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Le Nom de la rose

Original title: The Name of the Rose
  • 1986
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 10m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
123K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,992
911
Le Nom de la rose (1986)
Period DramaWhodunnitDramaMysteryThriller

An intellectually nonconformist friar investigates a series of mysterious deaths in an isolated abbey.An intellectually nonconformist friar investigates a series of mysterious deaths in an isolated abbey.An intellectually nonconformist friar investigates a series of mysterious deaths in an isolated abbey.

  • Director
    • Jean-Jacques Annaud
  • Writers
    • Umberto Eco
    • Andrew Birkin
    • Gérard Brach
  • Stars
    • Sean Connery
    • Christian Slater
    • Helmut Qualtinger
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    123K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,992
    911
    • Director
      • Jean-Jacques Annaud
    • Writers
      • Umberto Eco
      • Andrew Birkin
      • Gérard Brach
    • Stars
      • Sean Connery
      • Christian Slater
      • Helmut Qualtinger
    • 228User reviews
    • 63Critic reviews
    • 54Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 BAFTA Awards
      • 17 wins & 6 nominations total

    Photos218

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    Top cast71

    Edit
    Sean Connery
    Sean Connery
    • William of Baskerville
    Christian Slater
    Christian Slater
    • Adso of Melk
    Helmut Qualtinger
    Helmut Qualtinger
    • Remigio de Varagine
    Elya Baskin
    Elya Baskin
    • Severinus
    Michael Lonsdale
    Michael Lonsdale
    • The Abbot
    Volker Prechtel
    Volker Prechtel
    • Malachia
    Feodor Chaliapin Jr.
    Feodor Chaliapin Jr.
    • Jorge de Burgos
    William Hickey
    William Hickey
    • Ubertino de Casale
    Michael Habeck
    Michael Habeck
    • Berengar
    Urs Althaus
    Urs Althaus
    • Venantius
    Valentina Vargas
    Valentina Vargas
    • The Girl
    Ron Perlman
    Ron Perlman
    • Salvatore
    Leopoldo Trieste
    Leopoldo Trieste
    • Michele da Cesena
    Franco Valobra
    • Jerome of Kaffa
    Vernon Dobtcheff
    Vernon Dobtcheff
    • Hugh of Newcastle
    Donald O'Brien
    Donald O'Brien
    • Pietro d'Assisi
    • (as Donal O'Brian)
    Andrew Birkin
    Andrew Birkin
    • Cuthbert of Winchester
    F. Murray Abraham
    F. Murray Abraham
    • Bernardo Gui
    • Director
      • Jean-Jacques Annaud
    • Writers
      • Umberto Eco
      • Andrew Birkin
      • Gérard Brach
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews228

    7.7123.3K
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    Featured reviews

    8ozthegreatat42330

    The Name of The Rose is a superb film but requires thinking.

    A murder mystery set in a monastery in the late middle ages, at a time when the Franciscan order and the Holy Inquisition were at odds, mostly over the extravagances of the Papacy, is a dark and moody film, which matches the period of the story well. Once again Sean Connery takes a difficult role and makes it uniquely his. Fifteen year old Christian Slater is seen in his breakout role. But the real star of the film is the library of the monastery, a labyrinthine building that is many floors high and created with stairways that seem to always lead away from where you want to go. I found the book, frankly tedious. Umberto Eco writes in a style that is very pedantic at times, and just plain confusing at others. But the story translated well to the screen, but you must be willing to exhaust a little brain sweat to get anything out of the story. Be well rested before you watch this one.
    10mightymariner

    Flawless book, almost flawless film

    I've been enjoying films for 20 years now, and this is the first comment I've put on any film website. I've always had the mickey taken out of me for loving this film, and it's right up there amongst my favourites of a very eclectic bunch. Why? Well, firstly and I have to say, very importantly, it's taken from the finest piece of modern literature I've read. Umberto Eco's novel has such mammoth scope of subject matter and detail, it is was always going to be extremely hard to put into film (Dune anyone??), and Annaud certainly doesn't succeed in every way, but my lord he gives it a damn good go. The film quite rightly focusses on the human story within the book of a group of murders committed at an Italian abbey in the 14th Century, and the ongoing search for the purpetrator, by a Franciscan monk and his apprentice. The book encompasses many other issues and plotlines, which could not be fitted into the film. The three screenwriters do an excellent job, of filming the almost impossible to within 2 hours or so. Most importantly to me, the cinematography and set are sublime, almost unsurpassed in modern film to my mind, and still to this day amazing. I've always found that many non movie-lovers remember this film, for good or bad. The main reason for me is that it recreates so impressively the period it represents. Tonino Delli Colli, I salute you. The production team deserves a similar merit for bringing together what was in essence an European co-production, whilst not forgetting the biggest exterior set built in Europe since "Cleopatra". Step forward Dante Ferreti. I salute you too. 0.1 of a mark off for the editing, but let's not dwell on that. The acting is, bar none, marvellous, with even Christian Slater in his first main role putting up an extremely decent stab of being an apprentice monk.

