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La truite

  • 1982
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
928
YOUR RATING
La truite (1982)
DramaRomance

Frederique (Huppert) leaves her family's small-town trout farm to embark on an journey taking her to Japan and into the arms of a man. Irritations concerning her actions and present state of... Read allFrederique (Huppert) leaves her family's small-town trout farm to embark on an journey taking her to Japan and into the arms of a man. Irritations concerning her actions and present state of feelings begin to fill her mind, forcing her to come to terms with innermost self.Frederique (Huppert) leaves her family's small-town trout farm to embark on an journey taking her to Japan and into the arms of a man. Irritations concerning her actions and present state of feelings begin to fill her mind, forcing her to come to terms with innermost self.

  • Director
    • Joseph Losey
  • Writers
    • Roger Vailland
    • Monique Lange
    • Joseph Losey
  • Stars
    • Isabelle Huppert
    • Jacques Spiesser
    • Jeanne Moreau
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    928
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph Losey
    • Writers
      • Roger Vailland
      • Monique Lange
      • Joseph Losey
    • Stars
      • Isabelle Huppert
      • Jacques Spiesser
      • Jeanne Moreau
    • 13User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Photos7

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    Top cast20

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    Isabelle Huppert
    Isabelle Huppert
    • Frédérique
    Jacques Spiesser
    Jacques Spiesser
    • Galuchat
    Jeanne Moreau
    Jeanne Moreau
    • Lou Rambert
    Jean-Pierre Cassel
    Jean-Pierre Cassel
    • Rambert
    Daniel Olbrychski
    Daniel Olbrychski
    • Saint-Genis
    Isao Yamagata
    Isao Yamagata
    • Daigo Hamada
    Jean-Paul Roussillon
    Jean-Paul Roussillon
    • Verjon
    Roland Bertin
    • The Count
    Lisette Malidor
    • Mariline
    Craig Stevens
    Craig Stevens
    • Carter
    Ruggero Raimondi
    Ruggero Raimondi
    • Party Guest
    Alexis Smith
    Alexis Smith
    • Gloria
    Lucas Belvaux
    Lucas Belvaux
    • Clerk
    Pierre Forget
    Pierre Forget
    • Frédérique's Father
    Ippo Fujikawa
    • Kumitaro
    Yûko Kada
    • Akiko
    • (as Yuko Kada)
    Anne François
    • Air Hotesse
    Pascal Morand
    • Les luronnes
    • Director
      • Joseph Losey
    • Writers
      • Roger Vailland
      • Monique Lange
      • Joseph Losey
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    5.8928
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    Featured reviews

    5gbill-74877

    Unsatisfying

    "Our village called us 'the savages.' We founded a club. ... A club whose aim was to get things out of men without ever giving them anything"

    I confess I'm not a big fan of movies that have as their story line a young woman who uses sex with a series of men to rise above her humble upbringing, ala Barbara Stanwyck in Baby Face(1933). They feel in some way as misogynistic as they are empowering. I'm even less a fan of movies that relegate Jeanne Moreau to such an undeveloped role, although she does get one nice scene standing up for herself towards the end. Oh, Isabelle Huppert is fine here, flirting and beguiling men to get what she wants out of them and flashing her pert little body along the way, but the story was one-dimensional, outdated, and sloppy.

    At one point we see Huppert's reflection in multiple mirrors and it brought to mind Marilyn Monroe in How to Marry a Millionaire (1953) and Brigitte Bardot in La Parisienne (1957) from decades earlier. Maybe that's because Joseph Losey originally conceived of this film in the 1960's with Bardot in the lead role. There is an attempt to update things via the acceptance of being bi or gay, and Moreau's character is allowed to say "Nowadays, heterosexuality and homosexuality mean nothing. You're either sexual or you're not," which is pretty remarkable for 1982, but it didn't really feel integrated into what was a meandering plot, and the gay husband never seemed like a real person to me.

    The young woman's backstory on the trout farm, in particular seeing her father and his buddy molest girls, tries to explain how she became so manipulative, but it could have been so much better told. The dialogue in the film wasn't very satisfying either. When asked what her first impressions of Japan are, she says that there are lots of Japanese. She meets an older woman who encourages her to have sex without shame, saying she's had it 33,000 times in her life. It's not exactly deep, but maybe this banality was part of the point. How sex relates to power is of course the main thing - as a means of social advancement for the young woman, and as a way of dominating and seeking pleasure for the older men after her. Unfortunately, too often there are scenes that don't push a cohesive narrative or develop these characters, only serving to elongate the movie. It just never pulls itself together, which is a shame, given those who worked on it.
    10gilcostello

