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Jenny Lamour

Original title: Quai des Orfèvres
  • 1947
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
6.7K
YOUR RATING
Suzy Delair and Louis Jouvet in Jenny Lamour (1947)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer3:24
1 Video
63 Photos
CrimeDrama

A jealous husband intends to kill the man his wife is meeting for business, but arrives to find the deed already done.A jealous husband intends to kill the man his wife is meeting for business, but arrives to find the deed already done.A jealous husband intends to kill the man his wife is meeting for business, but arrives to find the deed already done.

  • Director
    • Henri-Georges Clouzot
  • Writers
    • Stanislas-André Steeman
    • Henri-Georges Clouzot
    • Jean Ferry
  • Stars
    • Louis Jouvet
    • Simone Renant
    • Bernard Blier
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    6.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Henri-Georges Clouzot
    • Writers
      • Stanislas-André Steeman
      • Henri-Georges Clouzot
      • Jean Ferry
    • Stars
      • Louis Jouvet
      • Simone Renant
      • Bernard Blier
    • 44User reviews
    • 65Critic reviews
    • 89Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 3:24
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos62

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Louis Jouvet
    Louis Jouvet
    • L'inspecteur adjoint Antoine
    Simone Renant
    Simone Renant
    • Dora Monnier
    Bernard Blier
    Bernard Blier
    • Maurice Martineau
    Suzy Delair
    Suzy Delair
    • Jenny Lamour
    Pierre Larquey
    Pierre Larquey
    • Emile Lafour
    Jeanne Fusier-Gir
    Jeanne Fusier-Gir
    • Pâquerette
    Claudine Dupuis
    Claudine Dupuis
    • Manon
    Charles Dullin
    • Georges Brignon
    Henri Arius
    • Léopardi
    • (as Arius)
    Charles Blavette
    Charles Blavette
    • Le gendarme Poitevin
    • (as Blavette)
    René Blancard
    René Blancard
    • Le commissaire principal de la P.J.
    • (as R. Blancard)
    Robert Dalban
    Robert Dalban
    • Paulo
    • (as R. Dalban)
    Jean Daurand
    • L'inspecteur Picard
    • (as J. Daurand)
    Jean Dunot
    Jean Dunot
    • Nitram
    • (as J. Dunot)
    Jacques Grétillat
    Jacques Grétillat
    • Auguste
    • (as J. Grétillat)
    Gilberte Géniat
    Gilberte Géniat
    • Mme Beauvoir
    • (as G. Géniat)
    Gabriel Gobin
    Gabriel Gobin
    • Le patron du bistrot
    • (as G. Gobin)
    François Joux
    • L' officier de police Fayard
    • (as F. Joux)
    • Director
      • Henri-Georges Clouzot
    • Writers
      • Stanislas-André Steeman
      • Henri-Georges Clouzot
      • Jean Ferry
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews44

    7.76.7K
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    Featured reviews

    10dbdumonteil

    Chabrol's predecessor.

    First of all,there is a detective story:"légitime défense" by Belgian Stanislas André Steeman whose "l'assassin habite au 21" Clouzot had already transferred to the screen in 1942,with Pierre Fresnay and the same actress Suzy Delair.Steeman complained about Clouzot's adaptation for both movies.The movie from 1942 was excellent,but the "detective story" side had been kept,so why complaining?As for "Quai des orfèvres",Clouzot was now in a new phase of his brilliant career.After having directed "le corbeau" and been blacklisted,he had a lot more to say than a simple whodunit.Steeman complained essentially about the poor detective ending,which I will not reveal of course,but Clouzot focused on the social vignettes,on his characters's psychology,and he did not give a damn about the puzzle à la Agatha Christie.By doing so,he becomes the genuine predecessor of CLaude Chabrol who has always been closer to him than to Alfred Hitchcock whom he admires much though. Suzy Delair has great screen presence,and you will love the song she really sings(she was a singer too)"avec son tralala".Bernard Blier gives ,as ever,a sparing of gestures and words performance,and he really pulls it off .Two characters are particularly interesting and disturbing:the first one,Dora,the photographer:she takes pictures of female models ,and Clouzot,by subtle touches,reveals us she's a lesbian.Of course,the word is never uttered(How could it be in 1947?) The police chief (fabulous Louis Jouvet) tells her:"You and me,WE are not lucky with women."The portrait of this cop is very detailed:we learn a lot of things about him,not necessarily connected with the Delair/Blier plot:he's a widower ,with a son he adores and who runs into school difficulties,particularly in geometry.So we get to know all the characters in depth.One of the most important manifesto of post-war French cinema.
    7jzappa

    Clouzot's Least Dark Suspense Thriller

    The extraordinarily adorable Suzy Delair plays a statuesque performer obsessed with succeeding in the theater. Her husband and accompanist, played by Bernard Blier, is a composed but jealous man. When he finds out in a less than preferable way that his flashy wife has planned a rendezvous with a lecherous old businessman with the intention of advancing her career, he loses all control and threatens the businessman with murder. Now, at that point, I must stop describing the film to you because it skates on such thin ice with its twists, revelations, ambiguities and suspense that to imply any of it would endanger it. I am not sure how good or bad that is for this French police procedural emanating from the song- and-dance community, though it is certainly interesting that what we do know throughout is who did not do it. We just don't know who did.

    The story depends upon the procedure of following clues, where ideal alibis fail and where cautiously created fabrications and deceptions disintegrate. Interestingly, this is a suspense film in which suspense is generated in spite of the knowledge one would traditionally think too much too soon.

