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IMDbPro

Pépé le Moko

  • 1937
  • Approved
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
8.5K
YOUR RATING
Mireille Balin, Jean Gabin, and Line Noro in Pépé le Moko (1937)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer3:30
1 Video
99+ Photos
CrimeDramaRomance

A wanted gangster is both king and prisoner of the Casbah. He's protected from arrest by his friends, but is torn by his desire for freedom. A visiting Parisian beauty may determine his fate... Read allA wanted gangster is both king and prisoner of the Casbah. He's protected from arrest by his friends, but is torn by his desire for freedom. A visiting Parisian beauty may determine his fate.A wanted gangster is both king and prisoner of the Casbah. He's protected from arrest by his friends, but is torn by his desire for freedom. A visiting Parisian beauty may determine his fate.

  • Director
    • Julien Duvivier
  • Writers
    • Henri La Barthe
    • Julien Duvivier
    • Jacques Constant
  • Stars
    • Jean Gabin
    • Gabriel Gabrio
    • Saturnin Fabre
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    8.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Julien Duvivier
    • Writers
      • Henri La Barthe
      • Julien Duvivier
      • Jacques Constant
    • Stars
      • Jean Gabin
      • Gabriel Gabrio
      • Saturnin Fabre
    • 67User reviews
    • 69Critic reviews
    • 98Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 3:30
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos122

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    + 115
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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Jean Gabin
    Jean Gabin
    • Pépé le Moko
    Gabriel Gabrio
    Gabriel Gabrio
    • Carlos
    Saturnin Fabre
    Saturnin Fabre
    • Le Grand Père
    Fernand Charpin
    Fernand Charpin
    • Régis
    • (as Charpin)
    Lucas Gridoux
    Lucas Gridoux
    • Slimane
    Gilbert Gil
    Gilbert Gil
    • Pierrot
    • (as Gilbert-Gil)
    Marcel Dalio
    Marcel Dalio
    • L'Arbi
    • (as Dalio)
    Charles Granval
    Charles Granval
    • Maxime
    • (as Granval)
    Gaston Modot
    Gaston Modot
    • Jimmy
    René Bergeron
    René Bergeron
    • Meunier
    • (as Bergeron)
    Paul Escoffier
    Paul Escoffier
    • Louvain
    • (as Escoffier)
    Roger Legris
    Roger Legris
    • Max
    • (as Legris)
    Jean Témerson
    • Gravère
    • (as Temerson)
    Robert Ozanne
    • Gendron
    Philippe Richard
    Philippe Richard
    • Janvier
    Georges Péclet
    • Barsac
    • (as Péclet)
    Mireille Balin
    Mireille Balin
    • Gaby
    Line Noro
    Line Noro
    • Inès
    • Director
      • Julien Duvivier
    • Writers
      • Henri La Barthe
      • Julien Duvivier
      • Jacques Constant
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews67

    7.78.4K
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    Featured reviews

    dominic-9

    The exotic origin of film noir

    Pepe le Moko marks a fundamental step in the aesthetic development of european cinema. It is also one of many great crime films of the thirties that is sadly overlooked in many critics top 100 lists.

    Through it's lush sense of location and character Duvivier builds up a sweaty, exotic and complex picture of the underworld life of the Kasbah and the vast panorama of engagingly seedy characters especially Pepe le Moko, played with such effortlessly charismatic ease by Jean Gabin. But it is the rich claustrophobic atmosphere and the relentless pressure of the police that powers this film along to it's elegantly tragic conclusion. A masterpiece, and the clearest fore-runner to the whole film noir genre.
    9Boba_Fett1138

    French film-noir before film-noir even existed.

    The term film-noir didn't got handled until the '40's but this term would also really apply to this movie. It features all of the film-noir ingredients with its story as well as its atmosphere.

    The movie isn't as smooth or expensive and good looking as an American movie but otherwise there is not much wrong with it. It features a typical crime story in which a Parisian gangster hides in Algeria. Combined with this get the usual factors such as romance and a tough main character, who of course also shows his humane side. It has a solid story that is typical for the genre and therefore for the regular genre viewer won't feature many surprises in it but it's for them also nice and interesting to see how this typical film-noir ingredients all got handled in a '30's, before the film-noir got even really truly invented.

    But because the movie isn't American this of course also means that this movie is a 'different' one to watch. It features often some more interesting camera-angles and style of editing. It makes some of the sequences really great to look at. It also has a good and pleasant pace and is skillfully being directed by Julien Duvivier.

    It's also a movie that got greatly carried by its principal actor Jean Gabin. He plays his character in the right way for the movie. He's a criminal but you still like him. It's a great character played by a great actor. Not all of the supporting actors are just as good however and act in a more typical kind of '30's over-the-top acting style, though the movie does feature some more great characters.

    The movie got for some part shot in Algeria itself but some sequence are also sometimes painfully obvious studio-work. It's the foremost reason why the movie at times has a sort of cheap and less smooth look over it. The movie did became a success though and even managed to get an American release. This success inspired Hollywood to make one year later an American remake of this movie, called "Algiers", starring French born actor Charles Boyer and Hedy Lamarr.

    A real fine late '30's French crime drama, which really can be seen as an early film-noir.

    9/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    tprofumo

    Film noir from the French, before they invented the phrase

    "Pepe Le Moko" is an early film noir, coming several decades before the French themselves invented the term to explain atmospheric American crime films. And it is one of the best, a film ranking right up there with the work of Melville, Becker, and other top post war directors.