    An Illusive Rainbow

    Joseph Losey established himself as a gifted filmmaker in the late '40s with The Boy with Green Hair, my favorite film from childhood. The thing about genuine artists is they can't kick the truth. Regardless how wayward they become in their obsessive lifestyles or imaginations, their deepest obsession remains with the truth. Losey would eventually make in the early '60s what was up to that point the best film exploration of the sado-masochistic impulse, The Servant, with the great film actor, Dirk Bogarde, and during that same period the effects of child sacrifice in The Damned. He would later explore the very dark dead-end of multiple sexual partners as a way of life in his film adaptation of Mozart's Don Giovanni (1979). But his great masterpiece, in my view, is his penultimate film, La Truite (The Trout, 1985). He must have experienced great satisfaction in knowing that every critic missed the central theme and all the deeper nuances of what he was conveying in the film, most thinking that it was simply a comic film about a cold-hearted bitch, played perfectly by the ever-surprising Isabelle Huppert. I will not dwell on the complexity of what this film is about, only to mention that it involves a precocious child, Frederique, who discovers much too early in life the sado-masochistic matrix of the world and begins her trek on finding ways to adapt to it while not allowing a core innocence to be destroyed by it, to keep an upper-hand in distance, a postmodern Fanny Price who is elevated not by dominance but by a detachment that, in its severance from God, borders on being the ultimate act of cruelty, indifference. She keeps in tow a hyper-sensitive, self-destructive husband who is gay and who, in discovering the dead-ends of sado-masochistic delight, is devastated every second of every moment by looking long and hard into the reality of love lost in the only territory he knows, the valley of the void where he commits to drinking himself to death. The heroine played by Ms. Huppert has only one ally, an elderly Japanese man who has achieved a similar detachment in his life, and they become spiritual friends. This film is not about a bitch, but about "misdirected transcendency" (Girard) in a world that is severed from God.
    3claudio_carvalho

    A Deceptive Movie by Joseph Losey

    In a small coastal town, the youngster Frédérique (Isabelle Huppert) works in a trout-farm. She marries the gay Galuchat (Jacques Spiesser) and they lure the upper-class businessmen Rambert (Jean-Pierre Cassel) and Saint-Genis (Daniel Olbrychski) in the bowling, pretending that they do not play well and winning a large amount in a game, despite the protest of Rambert's wife Lou (Jeanne Moreau).

    Saint-Genis invites Frédérique to travel with him in a business trip to Japan, where he has a meeting scheduled with the Japanese businessman Daigo Hamada (Isao Yamagata) and she leaves Galuchat and has a brief love affair with Saint-Genis. She returns when she is informed that her husband is in the hospital. Then Rambert tries to convince Frédérique to be his lover, with tragic consequences.

    "La Truite" is a deceptive movie by Joseph Losey with a messy story that wastes a cast with the names of Jeanne Moreau, Isabelle Huppert and Jean-Pierre Cassel. I finished watching this pointless movie and I honestly did not understand what the point is. Further, what three old bourgeois are doing in a bowling? My vote is three.

    Title (Brazil): "Uma Estranha Mulher" ("A Strange Woman")
    6l_rawjalaurence

    Moody Late Losey

    In LA TRUITE Isabelle Huppert plays a cold-blooded trout of a woman, Frédérique, supported by Jeanne Moreau as a wife whose husband, Rambert (Jean-Pierre Cassel), throws himself (repeatedly) at Frédérique. Frédérique, who is married to a gay husband (Jacques Spiesser) agrees to accompany Saint-Genis (Daniel Olbrychski) to Tokyo, as much to annoy Rambert as to torment Saint-Genis.

    The movie has many luscious sequences in Tokyo and France, and Huppert acts most of the other protagonists off the screen in a difficult role. There are flashbacks of her learning how her father and his friends used women, which increases her resolve not to be abused in similar fashion. She comes across as outwardly unsympathetic, but we understand her motives in a world where rich people treat those around them with the same lack of concern as they do their possessions. Rambert is even less sympathetic and less capable of love than Frédérique.

    In this slow-moving narrative style definitely assumes more significance than content, but the film does have a particularly satisfactory ending.
    2planktonrules

    Is there any point to all this?!

    The review on IMDb by David Melville sums up very well some of the problems with this film. So much of the plot just doesn't make sense nor does the casting of Isabelle Huppert in such a demanding role. Melville was right--a vixen like Bardot in her prime could have made it work but Huppert was not up to it. She wasn't believable as a woman this alluring and selfish. But there is so much more wrong with this movie Melville didn't get to--poorly written and often grossly under-developed characters--and in the process wasting talent like Jeanne Moreau, Alexis Smith and her husband Craig Stevens. On top of all that, the story was unappealing, disjoint and almost impossible to follow at times--partly because of the odd way the film bounces around from the present to the past and partly because the film is so dull it's hard to keep up with it.

    Despite me hating the film, I have enjoyed some of Isabelle Huppert's movies and French movies are my favorite international films. It's just with so many wonderful French films, I don't advise you to waste your time on this one--it's so much easier to find a film worthy of your time.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Although Joseph Losey lived in England for many years and directed many famous British films, this late movie of his has never had commercial showings in the UK, nor ever been shown on British television.
    • Alternate versions
      Original French-language version is 116 minutes long; the version released in the US ("The Trout") is 11 minutes shorter.
    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: Xtro/Octopussy/Hollywood Outtakes/La Truite/Angelo My Love (1983)
    • Soundtracks
      Stand Up And Shout It Out
      (uncredited)

      (end title)

      Written by Richard Hartley

      Performed by Greg Snow

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 22, 1982 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Languages
      • French
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Trout
    • Filming locations
      • Pontarliers, Doubs, Franche-Comté, France(exteriors, Doubs and Loue rivers)
    • Production companies
      • Gaumont
      • TF1 Films Production
      • Société Française de Production Cinématographique (S.F.P.C.)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 43 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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