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Lady Chatterley

  • 2006
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 48m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
4.9K
YOUR RATING
Lady Chatterley (2006)
A French adaptation of the second version of D.H. Lawrence's erotic tale.
Play trailer2:12
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Steamy RomanceDramaRomance

A French adaptation of the second (and much less well-known) version of D.H. Lawrence's erotic tale.A French adaptation of the second (and much less well-known) version of D.H. Lawrence's erotic tale.A French adaptation of the second (and much less well-known) version of D.H. Lawrence's erotic tale.

  • Director
    • Pascale Ferran
  • Writers
    • D.H. Lawrence
    • Roger Bohbot
    • Pascale Ferran
  • Stars
    • Marina Hands
    • Jean-Louis Coulloc'h
    • Hippolyte Girardot
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    4.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Pascale Ferran
    • Writers
      • D.H. Lawrence
      • Roger Bohbot
      • Pascale Ferran
    • Stars
      • Marina Hands
      • Jean-Louis Coulloc'h
      • Hippolyte Girardot
    • 46User reviews
    • 70Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 11 wins & 14 nominations total

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    Trailer 2:12
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    Photos37

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    Top cast28

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    Marina Hands
    Marina Hands
    • Constance
    Jean-Louis Coulloc'h
    Jean-Louis Coulloc'h
    • Parkin
    Hippolyte Girardot
    Hippolyte Girardot
    • Sir Clifford Chatterley
    Hélène Alexandridis
    • Mrs. Bolton
    Hélène Fillières
    Hélène Fillières
    • Hilda
    Bernard Verley
    Bernard Verley
    • Sir Malcolm
    Sava Lolov
    Sava Lolov
    • Tommy Dukes
    Jean-Baptiste Montagut
    • Harry Winterslow
    Fanny Deleuze
    • Tante Eva
    Michel Vincent
    • Marshall
    Colette Philippe
    • Mrs. Marshall
    Christelle Hes
    • Kate
    Jade Bouchard
    • La jeune bonne
    Joël Vandael
    • Field, le chauffeur
    Jacques De Bock
    • Le médecin
    • (as Jacques de Bock)
    Jean-Claude Leclère
    • Winter
    Ninon Brétécher
    • Emma Flint
    Léopold Canou
    • Bébé Flint
    • Director
      • Pascale Ferran
    • Writers
      • D.H. Lawrence
      • Roger Bohbot
      • Pascale Ferran
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    6.74.8K
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    Featured reviews

    8marie-gentiane1

    A beautiful movie about the awakening of a woman's senses!

    I have seen the BBC adaptation of the DH Lawrence novel made by Ken Russell with Joely Richardson and Sean Bean and there is no comparison: I prefer the French adaptation even if the film is not always faithful to the book on some points (for example, in the book, Sir Clifford is having problems with his miners and his employees because he is very arrogant but in the film, Pascale Ferran does not mention these problems). The actors are maybe a little more good-looking in the BBC version but that's about it (sorry, Sean Bean). And if you want to see a film about a beautiful but bored, aristocratic woman whose sensuality is suddenly re-awakened by her meeting with the sullen, unsociable but virile Parkin/Mellors, then this film is for you. Pascale Ferran seemed to have focused her film on the love-story between Lady Constance/Connie and Parkin, the gamekeeper and the discovery or re-discovery of one's senses. That is why you have beautiful shots of nature, of magnificent trees in spring and why you have many scenes in which Constance is walking in the forest and just listening to the songs of birds. The forest is also the place where she discovers her own sensuality. The actors are brilliant, they magnificently show all sorts of emotions on their faces and the love-making scenes are all made with much reserve, with subtlety...It is all refined and very beautifully-done. I loved this Connie, I could relate to her and I loved the long pauses and the looks between the two leads, the big shots on the hands, on some legs or other parts of the body and some refined clothes. The costumes are also important. This movie reminds me a little of some scenes of The Piano by Jane Campion and if you enjoyed The Piano, I am sure you will like this French adaptation. Definitely a 'must-see'. It is a little long, more than 2 hours and a half, I think but if you are used to watching long BBC period dramas like me, you will have no fear in watching this!
    8cliffhanley_

    True to the spirit of passion

    Considering the giant steps taken by cinema since the sixties, it's been a long wait for the real Lady C on her way to the big screen. Prurient or bland have been the previous attempts: Japan and Italy have had goes, Sylvia "Emmanuelle" Kristel starred predictably enough in a strictly 'B' version, and Ken Russell, who had had success with 'Women In Love', directed an out-of-character watered-down serial for television.

