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Les Duellistes

Original title: The Duellists
  • 1977
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
29K
YOUR RATING
Harvey Keitel and Keith Carradine in Les Duellistes (1977)
From genre-defining films like 'Alien' and 'Blade Runner' to 'Gladiator' and 'The Martian,' we break down the cinematic trademarks of director Ridley Scott.
Play clip1:40
Watch A Guide to the Films of Ridley Scott
2 Videos
99+ Photos
Period DramaWar EpicDramaWar

France, 1801. Due to a minor perceived slight, mild-mannered Lieutenant d'Hubert is forced into a duel with the hot-headed and irrational, Lieutenant Feraud; their disagreement ultimately re... Read allFrance, 1801. Due to a minor perceived slight, mild-mannered Lieutenant d'Hubert is forced into a duel with the hot-headed and irrational, Lieutenant Feraud; their disagreement ultimately resulting in scores of duels spanning several years.France, 1801. Due to a minor perceived slight, mild-mannered Lieutenant d'Hubert is forced into a duel with the hot-headed and irrational, Lieutenant Feraud; their disagreement ultimately resulting in scores of duels spanning several years.

  • Director
    • Ridley Scott
  • Writers
    • Gerald Vaughan-Hughes
    • Joseph Conrad
  • Stars
    • Keith Carradine
    • Harvey Keitel
    • Albert Finney
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    29K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ridley Scott
    • Writers
      • Gerald Vaughan-Hughes
      • Joseph Conrad
    • Stars
      • Keith Carradine
      • Harvey Keitel
      • Albert Finney
    • 152User reviews
    • 78Critic reviews
    • 70Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 BAFTA Awards
      • 2 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos2

    A Guide to the Films of Ridley Scott
    Clip 1:40
    A Guide to the Films of Ridley Scott
    The Duellists
    Clip 2:12
    The Duellists
    The Duellists
    Clip 2:12
    The Duellists

    Photos126

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    Top cast36

    Edit
    Keith Carradine
    Keith Carradine
    • Armand d'Hubert
    Harvey Keitel
    Harvey Keitel
    • Gabriel Feraud
    Albert Finney
    Albert Finney
    • Fouché
    Edward Fox
    Edward Fox
    • Colonel
    Cristina Raines
    Cristina Raines
    • Adèle
    Robert Stephens
    Robert Stephens
    • Gen. Treillard
    Tom Conti
    Tom Conti
    • Dr. Jacquin
    John McEnery
    John McEnery
    • Amiable Second
    Diana Quick
    Diana Quick
    • Laura
    Alun Armstrong
    Alun Armstrong
    • Lacourbe
    Maurice Colbourne
    Maurice Colbourne
    • Tall Second
    Gay Hamilton
    • Maid
    Meg Wynn Owen
    Meg Wynn Owen
    • Léonie
    Jenny Runacre
    Jenny Runacre
    • Mme. de Lionne
    Alan Webb
    Alan Webb
    • Chevalier
    Arthur Dignam
    Arthur Dignam
    • Captain with Eyepatch
    Matthew Guinness
    Matthew Guinness
    • Mayor's Son
    Dave Hill
    Dave Hill
    • Cuirassier
    • Director
      • Ridley Scott
    • Writers
      • Gerald Vaughan-Hughes
      • Joseph Conrad
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews152

    7.428.6K
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    Featured reviews

    10matija

    One of the few great, timeless movies.

    Often, when you watch a movie, you can tell when it was made.

    It deals with the mores and prejudices of the time it was made. The costumes are done without attention to detail or the hair-styles of the leading actors don't belong to the time when the movie is supposed to be taking place.

    Not this movie.

    It deals with timeless themes: courage, fate, inevitability,

    honor. The costumes are impeccable, and even the hair-styles change as time progresses, exactly as the fashions changed during the times of the Napoleon. Without knowing the actors (though the cast is composed of excellent, justifiably famous artists), there is no way to tell it was made in 1977. It might have been made yesterday, or it might have been filmed on the spot.

    If you enjoy a movie where attention was paid to every detail to make it a true piece of art, if you enjoy dramatic photography thoughtful themes, and just the barest suggestion of dry humor, this is the movie for you.
    Dodger-9

    Good looking debut

    After making a string of acclaimed adverts, Ridley Scott followed fellow ad man Alan Parker onto the big screen with his debut movie.

    The Duellists was based on a tale by Joseph Conrad (who inspired Apocalypse Now and the ship names for his 1979 feature, Alien - Nostromo and Narcissus).