    I like a good whodunnit, but I adore a whodunnit which throws in the visual magnificence of a different age, top notch performances, a script taken from a extraordinary source, and assured directing. 10 out of 10, and my mates can carry on taking the mickey out of me.

    So in summary, I'll leave it to the director himself.. `When I see a film, I love it when I'm entertained, when I care for the actors, when I share their emotions, when I'm scared, when I'm in love, but also if I learn a little something, if I have the feeling that I haven't seen something before, and that's what `The Name of the Rose' has.'
    7Nazi_Fighter_David

    "The step between ecstatic vision and sinful frenzy is all too brief."

    The film opens in 1327, with a Franciscan monk and his young novice arriving to a remote abbey in the dark north of Italy to participate in a crucial debate between the emissaries of Pope John XXII and leaders of the Franciscan order, to decide whether the church should take vows of poverty or wealth...

    After a series of murders—attributed to the presence of a supernatural force— that are taking place within the cold walls of the godforsaken battlement, Brother William of Baskerville (Connery) ends up undertaking an investigation to solve the secrets surrounding these unexplainable crimes… All of them bearing blackened fingers and blackened tongues…

    What follows, brings William face to face with Bernardo Gui (F. Murray Abraham), the sadistic Grand inquisitor—appointed by the Pope to hunt down and free the Church of heretics—who sees the abbey enshrouded in a terrifying mystery and the devil roaming behind every foul deed… Gui burns every last suspected devil-worshipper in the village, forcing Baskerville to uncover the truth before innocent blood is shed…

    As always, Connery lends dignity, intelligence as the acute and prudent monk who has knowledge, both of the human spirit and the wiles of the evil one… Connery plays his role with gusto…

    Newcomer Christian Slater plays Connery's faithful sidekick, Adso, the youngest son of the Baron of Melk who sure does like to watch his master at work… One night—expressing fear and confusion— he gets feminine carnal delights from a peasant girl, 'a creature that rose like the dawn, was bewitching as the moon, radiant as the sun, terrible as an army poised for battle…'

    For a moment, Ron Perlman steals the show as the heretical hunchbacked monk named Salvatore who is ugly yet phenomenal… His scenes with Abraham are stirring…

    "The Name of the Rose" is atmospheric, but disturbing at many levels… Some might say, contradictory, leaving plenty of twists and turns unresolved and unexplained, but the film was a smash hit in Europe… Annaud succeeds in capturing the claustrophobia and panic of being truly lost in the menacing, creepy Dark Ages
    7Noir-5

    Scarey Days...

    If you like movies to send you back to another historical period, there are few which can do it more effectively than this one. The period is pre-enlightenment when the only books in the land (Italy) are owned by the different denominations of the Catholic faith. Inquisitions are the order of the day and the atmosphere of mistrust and misrepresentation which accompany such a fragile state, is expertly realised.

    Enter Sean Connery playing a Sherlock Holmes (`…Elementary my dear Wat-shun…') from the dark/middle ages, replete with a magnifying glass of sorts and a recognisable system of logical deduction. The story is a fine balance of complexity (easy enough to follow, but not too simplistic) with the inclusion of a number of sub-plots to keep it all ticking along nicely. The acting is very good but what makes it stand out is its evocation of another era, which is reproduced with authority. Highly enjoyable.
    7swrvzum

    Good movie, though -contrary to the book- it falls into clichés and stereotypes of the era

    The Name of the Rose undertakes an incredibly challenging project, aiming to bring to the big screen a massive book by Umberto Eco of immense complexity: Medieval history, theology, disputes among internal factions within the church, the intricate issues of medieval heresies as a social phenomenon, literature and art. All of this encapsulated within an investigation into mysterious murders in an Italian abbey in 1327 AD.

    Anyone who has read Umberto Eco's book knows how detailed the author is in portraying these complex aspects, which are no longer obvious or easily understandable for a contemporary reader. Umberto Eco certainly has his own opinions on these themes, but still manages to paint a very authentic literary picture of that era.

