

As France is nearing the end of the first Indochina War, an open-minded teenage boy finds himself torn between a rebellious urge to discover love, and the ever-present, almost dominating aff... Read allAs France is nearing the end of the first Indochina War, an open-minded teenage boy finds himself torn between a rebellious urge to discover love, and the ever-present, almost dominating affection of his beloved mother.As France is nearing the end of the first Indochina War, an open-minded teenage boy finds himself torn between a rebellious urge to discover love, and the ever-present, almost dominating affection of his beloved mother.

  • Director
    • Louis Malle
  • Writer
    • Louis Malle
  • Stars
    • Lea Massari
    • Benoît Ferreux
    • Daniel Gélin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Louis Malle
    • Writer
      • Louis Malle
    • Stars
      • Lea Massari
      • Benoît Ferreux
      • Daniel Gélin
    • 53User reviews
    • 51Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 2 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 3:08
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos101

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Lea Massari
    Lea Massari
    • Clara Chevalier
    • (as Léa Massari)
    Benoît Ferreux
    Benoît Ferreux
    • Laurent Chevalier
    • (as Benoit Ferreux)
    Daniel Gélin
    Daniel Gélin
    • Charles Chevalier
    • (as Daniel Gelin)
    Michael Lonsdale
    Michael Lonsdale
    • Father Henri
    • (as Michel Lonsdale)
    Ave Ninchi
    Ave Ninchi
    • Augusta
    Gila von Weitershausen
    Gila von Weitershausen
    • Freda (the prostitute)
    Fabien Ferreux
    Fabien Ferreux
    • Thomas
    Marc Winocourt
    Marc Winocourt
    • Marc
    Micheline Bona
    Micheline Bona
    • Aunt Claudine
    Henri Poirier
    Henri Poirier
    • Uncle Léonce
    Liliane Sorval
    Liliane Sorval
    • Fernande
    Corinne Kersten
    Corinne Kersten
    • Daphné
    Eric Walter
    • Laurent's friend
    François Werner
    François Werner
    • Hubert
    René Bouloc
    René Bouloc
    • Man at Bastille Day party
    Jacqueline Chauvaud
    Jacqueline Chauvaud
    • Helene
    Jacques Gheusi
    • Hotel receptionist
    Yvon Lec
    Yvon Lec
    • Father Superior
    • Director
      • Louis Malle
    • Writer
      • Louis Malle
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews53

    7.511.3K
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    Featured reviews

    10epat

    Sophisticated naughtiness.

    This is one of my all-time favorite films.

    Young Laurent Chevalier, his mother & his roguish elder brothers break every taboo known to small-town 1950s Dijon: underage drinking, underage sex, blasphemy, incest, petty theft, adultery, art forgery, whoremongering, drunk driving... What more can you ask? Malle treats their escapades with such lighthearted sympathy & wit you can't help liking them.

    Before I first saw Soufflé au Coeur, I read a blurb for it in the monthly listings of my local repertory cinema that ran something like this (I quote from memory): "This film does a lot to restore the French to their former reputation for sophisticated naughtiness." I can't sum it up any better than that.
    9Sylviastel

    Moving, controversial but lovable film

    Louis Malle perhaps has directed his most controversial film about Laurent and his complicated relationship with his mother. Because he is the youngest of three boys, he is still a virgin and coddled like the family baby. The film seems to last forever but in a beautiful moving way. We watch as his beautiful Italian vivacious mother seems to attract admirers even her own son. Without discussing the film's oedipal issues, the film has some very pleasant scenes and some that are not so pleasant. Maybe Malle is trying to bring reality of a young body's sexuality. His two older brothers are not the sympathetic or kind older brothers to him especially. Laurent is truly the film's most important character but his mother is definitely the most important figure in his life. As he comes of age, she has to grasp with losing him to another woman, the inevitable outcome of any mother-son relationship. We learn a lot about Laurent's mother too in this film. While sexuality is another theme in this classic film, there are touching scenes between the Laurent and his mother. As he finds himself attracted to other women, he becomes daring, insulting and even unlikable. I won't give away the ending of this film. But it's worth watching even today more than 30 years later, I cannot believe it's older than me. It seems like it could have been done today and that's why it's a classic film.
    9zetes

    a beautiful coming of age story

    There have been a million coming of age stories in the history of the world, most of them probably in the film medium. What a pathetic thing to have to endure something as trite as the American film American Pie when something like The 400 Blows exists. Murmur of the Heart will remind most of that classic, and, akin to French films such as Zero for Conduct, The 400 Blows, and Malle's own Au Revoir Les Enfantes, it is excellently acted, both by the adults in the film and the children (here, though, they're teens), and it is infinitely more truthful than most American films of the same genre. Murmur of the Heart falls just short of The 400 Blows, but it is a worthy successor to it. Beware, though. This film's main theme is sexuality, and there are some very disturbing scenes, even thought the mood of the film is quite light-hearted. 9/10
    9movedout

    Malle's finest....