    This is being billed in the US now as a sort of lost film. Actually, it wasn't lost. Hollywood simply bought the rights and kept it off American movie screens so it could release its own remake of it in 1938, retitled "Algiers." That wasn't a half bad film, made enjoyable for the most part because it was a very off-beat story, had great atmosphere and featured the breathtakingly beautiful Hedy Lamarr in the role of Gaby.

    At first, when looking at this French original, you wonder why it seems so familiar. Then you realize that the Hollywood version is almost a shot for shot remake, copying almost everything. Everything, that is, but the performance of Jean Gabin.

    Hollywood's version, which stared Charles Boyer, always seemed a little contrived, primarily because Boyer was just not very convincing as the tough Paris gangster who pulls a bank heist and flees to Algiers, where he takes up permanent residence in the Arab quarter, the Casbah. Boyer just didn't seem like the gangster type.

    Gabin, who had played rough characters before and would go on to play many others, is perfect as the smart, charismatic, but sometimes brutal Pepe.

    It is ironic that the French, so in love with gangster films that they copied American cops and robbers films of the 30s, actually made one of their own in that era that wound up being copied by the Americans.

    This one is well worth seeing.
    10Galina_movie_fan

    "Everyone in the world has two fatherlands: his own and Paris".

    "Pepe Le Moko" (1937) directed by Julien Duvivier - is a wonderful movie with the great performance from very young Jean Gabin. It just happened that I've seen several movies with him in the older age where he is serious, not very talkative man with the head full of grey hair and I like him in the later movies, too but it was so much fun to see him as Pepe - young, charming, dangerous, smart, brutal, irresistible, and so much in love with Paris that he'd lost forever. As much as I enjoyed the film as an early noir and crime, I think it is about the longing for home, about the nostalgia and as such it is even more interesting, deeper, poignant that just a noir. The celebrated film director Max Ophüls, who knew a lot about nostalgia and immigration said about Paris,

    "It offered the shining wet boulevards under the street lights, breakfast in Monmartre with cognac in your glass, coffee and lukewarm brioche, gigolos and prostitutes at night. Everyone in the world has two fatherlands: his own and Paris."

    I could not help thinking of his words when I watched the film. There is one scene that almost reduced me to tears - a middle-aged former chanteuse plays one of her records on a gramophone and sings along with her voice that has not changed at all even if she looks nothing like the picture on the wall from the days of her youth. The time may play very nasty jokes with a woman - she may get fat or skinny, lose her teeth and hair but her voice will stay as strong or tender, ringing or melodious as it was in the long gone days that stay forever in her memory. She sings about Paris and there are tears on her eyes and the scene simply can't leave any viewer indifferent. There is another scene - between Pepe and Gaby the girl from Paris with whom Pepe falls in love (Mireille Balin). They talk about Paris remembering different places which are dear to both of them, and in the end, they both named La Place Blanche where they both belong and not in Algiers's Casbah where Pepe is safe and he rules the world of criminals but can't forget the sound of Metro in Paris. When Pepe wants to tell Gaby that he loves her, he tells her that she reminds him of Metro in Paris...

    I have not even mentioned how masterfully the film was shot by Julien Duvivier and how well it was acted, how fast it movies, and there are so many wonderful scenes that I have not mentioned...Great, great movie.
    8seveb-25179

    Plenty of pep

    One of the classic crime fiction films ever made and a fantastic time capsule containing the distilled exotic ambience of French colonial Algiers. Like many French movie stars, Jean Gabin is no oil painting, but he does have a certain energy and charisma, and he needs to, in order to avoid being upstaged by the colourful menagerie supporting players who surround him. Wanted by the French authorities, master criminal Pepe le Moco and his gang take refuge in the seamy labyrinth of the Algiers Casbah, where the police can never quite catch up with them, but slowly his sanctuary becomes his prison... Meanwhile the wily local inspector bides his time until a woman provides the flashpoint that could prove to be Pepe's undoing. If you have enjoyed the feel of Casablanca you may well fall in love with this one.

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    Related interests

    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
    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
      When Walter Wanger produced Algiers (1938), the American remake, he tried to have all copies of this movie destroyed. Fortunately, he was not able to do so.
    • Goofs
      After Pierrot's death, Pepe is getting progressively drunker, and his suit coat opens to reveal more of his shirt. His shirt has a monogram of "JG" on the pocket, which is the monogram of the actor (Jean Gabin) and not the character because Gabin often wore his own clothes and at that point in the film he coquettishly calls attention to the fact that he is wearing clothes from his personal wardrobe in a sort of sartorial wink at the audience."
    • Quotes

      Chef Inspecteur Louvain: But can we trust you? No double-dealing?

      Régis: Sir, I am an informer not a hypocrite.

    • Connections
      Edited into Catalogue of Ships (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Où est-il donc ?
      Music by Vincent Scotto

      Lyrics by André Decaye and Lucien Carol

      Performed by Fréhel

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 3, 1941 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official site
      • Distributeur
    • Languages
      • French
      • Arabic
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tajinstveni Alžir
    • Filming locations
      • Algiers, Algeria(exteriors, backgrounds)
    • Production company
      • Paris Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $60,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $155,895
    • Gross worldwide
      • $156,544
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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