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Jours tranquilles à Clichy

  • 1990
  • 12
  • 2h
IMDb RATING
4.8/10
828
YOUR RATING
Jours tranquilles à Clichy (1990)
Drama

Expatriate Henry Miller indulges in a variety of sexual escapades while struggling to establish himself as a serious writer in Paris.Expatriate Henry Miller indulges in a variety of sexual escapades while struggling to establish himself as a serious writer in Paris.Expatriate Henry Miller indulges in a variety of sexual escapades while struggling to establish himself as a serious writer in Paris.

  • Director
    • Claude Chabrol
  • Writers
    • Claude Chabrol
    • Ugo Leonzio
    • Henry Miller
  • Stars
    • Andrew McCarthy
    • Nigel Havers
    • Barbara De Rossi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.8/10
    828
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Claude Chabrol
    • Writers
      • Claude Chabrol
      • Ugo Leonzio
      • Henry Miller
    • Stars
      • Andrew McCarthy
      • Nigel Havers
      • Barbara De Rossi
    • 12User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos19

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    Top cast43

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    Andrew McCarthy
    Andrew McCarthy
    • Henry Miller
    Nigel Havers
    Nigel Havers
    • Alfred Perlès
    Barbara De Rossi
    Barbara De Rossi
    • Nys
    Stéphanie Tchou-Cotta
    • Colette
    • (as Stéphanie Cotta)
    Isolde Barth
    Isolde Barth
    • Ania
    Mario Adorf
    Mario Adorf
    • Ernest
    Anna Galiena
    Anna Galiena
    • Edith
    Jacques Brunet
    Jacques Brunet
    • Colette's father
    Beatrice Kruger
    • Colette's mother
    • (as Béatrice Kruger)
    Eva Grimaldi
    Eva Grimaldi
    • Yvonne
    Stéphane Audran
    Stéphane Audran
    • Adrienne
    Jurgen Mash
    • The psychiatrist
    Dominique Zardi
    Dominique Zardi
    • Gustave
    Thomas Chabrol
    Thomas Chabrol
    • Guest at cocktail party
    Matthieu Chabrol
    • Pianist
    Brigitte Chamarande
    Giuditta Del Vecchio
    • Yoko
    Brigitte Christensen
    Brigitte Christensen
    • Director
      • Claude Chabrol
    • Writers
      • Claude Chabrol
      • Ugo Leonzio
      • Henry Miller
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    4.8828
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    10

    Featured reviews

    Charlot47

    A colourful journey into an imaginary past

    Reviewers have complained that this film does not capture enough of the book by Henry Miller and includes things he did not write. Of the additions, for me the frame story rings poignant and true. On the Californian coast we see the dying Miller obsessed by one last unconsummated passion for a beautiful young nude model, a recreation of the bewitching teenage Colette he had lost. Outside on the beach the ghosts of his old Parisian friends gather for him to join them. Then we move into his memories.

    Of these, the added stuff about fascism and communism in 1930s Paris does seem feeble. But my defence for both departures is that they are at worst ironic and at best comic. The real Miller and some of his friends may have taken themselves fairly seriously but in this film the cavortings and occasional soul-searchings of American exiles in Paris, immune from the harsh political facts of European life, border on the absurd. His devotion to Proust is treated satirically and to a Parisian his frequent comparisons with Brooklyn are merely ridiculous.

    In fact we see virtually no real Paris, the city being most of the time conveyed by sets, which deliberately distance the story to a dreamy insubstantial past. Like the artificiality of the book, the film creates a fantasy world, one of untrustworthy recollection from a gifted, persuasive but ultimately unreliable narrator. Though actuality does intrude when Colette runs away and jumps onto a very real Metro train, so leaving the imaginary sphere for the quotidian.

    While intensely autobiographical, incorporating wholesale people he knew at the time, Miller's work is fiction. It is not a diary but a melody spun out of his experience, looking beyond outward events to his inward poetic and philosophical reflections. This last dimension is what I miss in Chabrol's film, which mostly stays closer to the colourful surface occurrences of the characters' lives. Although I don't think many male viewers will complain about the often revealed surfaces of the many lovely women.
    2dbdumonteil

    another Claude Chabrol dud

    Henry Miller, the famous nefarious American writer in the twilight years remembers his youth spent in Paris at the dawn of the thirties. A life of debauchery guided by the search for rapture and intense pleasure of the senses through sex, food and literature (he was a profound admirer of Marcel Proust).