    Does the film achieve the same? No.

    The casting is wonderful, especially Connery, but young Adso, played by Slater, is also well interpreted. The film focuses on the story of the investigation, which is undoubtedly the thread that ties the narrative together.

    What bothers me most about this film is the depiction of the monastery and that distant medieval era, far from the historical reality described by Eco: The monks are mostly grotesque figures, dirty, crazy, deformed, obscene. The common folk, on the other hand, seem like a bunch of monkeys incapable of speaking, eating garbage thrown out of the monastery. The atmosphere always seems dark and devoid of light, as if to represent that era. This is a cinematic stereotype of the Middle Ages that is far from historical reality.

    Monasteries were places where manuscripts were safeguarded, transcribed, and translated for centuries, without which we wouldn't have been able to read them today. The period of the High Middle Ages, in which the story takes place, was a time of great innovation for the era: agricultural innovations, the flourishing of universities, advancements in mathematics and civil engineering that allowed the construction of the marvelous Gothic architecture we can still admire today, infrastructure development.

    We can't look back today and judge that era through contemporary lenses. Many concepts and innovations required time to develop before reaching us. What may seem obvious to us today was not so at the time, so it's necessary to empathize with the mentality of that era to understand its various nuances. Eco tries to do this in his book, but the film does not. The film settles for using clichés and a false stereotype of the Middle Ages.

    The film manages to maintain tension and an interesting story, mainly because it follows the intriguing investigative plot of the original material. In this sense, it is certainly worth watching. However, I would still recommend to those who enjoyed this film to read the book.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sean Connery's career was at such a low point when he read for the role that Columbia Pictures refused to finance the movie when Jean-Jacques Annaud cast him as William von Baskerville.
    • Goofs
      The secret message on the parchment is exposed three times. The translator heated it to reveal the location of the library, William of Baskerville heated it again when he was in the scriptorium and yet again to show the others the message. When a message is written in lemon juice, heating it will cause it to become exposed because the sugar in the juice is caramelized and thus would not disappear again.
    • Quotes

      Adso of Melk: Master? Have you ever been in love?

      William of Baskerville: In love? Yeah, many times.

      Adso of Melk: You were?

      William of Baskerville: Yes, of course. Aristotle, Ovid, Vergil...

      Adso of Melk: No, no, no. I meant with a...

      William of Baskerville: Oh. Ah. Are you not confusing love with lust?

      Adso of Melk: Am I? I don't know. I want only her own good. I want her to be happy. I want to save her from her poverty.

      William of Baskerville: Oh, dear.

      Adso of Melk: Why "oh dear"?

      William of Baskerville: You *are* in love.

      Adso of Melk: Is that bad?

      William of Baskerville: For a monk, it does present certain problems.

      Adso of Melk: But doesn't St. Thomas Aquinas praise love above all other virtues?

      William of Baskerville: Yes, the love of God, Adso. The love of God.

      Adso of Melk: Oh... And the love of woman?

      William of Baskerville: Of woman? Thomas Aquinas knew precious little, but the scriptures are very clear. Proverbs warns us, "Woman takes possession of a man's precious soul", while Ecclesiastes tells us, "More bitter than death is woman".

      Adso of Melk: Yes, but what do you think, Master?

      William of Baskerville: Well, of course I don't have the benefit of your experience, but I find it difficult to convince myself that God would have introduced such a foul being into creation without endowing her with *some* virtures. Hmm? How peaceful life would be without love, Adso, how safe, how tranquil, and how dull.

    • Crazy credits
      The opening credits read - A palimpsest of Umberto Eco's Novel The Name of the Rose
    • Alternate versions
      Certain prints of the movie have the sex scene between Adso and The Girl removed in order to comply with local laws.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Touch and Go/'Night, Mother/Blue Velvet/Where the River Runs Black (1986)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 17, 1986 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • West Germany
      • Italy
      • France
    • Languages
      • English
      • Latin
    • Also known as
      • El nombre de la rosa
    • Filming locations
      • Kloster Eberbach, Eltville Am Rhein, Hessen, Germany(interiors: monastery church)
    • Production companies
      • Constantin Film
      • Cristaldifilm
      • Les Films Ariane
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • ITL 30,000,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $7,153,487
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $494,571
      • Sep 28, 1986
    • Gross worldwide
      • $7,153,487
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 10 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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