Le quai des brumes
- 1938
- Tous publics
- 1h 31min
Jean, déserteur de l'armée coloniale, veut quitter la France. Au Havre, il rencontre Nelly, jeune femme terrorisée par son tuteur, un jeune truand ainsi qu'un petit chien fidèle qu'il adopte... Tout lireJean, déserteur de l'armée coloniale, veut quitter la France. Au Havre, il rencontre Nelly, jeune femme terrorisée par son tuteur, un jeune truand ainsi qu'un petit chien fidèle qu'il adopte.Jean, déserteur de l'armée coloniale, veut quitter la France. Au Havre, il rencontre Nelly, jeune femme terrorisée par son tuteur, un jeune truand ainsi qu'un petit chien fidèle qu'il adopte.
- Récompenses
- 6 victoires et 1 nomination
- Panama
- (as Delmont)
- Quart Vittel
- (as Aimos)
- Le peintre
- (as Le Vigan)
- Le docteur
- (as Genin)
- Le chauffeur
- (as Perez)
- Le garçon d'hôtel
- (as Legris)
- Un complice
- (non crédité)
- Lucien's henchman
- (non crédité)
- Complice
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesSome may notice that the Le Havre setting, while realistic, seems to have a slightly strange perspective. This is because the streets were constructed with a "false perspective" technique: the buildings were gradually scaled down in size the farther they go into the background; when shot with the proper camera lens, such a street will seem to stretch away from the camera up to four times longer than it actually does.
- GaffesWhen Jean and Nelly have their picture taken, they are standing close together. After a brief cut to the photographer who instructs them not to move anymore, there is a clear gap between them.
- Citations
Quart Vittel: What could be simpler than a tree?
Le peintre: A tree. But when I paint one, it sets everyone on edge. It's because there's someone or something hidden behind that tree. I can't help painting what's hidden behind things. To me a swimmer is already a drowned man.
- ConnexionsEdited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: La monnaie de l'absolu (1999)
The thick veils of smog give the amplify the film's preoccupation with solitude and opacity- dialogue here is often barbed, strained and bitter, the world-weary cynicism of the characters betraying their immense suffering. Principles are a luxury in an age of disenchantment- the proprietor of Panama's is impassive towards the suicide of his resident Werther (his existentialist exclamation "What's the use?" accenting the futility of suicide- far from offering a reprieve from superfluity, it merely confirms it) while loyalty amongst Leguardier's posse is dispelled briskly after his humiliation. Superfluity is the order of the day- "The world is better off with one less good-for-nothing"..."He needs an identity...I can give him mine.". Each character is acutely aware of his own gratuitousness, and each of them tries desperately to cobble together a raison d'etre in the face of nothingness. When these collapse, as in the case of Michel, Zabal and Leguardier, they are driven to murder or suicide.
As with Les Enfants Du Paradis, Carne's forte lies in sculpting exquisitely intricate characters- the sheer HUMANITY of this movie warrants multiple viewings. Michel Simon's grotesque, graceless Zabal is brilliantly rendered- scorned doubly for his money and his cosmetic deficiencies, Zabal's resignation to a cruel fate (soul-corroding loneliness and a burgeoning moral ugliness) culminates in a death as clumsy and maladroit as his demeanor. His reverence for beauty, as exhibited in his adoration of Nelly and religious hymns, is severely at odds with his environs.
Leguardier, petty hoodlum, imitates American gangster archetypes gleaned from film and hardboiled novels, but his seemingly cocksure swagger is a poor facade for his suffocating ennui and moral cowardliness. Nelly, forbearing and forlorn, is prey to reveries of love, fantasies that promise fulfilment until the film's heartrending conclusion. Looming ominously in the background of the movie are questions on the purpose of art in this grim epoch- the characters on display are all victims of quixotic myths: of war, patriotism, love, crime, masculinity. The incongruities between these fables and cruel reality, the hideous gulf between romance and fact, these are perhaps the saddest truths the film yields.
The ending, seen in this light, is bittersweet- Jean, the tragic character par excellence who has said Yes to all that is absurd and obscene in his life, relinquishes all illusions about the impermanence of all things, including love. Nelly and Jean have achieved true communion, true intercourse, if even for an ephemeral moment. His death is a noble one, an affirmation and acceptance of transience. This is the happiest conclusion that Carne can offer, and even in the film's unrelenting fatalism there is fortitude and life-affirming courage. Camus would've given the thumbs up! In the absurd quandary of life, there is room for sentiment and fraternity, as long as we accept its temporal nature. In Proustian fashion, memory renews all things, so let us embalm these precious moments!
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Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 27 389 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 6 618 $US
- 16 sept. 2012
- Montant brut mondial
- 39 623 $US
- Durée1 heure 31 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1