    As you my expect from Ridley, every scene looks gorgeous and is obviously the mark of a man moving from 30 second promotional films into the big screen world.

    Harvey Keitel (later to star in Thelma and Louise) and Keith Carradine are the Hollywood stars acting alongside a wealth of British thesps including Albert Finney, Diana Quick, Tom Conti, Pete Postlethwaite and Veronica Quilligan (later to play the innocent protagonist of Neil Jordan's Angel).

    The movie is clearly inspired by Stanley Kubrick's Paths of Glory and Barry Lyndon and looks like a dry run for Gladiator's battle scenes.

    It deals with the themes of honor, obsession and violence. Needless to say, the futility of war and the destructive nature of revenge leads to the twist that both men have been duelling for so long, in the end they actually forget what it was that set them off on their feud.

    The duels are stunning, the attention to detail is meticulous and the movie won a string of awards, including 'Best Debut Film' at the 1977 Cannes film festival.

    Top trivia

    * The budget was so tight that Scott was forced to use producer David Puttnam and other crew members as extras.

    This was an extension of his earlier short films, a potted version of Paths of Glory in which a handful of extras (including Tony Scott) go over the wire and run round the camera before repeating the exercise. Smoke and editing hide the fact that there were so few people involved.

    *The Duel, as it was originally called, was to be made for French TV as a one-hour film.

    *The scene where the French army is bogged down was shot in a ski resort near Inverness.

    *After EMI turned down the script, Scott flew the project to Chicago and the company Hallmark...

    *After the French deal collapsed and the $700,000 budget proved too rich for Hallmark's blood, one of the bosses saw its potential as a film and suggested that Scott try and make it as a movie.

    *The eventual budget was a mere $900,000. Scott clinched the dealing by telling Paramount he would put up a completion bond and that he would start pre-production on the day of the meeting. He would start shooting within a couple of months.

    The thought of filming a movie like that in September left the suits slack of jaw.

    In the sun-kissed world of la la land, making a Joseph Conrad movie in Winter sounded like a nightmare.

    *Scott had originally wanted to make a Western but lacked the cash to fly off to Monument Valley and the locations of other such classic John Ford Westerns.
    10arieleviacavafollis

    the best understanding of Napoleon's age ever (thanks to Conrad)

    The best issue about this movie, other than, of course, the aesthetic perfection, is its absolute fidelity to Conrad's short novel. I think this is very good in the movie because the book is so good, and it would have made no sense try to change it in the least way, as it often happens when movies come out of books (for example, Kubrick always made his films somehow look different from the books they are taken from, and I should say often improved them, but in many other cases it's true the opposite). It's noteworthy saying that in another, more popular, Ridley Scott's movie such as Blade Runner, always derived from a novel, important changes have been made from the original story ( in that case, all the part about the 'empathy' religion doesn't appear in the movie, and I think it was a good choice to omit it). But ' The Duelists' had to stick to the book! The point about the Duelists is all about the rich simplicity of its being a movie: Ridley Scott just takes the story as it is, and it's a damn good one, and he tells it to us in the best possible way, with an incredible attention to the graphical details (the duel scenes are just one better than the other), and an amazing use of the camera (the boxing scene, the horse riding duel). Now, going back to the story, in less than 100 pages, Conrad managed in explaining everything about the great illusion of Napoleon's empire, without the emperor ever appearing in it. It's incredible how he managed making the ever lasting duel between the two officials a great metaphor of that age, still keeping the two characters real and alive. The movie gives you all this. Watch it!
    schogger13

    The Casting Of A Perfect Shadow

    The Duellists is remarkable in lots of ways. For one, it's a masterpiece debut. It's also one of the very rare films putting a director on the map who keeps delivering what the debut already displayed in abundance. What's more, it is even rarer in so far that this movie hasn't aged a single day, which can't be explained away with the fact that it's a period piece. It stands the test of time as flawlessly as two other legendary debuts, Orson Welles's Citisen Kane and John Huston's Maltese Falcon. The flipside displays a mystery. The Duellists is an almost totally unknown film. To this day it hasn't earned what it had cost to make it in 1977: 900.000$. That, without doubt, makes it the most underrated masterpiece by one of THE directors of his generation.