    Quay of the Goldsmiths is the least dark of Henri-Georges Clouzot's films. It's nowhere near as sinister as the shocking Les Diaboliques, as tragic as the riveting Wages of Fear or as eery as Le Corbeau. Maybe it is due to the vibrance of the dance halls and theater settings of 1940s France, which all work as the milieu of this crime thriller.

    Clouzot both understands and approves of his characters, even the more rotten ones, where he has more of a vindictive streak with his other films. Where he may have had understanding for the scheming women in Les Diabolique or the truck drivers who sink to the level of risking horrible death in order to oust themselves from miserable life in The Wages of Fear, there isn't necessarily support or agreement on the part of the filmmaker, for these are characters who plainly made the direct decisions that determine their fate. All the characters in this more settling film have scenes and moments that endear us to them, even the harsh, cold detective played by Louis Jouvet, who worries about his young adoptive son amid all the trouble and despair that happens in his life at any time with the drop of a hat.

    There is humor and unabashed sexiness, the latter mostly on the part of Delair, that neutralize the pressure to a degree. Clouzot was quietly practicing his craft, patient till he made his unrelenting later films, in which he would permit his audiences no pardon from the tension.
    8Xstal

    A Cunningly Concocted Curtain Call...

    It takes a while for the scene to set, a subtle intriguing build up, just as you'd expect, but where is it going, this to-ing and fro-ing, as the alibis and excuses unwind and reset? To somewhere quite unexpected is the answer.
    8blanche-2

    Clouzot strikes again and hits his mark

    Henri-Georges Clouzot's "Quai des Orfevres" (1947) stars Suzy Delair, Bernard Blier, Louis Jouvet, and Charles Dullin. The story takes place in post-war Paris, where an accompanist, Maurice Martineau (Blier) lives with his singer wife, Marguerite, better known as Jenny Lamour (Suzy Delair). An important man, Georges Brignon (Dullin) promises Jenny work, and because she's ambitious, she flirts with him. Maurice is an extremely jealous man, so he finds Brignon in a restaurant and threatens him.

    Later on, Jenny tells Maurice she is visiting her grandmother, who lives in another town. This gives Maurice a good opportunity to bump off Brignon, especially when he finds the man's address on a piece of paper in the kitchen and realizes Jenny was lying. But when he gets to Brignon's house, Brignon is already dead.

    Inspector Antoine (Juvet) is assigned to the case, and it doesn't take him long to realize that some alibis aren't very secure.

    Wonderful film, with the excellent Juvet outstanding as Inspector Antoine, and an excellent performance by Simone Renant as a lesbian photographer, Dora, in love with Jenny. Delair, who was involved with Clouzot, is good as a lower-class woman who loves her husband but wants to get ahead in show business as well.

    This is Clouzot at his best, with a witty script with some plot twists and a true Parisian atmosphere.
    10heliotropetwo

    Genre bending Tragi-comic love story-character study-police procedural.

    The Director loves the actress and it shows. The actress inhabits the character, whom we love at first sight and sound. The character loves her jealous unprepossessing husband and he loves her. His childhood friend secretly loves his wife and the fact that his friend is a beautiful woman makes the love tragic and ironic. His wife is jealous of his childhood friend and thinks her attentions are out of secret love for her husband.

    Then there is a murder and the investigating police lieutenant, who loves only his bi-racial son, and resents being taken from his company by the above characters, who have had some unpleasant contact with the deceased and are all lying to one degree or another, unravels the mystery with some of the most precise and authentic procedural detail ever captured on film.

    And then there are the atmospherics of a post-war Paris, where coal is in short supply, music is filled with erotic longing and wistful memory, and innocence has long ago been washed away by the rain.

    All of this in a milieu of magicians whose tricks don't always work, dogs who walk on their hind feet and express music criticism, hungry news reporters and exhausted cops.

    And then there are many of the finest actors of their generation who have been through some very bad years directed by, to come full circle, a man who is in love with his lead actress and who, with full justification, was a respected friend of Picasso.

    I've seen this film often and I love all of them and it.

    Best Emmys Moments

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    Related interests

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    Crime
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Henri-Georges Clouzot wrote almost two-thirds of the film only having read the novel years before, recalling it from memory, since it was out of print by the time he started the screenplay. When the novelist Stanislas-André Steeman saw the film, he was furious about the differences between the novel and the film.
    • Goofs
      When Antoine is repeating Maurice's deposition to the typist, he says that the confrontation between Maurice and Brignon at the restaurant took place on Wednesday, December 2, 1946. In 1946, December 2 fell on a Monday.
    • Quotes

      L'inspecteur adjoint Antoine: I have to admit, I've taken a liking to you, Miss Dora Monier.

      Dora Monier: Me?

      L'inspecteur adjoint Antoine: Because I have to say, you're just my type. When it comes to women, we'll never have a chance.

    • Connections
      Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: La monnaie de l'absolu (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Avec son Tralala
      Music by Francis Lopez

      Lyrics by André Hornez

      Performed by Suzy Delair

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Jenny Lamour?Powered by Alexa
    • Why did they discuss swapping butter and shoes?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 5, 1948 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official site
      • distributor's webpage
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Quay of the Goldsmiths
    • Filming locations
      • Paris, France(Exterior)
    • Production company
      • Majestic Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $180,974
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $9,632
      • Oct 27, 2002
    • Gross worldwide
      • $181,041
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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