    As it's a woman's story, it makes sense for a woman to direct it, and even more, to make a success of it. Ferran has taken an unknown, or forgotten earlier version of the novel, "John Thomas and Lady Jane" as the basis of her film.

    It has been described as being less polemical than the final version, but it works well, in emphasising how active Constance Chatterley was in her striving for a better life, and in showing how she came to identify herself with the socialist struggle. In 1959, during the Penguin Books/Chatterley obscenity trial, it was infamously asked if this was the kind of book one would wish one's wife or servants to read. That has always been good for a laugh, if it was only about sex - but it was political. Sex and politics: a combination we now take for granted, but despite the few years since female emancipation, the combination was yet unthinkably hairy for the Fifties.

    The novel itself was excessively wordy, often risibly so, with Lawrence's male-oriented phallus-worshipping view of the world to the fore. When the gamekeeper Parkin (Jean-Louis Coilloc'h, bearing a remarkable resemblance to Brando in 'Streetcar') reveals to Lady C, his worries about being too sensitive and perhaps too womanly, we hear the author's voice. By adding capitals to every part of the story, the director has made a film that could easily be followed as a silent: 'The House', The Forest', The Cabin', The Miners'…But replacing words with action, especially in the sex scenes, allows the intimacy and passion to live on, without the anachronistic wordplay and modes of speech which now distance us from the lovers. Plenty of time, too, is given to watching a girlishly clumsy Constance (Marina Hands) explore the forests and streams surrounding the House; also to the contrast with her bucolic little paradise when she is driven into town and sits in her car, her gaze lingering on more 'real men' as they emerge, begrimed, from the mine. Such a contrast, made in such visual terms, remains in the air when Sir Clifford (Hippolyte Girardot) jokes about the miners striking every winter, and Connie doesn't laugh. It's important to remember that the airs and graces put on by upper-class married couples were partly to avoid losing face in front of the servants; Sir Clifford is not the only stiff and distant husband in his world, and the supporting of attitudes and beliefs by corsets and tweeds was aped by the aspiring middle classes (as in 'Brief Encounter') until wars, jazz, rock 'n' roll, 'certain books' and the satire boom moved the concentration of gravity to The Whitehouse, Saudi Arabia and the Taliban's favourite cave.

    The problem of getting a whole novel on-screen concurrently with a film in its own right has been solved by the use of intertitles, the director doing a voice-over; and the Lady's trip to France has been slotted in as a home movie, while Parkin's misadventures back home are covered in a letter from Sir Clifford's nurse (Anne Benoit), who tells it straight to camera. These changes in texture help to keep the pace up in this quite long film, just as earlier cuts are often a tranquil old-fashioned 'fade to black', to denote the passing of time.

    Again; the scenes of intimacy are well told: they are acted and filmed in a manner which fools us into believing we are flies on the wall. There is no concentration on the 'plumbing' as there is with too much on-screen sex, and just a few fully-clothed scenes, a few words and minimal choreography are all it needs to put over the spirit of the novel, the return to the garden and the grace and honest beauty of making love.
    10gradyharp

    Sense and Sensuality: DH Lawrence's Masterpiece Glows in the Hands of the French!

    DH Lawrence's novels may be tough to translate to the screen, so much of his writing is dependent on the words on the page as they form images of extraordinary beauty and sensuality. His novels are quintessentially British and reflect on the dehumanizing effects of modernity and industrialization, confronting issues relating to emotional health and vitality, spontaneity, sexuality, and human instinct. During his lifetime he was even labeled a pornographer, but that was then and now is now, and under the gifted guidance of director/writer (with Roger Bohbot and Pierre Trividic) Pascale Ferran, Lawrence's exquisite tale of sexual awakening has found what for this viewer is the finest transition of the novel to the screen.

    The place is England after WW I and Sir Clifford Chatterley (Hippolyte Girardot) is the paraplegic wealthy husband of Constance/Lady Chatterley (a radiant Marina Hands). Quite apropos for the era, Constance tends to her impotent husband, does needlepoint, and takes walks to while away her boredom. On one of her walks she encounters the gamekeeper Parkin (Jean-Louis Coullo'ch), seeing a partially nude man for the first time in her life. The impact awakens her somnolent sexuality and she manages to visit Parkin daily, gradually allowing her lust to unfold. Parkin is 'below her class' but is a masculine, sensuous embodiment of everything Constance has never experienced. They slowly bond and both of them become passionately in love, finding lovemaking in Parkin's hut, in the woods, in the rain - wherever they encounter. Constance wants to have a baby and convinces Clifford that she can become impregnated and the resulting child would be 'Clifford's' by pact. Constance travels to London, the Riviera, and other ports, only to return home believing that Parkin has reclaimed his ex-wife. But there are many surprises that greet her and the manner in which the story resolves (in Ferran's hands) leaves us unsure of the future.

