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L'histoire d'Adèle H.

  • 1975
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
9.6K
YOUR RATING
L'histoire d'Adèle H. (1975)
The story of Adèle Hugo's unrequited love for a lieutenant.
Play trailer2:52
1 Video
81 Photos
Period DramaBiographyDramaHistory

The story of Adèle Hugo's unrequited love for a lieutenant.The story of Adèle Hugo's unrequited love for a lieutenant.The story of Adèle Hugo's unrequited love for a lieutenant.

  • Director
    • François Truffaut
  • Writers
    • François Truffaut
    • Jean Gruault
    • Suzanne Schiffman
  • Stars
    • Isabelle Adjani
    • Bruce Robinson
    • Sylvia Marriott
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    9.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • François Truffaut
    • Writers
      • François Truffaut
      • Jean Gruault
      • Suzanne Schiffman
    • Stars
      • Isabelle Adjani
      • Bruce Robinson
      • Sylvia Marriott
    • 46User reviews
    • 43Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 11 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 2:52
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    Photos81

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    Top cast24

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    Isabelle Adjani
    Isabelle Adjani
    • Adèle Hugo
    Bruce Robinson
    Bruce Robinson
    • Lt Albert Pinson
    Sylvia Marriott
    Sylvia Marriott
    • Mrs. Saunders
    Joseph Blatchley
    Joseph Blatchley
    • Mr. Whistler
    Ivry Gitlis
    • Hypnotist
    Louise Bourdet
    • Victor Hugo's servant
    Cecil De Sausmarez
    • Mr. Lenoir
    Ruben Dorey
    • Mr. Saunders
    Clive Gillingham
    • Keaton
    Roger Martin
    • Doctor Murdock
    M. White
    • Colonel White
    • (as Mr White)
    Madame Louise
    • Madame Baa
    Jean-Pierre Leursse
    • Black penpusher
    Geoffroy Crook
    • George, servant at Johnstone's
    • (uncredited)
    Chantal Durpoix
    • Young whore
    • (uncredited)
    Raymond Falla
    • Judge Johnstone
    • (uncredited)
    David Foote
    • David, a young boy
    • (uncredited)
    Jacques Frejabue
    • Cabinetmaker
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • François Truffaut
    • Writers
      • François Truffaut
      • Jean Gruault
      • Suzanne Schiffman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    7.29.5K
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    Featured reviews

    Bram-5

    positive

    I loved this film, not only because I live in the city in which the story happened. Films based on personal diaries are always fascinating ('Heavenly Creatures') and this one is also haunting, due partly to the sepia tones. Adele lives in a bubble of despair, rarely venturing out from her tiny room. Her story is a sad one, painful and full of longing and Truffaut captures Adele's sense of isolation, of being out of this world, perfectly. You won't cry, the film is not manipulative, but you will empathize, you will feel her pain.
    Vincentiu

    Monstrosity of illusion

    Brilliant for the precise description of a very subtle frame of mind. Adele's ways are not obsession's expressions, not love or ambition. It is only necessity to live, to be, to build a sense without the protective father's shadow.

    And Adjani is charming in a great character who engrosses audience's energy. It is a desire's story but not only desire. It is a cruel adventure, mixed madness and ambition, Emma Bovary world's slices, fear and expectation and an absurd fight.

    It is a grotesque Don Quixote's story with oily nuances. Story of propriety like existence's purpose. The dream like escape and the rules like useless convention. In fact,a strange illustration of "Beyond Good and Evil".

    A beautiful film about desire's monstrosity,helplessness, misunderstanding,misfortune, illusion's honey and feeling's corpse.
    Bishonen

    Mesmerizing

    A genuine horror film of the spirit---the filmmaking is excellent and a bit of a thematic departure for Truffaut as there is little to no leavening humour in this film. In most of his works there is at least a touch of ironic drollness but this film is basically serious-minded all the way through with devastating results.

    "Haunting" is the best way to describe Adjani's work in this, one of her first film appearances. Her best moments are wordless; in her eyes is the essense of spiritual dissipation and emotional emaciation. Before our eyes, she is devoured by love, and not in the conventional sense. Without the film ever leaving the secular world, Adele Hugo descends to Hell and Truffaut finds the horror of her journey in the most mundane settings and gestures. A movie that stays with you.