    The basis was simple and commanding: The adaptation of the classic Joseph Conrad story 'The Duel'. The result is a lesson in perfect cinematic storytelling. And it's also a lesson in the forgotten art of low budget moviemaking. Not a single frame suggests that 'more' would've been better. The required economy of every single aspect of production always finds its perfect answer in the execution of the story. What you can't see or hear doesn't need to be there. It's as simple as that. Suffice to say, Ridley Scott being the director he is, The Duellists is visually superb and at the same time devoid of a single frame just being there to look good. His visual style is completely dependent on the substance of the story as well as the acting. That becomes blindingly obvious in his weaker films, where he resorts to 'beautifying' an empty shell. No other great director is as much a slave of the story's quality, before he can become its master. But once a strong moment, a powerful dialogue, a strong character hits his senses, he 'translates' their life into his unique visual language. In that he is almost without comparison. What we sometimes later perceive as only beautiful is always as essential to the story as a note in a symphony is essential to the next one to make 'sense'. The almost hauntingly arcadian, rural opening shot of the movie is a perfect example. The little girl with her geese leads us through innocence and peace across the screen... and bumps with us into the towering Husar blocking the path. No words. Just eyes making the girl lead her geese away from the path, away from what the Husar is guarding against unwanted onlookers. We're already hooked into the story on more than one level, and the cut to the duellists on the open field tells us where paradise ends. That's Ridley Scott in his purest form. The beauty of his style is in fact visual drama, and the power of his language is as visible now as it was in 1977. In 'Gladiator', watch the transition from Maximus's cornfild dream to the tortured earth of the battlefield in Germania and you'll see what I mean. That's why Scott is also an actor's director. He always makes sense to them and the characters with every move of the camera and sets them in the best possible light for what's required. He likes good actors, which isn't as normal as one might think. There isn't a hollow second to be found in each and every performance on The Duellists. That the casting is flawless down to the last extra helped, of course. All this explains much of the ageless quality of the movie. No hollow set pieces to 'jazz it up a bit'. Only authentic locations and no built sets. Costumes, makeup, props... everything totally convincing and fitting to the period. It's virtually impossible to determine the movie's age without knowing the actors. Scott turned an ageless story into an ageless movie. An excellent script and extremely good acting all round helped him do it.

    For me The Duellists is the first of 3 consecutive masterpieces (the other two are, of course ALIEN and Blade Runner), unrivalled since John Huston's first 3 films.

    10 out of 10 Ulrich Fehlauer
    b4peace

    definitely worth watching

    Seems this film has left most viewers with only positive comments to make (quite rare actually). I agree with most of them.

    This is a very believable film and is beautiful to watch in parts thanks to Scott's eye for design and natural beauty, esepecially regarding the use of light.

    I was mesmerised to know how it was all going to end. I was so sure it was going to end tragically but then was surprised and elevated by the ending that showed the richness & depth of the human experience. I believe there's some meaning for us all in this movie. And I got to hear about this movie by accident!

    An amazing quality of a film overall when you read about it's history, which was almost not made!

    8/10

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sir Ridley Scott said that after having directed anywhere from 1,500 to 2,000 television commercials, he realized no one was going to approach him about directing a film, so he'd have to take the lead. Since his funds were limited, he used a public domain source for the story, and commissioned the script for this movie on his own.
    • Goofs
      (at around 1h 23 mins) Faraud, loading his pistol, drops a ball into the barrel and then rams it into place. When the ball drops,a metallic sound is heard, indicating that there is no powder in the barrel.
    • Quotes

      Armand D'Hubert: General Feraud has made occasional attempts to kill me. That does not give him the right to claim my acquaintance.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits prologue: STRASBOURG 1800
    • Connections
      Featured in Moviedrome: Double Bill - The Duellists/Cape Fear (1991)
    • Soundtracks
      Bist du bei mir
      (uncredited)

      Music by Gottfried Heinrich Stölzel

      from "Notenbüchlein für Anna Magdalena Bach No. 25. BWV 508"

      Written by Johann Sebastian Bach (uncredited)

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    FAQ22

    • How long is The Duellists?Powered by Alexa
    • What is the meaning of Feraud's gesture at the inn in Lübeck?
    • What is the location of the castle ruin at which Keith Carradine and Harvey Keitel fight their final pistol duel?
    • Is this from a book?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 31, 1977 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Duellistes
    • Filming locations
      • Château de Commarques, Dordogne, France(final pistol duel)
    • Production companies
      • Paramount Pictures
      • Enigma Productions
      • Scott Free Enterprises
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $900,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $568
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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