    The film is captured amidst the beauties of the natural world - flowers, trees, springs, brooks - and these aspects of the natural world are an influential part of Constance's sexual awakening. Yes, there are scenes of complete nudity and love making but they are photographed so well by Julian Hirsch that they become an integral part of the story. The musical score by Béatrice Thiriet finds the right quality of elegance and sensuality. If there is a problem with this nearly three-hour film it is in the editing by Yann Dedet and Mathilde Muyard that takes liberties with scene transitions that prove disruptive.

    But it would be hard to imagine two actors who could match the subtlety and sexual tension that Marina Hands and Jean-Louis Coullo'ch to this film. It is breathtakingly beautiful to experience DH Lawrence's story in the hands of the French crew and cast. Grady Harp
    8Buddy-51

    Lush study of lust

    "Lady Chatterley" is a tale of repression, lust and sexual liberation set in post-World War I France. Despite its title, the movie isn't an adaptation of "Lady Chatterley's Lover," the taboo-shattering D.H. Lawrence novel that scandalized the world when it was published in 1928. The film is actually based on a Lawrence work entitled "John Thomas and Lady Jane" that came out the previous year. But the theme and storyline are just about as erotic and provocative as what we find in its more famous successor.

    This version features Marina Hands as the beautiful young wife of an aristocratic mine owner who's been rendered wheelchair-bound and impotent by injuries he sustained on the battlefield. Deprived of sex, Constance begins to fantasize about the husky gamekeeper who lives in the woods on the estate, and it's not long before the two of them have consummated their relationship. Jean Louis Coulloc'h is a particularly interesting casting choice as Parkin, for his scrappy features, thinning hair, linebacker's build and non-matinée-idol looks remove the story from the realm of dime-novel romance and into the arena of sheer physical attraction and lust. At least for awhile, that is, until the almost inevitable rush of feelings begins to overtake the couple, and the harsh realities of sexual mores, marital bonds and class distinctions that so define the era in which they live begin to make themselves felt.

    Co-written by Roger Bohbot and director Pascale Ferran, the movie is long (two-hours-and-forty-one minutes, to be exact!), episodic and deliberately paced, but the lush setting, understated human drama and moving performances keep us riveted for the duration.
    7minnich

    Interesting "French twist" in the film-making

    This version of the often-shot story of Lady Chatterley is in French with English subtitles, and I found the "look" of many of the actors to be decidedly French (big surprise) rather than English. The plot development was decidedly leisurely in the first half of the film, but this was not a game-breaker as far as my enjoyment of the movie. However, compared to all the other versions on this story that I've seen, I found this French effort to bring an element of earthy realism (best way I can describe it) to the story that the others lacked. The scene where the gamekeeper and Lady Chatterley "decorate" each other with flowers and subsequently disport themselves outside in the field and woods is a particularly interesting and memorable sequence. One minor quibble: the film seemed to both begin and end rather abruptly...you'll know what I mean when you watch it.

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    Related interests

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    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This movie is based on an alternate draft of D.H. Lawrence's novel unpublished until after his death. It's why the gamekeeper is called Parkin instead of Mellors.
    • Goofs
      When the chauffeur is bringing Lady Chatterley home at the end the car is being driven on the right. In England one drives on the left.
    • Alternate versions
      After the film had played in theaters, an "Extended European" version was released on home video and some streaming channels that was an hour longer.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Rembob'Ina: Les 30 ans d'Arte (2022)
    • Soundtracks
      Valse triste, Op.44
      Composed by Jean Sibelius

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 1, 2006 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Belgium
      • France
    • Official site
      • Official site (Spain)
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Lady Chatterley et l'homme des bois
    • Filming locations
      • Château de Montmery, Ambazac, Haute-Vienne, France(Wragby Hall, Lady Chatterley's home)
    • Production companies
      • Maïa Films
      • ARTE
      • Saga Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $687,414
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $32,814
      • Jun 24, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,200,383
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 48m(168 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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