    A lacerating but very rewarding experience!
    8DennisLittrell

    A story of obsessive love

    Isabelle Adjani plays the title role, that of Adele Hugo, daughter of the great French writer, a woman obsessively in love with an English army lieutenant who doesn't want her. The scene is Halifax, Nova Scotia, during the time of the American Civil War. She has followed Lt. Pinson (Bruce Robinson) from her home in exile on the island of Guernsey to be with him even though he has rejected her. Adjani's sensuous beauty and her intense and passionate nature command the screen and we are drawn to identify with her as she spirals toward madness as her abject pleas of love are unrequited. We watch as she debases herself in every way possible in a desperate attempt to gain Pinson's love, even to the point of giving him to other women. She is psychologically pleased with this because she thinks it shows that her love for him transcends sexuality. Of course the nature of obsessive love is always entirely selfish. If you really love someone who doesn't want you, you have to let them go. But of course she cannot.

    Francois Truffaut directed and did a fine job of getting the most out of his young star. The maddening nature of obsession is well depicted and the story is focused and unfolds at a deliberate pace. Noteworthy is the setting itself, a cold and remote clime so that Adele is in isolation from her home, family and friends with little to do or think about every day except her obsession. It is easy to see how something like this can lead to complete madness.

    Memorable is a little story within the larger tale, that of the fraudulent hypnotist whom Adele thinks might be able to turn Pinson's indifference into love.

    (Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it at Amazon!)
    Nirannah

    Very Good Film About A Talented Writer Who Falls "In Love" W/ a Leiutenant

    Summary: A talented writer, Adele Hugo, becomes obsessed with her former lover , the indebted and womanizing Liutenant Pinson. Her love for him consumes her entire life and she eventually goes crazy because he doesn't love her back.

    Acting: Except for Adjani's performance, the acting is not very good, but that doesn't matter too much because the only person with a large role is Adjani. The guy who plays Pinson is pretty one dimensional. Anyway though, Adjani gives an Oscar-worthy performance, and balances her character's vigorously muscular and blunt aggression with her character's silky-fine desperation and entrapment. Another actress might have played Adele as being recklessly obsessed, but Adjani doesn't do that. Adjani actually shows us the thoughts and rationality of her character; we first see Adele as an intelligent, innocent young woman who somehow, some way, becomes slimmed down to a stub of passion in Pinson's presence. Cinematography: bland and bleak, which works in a way because that's how Adele views the world in comparison to her own out-of-proportion sadness, but also doesn't work because that's all it does: show us how the world looks like to Adele. I would have preferred if the cinematography actually captured the different emotions Adele was going through in each scene, it would have made the cinematography less one-note. This flaw in the cinematography unfortunately carries over to the overall tone of the film. Script: Good. It definitely conveys how Adele is always trying, with a passion so great it verges on the comical, to form the confusion of her life into a solid piece of truth. Part of this passion seems to be part of her neuroses; part of it seems to be the artist in her at work.

    The one flaw in the script was the voice over at the end: it didn't really give you a good idea of the rest of Adele's life, and I bet the writer put it in there because he thought, " Whoa, this script is pretty long. I'd better gloss over the later years of Adele's life." Costume design: Adele's red dress seems appropriately color-coded with the cinematography of the film, which, as I stated above, isn't such a good thing. Nothing else besides that red dress stuck out at me, and the rest of the costume design was pretty mediocre. Camera-work: Very good. I particularly like the slow zoom-in on the picture of Pinson, it was very powerful. Another good camera-work choice was when Pinson realized that Adele had told her father that she and Pinson were getting married. The director filmed this scene with the door blocking half the screen, which made the viewer feel, like Adele, very cut off from Pinson. I really liked the camera-work here, actually. Music: Powerful and fitting. I particularly liked the music when Pinson was walking towards Adele at the end. Overall: Very good film mainly carried by Adjani's excellent performance.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Initially planned as a grand-scale spectacular drama with Jeanne Moreau to play the lead, then Catherine Deneuve (then having an affair with François Truffaut) was considered for the role. The film took 7 years to be made, and finally Truffaut decided on Isabelle Adjani whom he noticed on a TV broadcast of the Comédie Française.
    • Goofs
      The hypnotist has a plant in the audience pretending to be a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, which was not set up until a decade after the story's setting of 1863
    • Quotes

      Adèle Hugo: I'm your wife. Forever. We'll stay together until we die.

    • Connections
      Featured in 48th Annual Academy Awards (1976)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 8, 1975 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Languages
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Story of Adele H
    • Filming locations
      • Channel Islands
    • Production companies
      • Les Artistes Associés
      • Les Films du Carrosse
      • Les Productions Artistes Associés
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $509
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $11,206
      • Apr 25, 1999
    • Gross worldwide
      • $509
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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