    It's high comedy. It's French bourgeois lifestyle. Louis Malle's delicate style of working with taboo subject matter reached a personal plateau with a dysfunctional household in "Murmur of the Heart", an early reach back into his own garden of memories and familial idiosyncrasies that he has stringently plucked from over the years. He approaches it with an innocent intent, cheeky, but still innocent nonetheless. Through the nostalgic and mean-spirited jibes at the domestic help, clergy and stiff-lipped crust of high society, it commences on a journey of an adolescent male, Laurent Chevalier (Benoit Ferreux) in Dijon, France circa 1954. He longs to break free to that stage of enlightened adulthood that seems just within reach but yet so very far. But within its pith, it's the very antithesis of melodrama. Taking on its inviolable subject matter's horns with both hands, it wrangles it to the ground while giving us something to think about. It's definitely not about exorcising ghosts of the past but to let them regale us with stories of unforgettable youth.

    After 35 years, "Murmur of the Heart" still rings truer and closer to home than most contemporary comedies (and even dramas) revolving around the "coming of age" and "sexual awakening" in a young teen. It's also more daring and liberal in its construction of key family members being part of that very natural formation of sexual DNA and identity. They discuss philosophy. They discuss suicide. They discuss "The Story of O". Laurent and his 2 older brothers consort in disrespectfully petty behaviour contrary to what their upbringing holds sacred. Laurent's a top student, an intellectual that sees the world around him as a playground. It's a smalltime superiority complex as he defines his sensitive sensibilities with discernment beyond his years and a haughty disregard for divergent thoughts with a self-important air.

    Revolving primarily about Laurent and his mother, Clara ("L' avventura's" Lea Massari), it's a refreshing look at a parental relationship based around adoration and fondness (coming under constant mocking by his brothers) than the contemporaneous and contemptuous notion of disdain and rebelliousness surrounding the authority figures and generational gaps. It underlines the idiom of a mother being her son's first love. In its essence, it encapsulates many complicated mother-child relationships including the emotional Oedipal issues that do crop up. And through that, a lovely parallelism is wrought with its interpretation of a woman who wants to be a girl and a boy who wants to be a man.

    Conforming to an almost sitcom style, its self-dependent, autonomous scenes and situations just about start to border on farcical proportions. Its characters place sex and carnality high up on a pedestal, while Malle condescendingly films it as something so pedestrian and run-of-the-mill, not worth the hype and excitement over it anyway. He makes the patient, inevitable buildup to a key sex scene that had caused controversy when it was first released, to seem more natural and accepting than he does the sexual encounters that actually do seem the norm in society.
    7mjneu59

    still overshadowed by controversy

    Only in France would an otherwise typical coming-of-age comedy lead up to a tender moment of incest, and perhaps only Louis Malle could have filmed it with such grace, tact, and good humor. The director's adolescent alter-ego is a gangly, jazz-happy son of a wealthy gynecologist, teased by his two older brothers, coddled by his cosmopolitan young mother, and suspicious of his father confessor's less than spiritual attentions. The discovery of a heart murmur sends him and his mother to a distant spa, where fate and nature conspire toward a fleeting indiscretion. But because Malle takes the time to establish his characters, and does so with such obvious affection, the moment is not as racy or obscene as it sounds. Curiously, the young hero's growing pains are also linked to his country's problems in Indochina, so is it any wonder, with the adult world in such turmoil, that a boy would rebel against the conventional wisdom of his elders?

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Pauline Kael, "what makes this movie so different from other movies about bourgeois life is that the director, Louis Malle, sees not only the prudent, punctilious surface but the volatile and slovenly life underneath. He looks at this bourgeois bestiary and sees it as funny and appalling and also - surprisingly - hardy and happy. It is perhaps the first time on film that anyone has shown us the bourgeoisie enjoying its privileges." Also for Kael, "it's a movie not about how one has been scarred but about how one was formed."
    • Goofs
      During the chess match, the boys are sitting on what should be the spectator sides of the board, rather than the player sides. It appears that the chessmen were set up along the files rather than the ranks. (The lower right hand corner squares are black, when they should be white.)
    • Quotes

      Clara Chevalier: Why not take things as they come?

      Laurent Chevalier: Meaning?

      Clara Chevalier: I don't know. Begin at the beginning. Wait to experience things yourself. And there's plenty of time. I'm not rushing you. Everyone has to discover love for himself. Lots of things can happen between a man and a woman. Better to find out for yourself, not from a book.

    • Connections
      Featured in Arena: My Dinner with Louis (1984)

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 28, 1971 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
      • West Germany
    • Official site
      • Gaumont (France)
    • Languages
      • French
      • Latin
      • Italian
      • English
      • Greek, Ancient (to 1453)
    • Also known as
      • Murmur of the Heart
    • Filming locations
      • Passage de la Geôle, Versailles, Yvelines, France(opening scene, as a street in Dijon)
    • Production companies
      • Nouvelles Éditions de Films (NEF)
      • Marianne Productions
      • Vides Cinematografica
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,160,784
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,160,784
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 58 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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