L'abbé Vincent veut construire une église dans le quartier de La Californie. Accueilli par des pierres, il fait face. L'abbé résiste, construit peu a peu son église et régénère tous les misé... Tout lireL'abbé Vincent veut construire une église dans le quartier de La Californie. Accueilli par des pierres, il fait face. L'abbé résiste, construit peu a peu son église et régénère tous les misérables avec qui il vit dont le plus endurci BibiL'abbé Vincent veut construire une église dans le quartier de La Californie. Accueilli par des pierres, il fait face. L'abbé résiste, construit peu a peu son église et régénère tous les misérables avec qui il vit dont le plus endurci Bibi
Photos
Édouard Delmont
- Le père Didier
- (as Delmont)
René Sarvil
- Julot
- (as Sarvil)
Henri de Livry
- Le sacristain
- (as De Livry)
Odette Barencey
- Zéphyrine
- (as Odette Barancey)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe shooting started in 1939 shortly before the war broke out and was, like many others, abandoned. It was only resumed on 10th July 1940. The film was released in April 1941.
Commentaire à la une
This is not legend ;this is fact .Till 1930 there was a sinister shantytown on the outskirts of Paris which was called "la zone" (=the slum belt); Georges Lacombe devoted a 28 min documentary to this place in 1928.From 1930 onwards , they began to demolish the slums and accomodated some of the underdogs in cheap brick houses ;anyway shantytowns persisted till the early sixties ,when HLM (public housing estate) created low-rent buildings en masse.
Before the war, this "zone " frightened the wealthy bourgeois who considered it the place where the dregs of society lived.The first picture is revealing : a wedding takes place in a chic part of Paris: bride and groom radiant with joy, guests dressed up to the nines :but those selfish privileged people ignore the beggar who asks them if they can spare a dime : old man Didier ,an anarchist who has lost in faith in God and in his fellow men ,an inhabitant of the zone.
The director switches abruptly from paradise to hell :in the zone , which crawls with vermin,where rats invade the slums ",where people live everyday off the waste and decay off the discards of their fellow man" : these Tracy Chapman's lines (from "subcity")can perfectly apply to these underdogs' situation : one sees them finding the carapace of a lobster in the rubbish .
"Notre Dame De La Mouise "(=Notre Dame destitution) was intended as a religious movie,to edify its audience ;a priest who used to work in the posh side of the city is not welcomed in the zone (they throw stones at him ) : undaunted,he proudly says ,picking up a missile " on this stone ,I will build my church" .And actually he has to build himself his tiny church (made out of wood) with sparse help from a inhabitant .
The inhabitants ,like old man Didier , do not care about religion and "pie in the sky " is not their food.Fortunately , religion takes a back seat to daily life in the slums ,and from that point of view,the movie is successful : the dandy who wants to attract poor girls to the bright lights of the city (probably a pimp) and is thrown into the mud , the girl (Odette Joyeux ) whose mom has found a place of concierge in a decent street and who leaves her lover crying , the small joys where they meet in a seedy café , the chanson réaliste bawled out by a wretch (Odette Barançay) accompanied on her husband's accordion ......
Except for the very last scenes ,which do not make any sense ,with the coming of the bishop ( one thinks of how a genius such as Luis Bunuel would have treated this mascarade ) , one rarely enters the makeshift church and one never attends a single mass.
"Notre Dame De La Mouise" is not "los olvidados" ,by a long shot ;but in 1939 , it's more than a curios , it's almost an anomaly on the French scene ; the film was released in 1941 ,during the occupation.Robert Peguy ,its director sunk into oblivion.
Before the war, this "zone " frightened the wealthy bourgeois who considered it the place where the dregs of society lived.The first picture is revealing : a wedding takes place in a chic part of Paris: bride and groom radiant with joy, guests dressed up to the nines :but those selfish privileged people ignore the beggar who asks them if they can spare a dime : old man Didier ,an anarchist who has lost in faith in God and in his fellow men ,an inhabitant of the zone.
The director switches abruptly from paradise to hell :in the zone , which crawls with vermin,where rats invade the slums ",where people live everyday off the waste and decay off the discards of their fellow man" : these Tracy Chapman's lines (from "subcity")can perfectly apply to these underdogs' situation : one sees them finding the carapace of a lobster in the rubbish .
"Notre Dame De La Mouise "(=Notre Dame destitution) was intended as a religious movie,to edify its audience ;a priest who used to work in the posh side of the city is not welcomed in the zone (they throw stones at him ) : undaunted,he proudly says ,picking up a missile " on this stone ,I will build my church" .And actually he has to build himself his tiny church (made out of wood) with sparse help from a inhabitant .
The inhabitants ,like old man Didier , do not care about religion and "pie in the sky " is not their food.Fortunately , religion takes a back seat to daily life in the slums ,and from that point of view,the movie is successful : the dandy who wants to attract poor girls to the bright lights of the city (probably a pimp) and is thrown into the mud , the girl (Odette Joyeux ) whose mom has found a place of concierge in a decent street and who leaves her lover crying , the small joys where they meet in a seedy café , the chanson réaliste bawled out by a wretch (Odette Barançay) accompanied on her husband's accordion ......
Except for the very last scenes ,which do not make any sense ,with the coming of the bishop ( one thinks of how a genius such as Luis Bunuel would have treated this mascarade ) , one rarely enters the makeshift church and one never attends a single mass.
"Notre Dame De La Mouise" is not "los olvidados" ,by a long shot ;but in 1939 , it's more than a curios , it's almost an anomaly on the French scene ; the film was released in 1941 ,during the occupation.Robert Peguy ,its director sunk into oblivion.
- ulicknormanowen
- 11 mai 2020
- Permalien
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Onze-Lieve-Vrouw van de sloppen
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 30 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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What is the English language plot outline for Notre-Dame de la mouise (1941)?
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