    Amid a bushy and patchy filmography, Claude Chabrol admits liking this movie very much. That this movie makes him feel good is a mystery to me for it showcases none interest. His lack of input in his film, even his absence in the directing are blatant. He shot in a glib way an amorphous biopic to which one doesn't succeed in getting interested beyond the first ten minutes. The characters (Henry "Joey" Miller, Alfred "Carl" Perlès, Colette Ducarouge) have little depth and thickness and their acting mainly consist in wandering from brothel to brothel, from restaurant to restaurant (as Chabrol's inclination for gastronomy has it) and from flat to apartment. Probably to obey to the famous Latin expression "Carpe Diem". The action is sluggish and it's nearly a feat that the filmmaker could stretch his film for two hours with such a thin, stale, repetitive screenplay. It's all the more infuriating as the scenario doesn't live up to some heaven-sent opportunities. The ones through which one could have remembered Chabrol's trademark like unearth the hateful flaws of a posh bourgeoisie. But alas, Chabrol contented himself to skim over this point. Bereft of this asset which might have justify the vision of this film and of rigor, Chabrol installs the audience in a deep torpor and one stays out of this derivative picture of the Paris during the Roaring Twenties.

    The cast is totally undistinguished, a far cry from Chabrol's great family like Jean-Claude Brialy, Michel Bouquet, Jean Poiret or Isabelle Huppert. Yes, the luminary Stéphane Audran is part of the cast but she's completely wasted in a role unworthy of her skills. Anna Galiena is also included in the cast but she will be given the chance to shine the same year with Patrice Leconte's dreamy "Mari De La Coiffeuse".

    Chabrol beat his dead horse with this mediocre commissioned film which is now in limbo. Anyway, 1990 was a dreadful vintage for him with these "quiet days in Clichy" and also with another fiasco the same year: "Dr. M".
    4claudio_carvalho

    Dull and Pointless

    The American writer Joe (Andrew McCarthy) arrives in Paris to research and write about Proust. He meets the Polish Karl (Nigel Havers) and they become friends and costumers of brothels and restaurants. When the fifteen year-old Colette (Stéphanie Cotta) arrives in Paris, they both fall in love with her.

    "Jours Tranquilles à Clichy", a.k.a. "Quiet Days in Clichy" (1990), is a dull and pointless movie by Claude Chabrol based on the story of Henry Miller and Alfred Perlès. The movie is boring and absolutely different from the other works of this great French director. My vote is four.

    Title (Brazil): "Dias de Clichy" ("Days of Clichy")

    Note: On 21 December 2024, I saw this film again.
    9Oreste

    Very nice portrait of the thirties...

    Different from many other Chabrol movies that follow "Hitchock-like" patterns, _Jours tranquilles à Clichy_ relates the days a young American writer (Henry Miller) spent in the Gay Paris of the early thirties, with his polish-descent friend and their young Colette, a 14 years old-ish girl with whom they both fall in love. The story in itself doesn't send us from a surprising even to another but slowly lifts the curtain over the prostitution, pornography, libertinage and partying that seemed to oppose Paris so much to New York, in the eyes of Miller, searching for a change from the dull like he lead before. The story is a quest for Proust and his lost time, a quest for a new life, for thrills, for truth in forgetting oneself...
    2Munchies-2

    Yawn!

    Quite a boring movie about the life of Henry Miller and his friend Alfred who takes photos of prostitutes for a living in early century France. They hardly ever leave the brothel they live in.

    Enter young Colette, a beautiful girl, what, 12, 14 years old at the most. They both marry her at a fake ceremony lead by the brothel's matron. They get all confused, and so did I

    Boring as hell.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The original movie poster showed a topless Giuditta Del Vecchio with the blade of a razor sliding under her armpit. In the scene from which the image is taken, the actress is seen frontally naked with her pubic area fully shaved.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Alfonso Sansone produttore per caso (2014)

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 9, 1990 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
      • Germany
    • Official sites
      • distributor's official site
      • Site Officiel Producteur
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Quiet Days in Clichy
    • Filming locations
      • Calvados, France
    • Production companies
      • AZ Film Production
      • L.C.J Editions & Productions
      • Cinecittà
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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