| Accueil | Créer un blog | Accès membres | Tous les blogs | Meetic 3 jours gratuit | Meetic Affinity 3 jours gratuit | Rainbow's Lips | Badoo |
newsletter de vip-blog.com S'inscrireSe désinscrire
http://tellurikwaves.vip-blog.com


 CINEMA :Les blessures narcissiques d'une vie par procuration
VIP Board
Blog express
Messages audio
Video Blog
Flux RSS

CINEMA :Les blessures narcissiques d'une vie par procuration

VIP-Blog de tellurikwaves
  • 12842 articles publiés
  • 103 commentaires postés
  • 1 visiteur aujourd'hui
  • Créé le : 10/09/2011 19:04
    Modifié : 09/08/2023 17:55

    Garçon (73 ans)
    Origine : 75 Paris
    Contact
    Favori
    Faire connaître ce blog
    Newsletter de ce blog

     Janvier  2026 
    Lun Mar Mer Jeu Ven Sam Dim
    293001020304
    05060708091011
    12131415161718
    19202122232425
    262728293001

    ©-DR- HOTEL DU NORD p14

    29/01/2014 18:10

    ©-DR- HOTEL DU NORD  p14


    L'Analyse de DVD Classik(7)

    Aux côtés de ce duo, une pléiade de personnages crée l’ambiance si particulière du film : le patron paternaliste de l’hôtel, sa femme tendre et protectrice, le jeune étudiant homosexuel, le policier raciste et méfiant ou encore l’éclusier trompé puis dominé par Raymonde mais toujours souriant constituent une troupe bigarrée et attachante qui donne vie à l’impressionnant décor entièrement reconstitué par Alexandre Trauner dans les studios de Billancourt. Cette ambiance de quartier, où les dialogues fusent et les couples s’enlacent semble avoir influencer le cinéma de Cédric Klaplish (Chacun cherche son chat notamment) où la multiplicité des personnages projetés dans un décor unique contribue à faire vivre la pellicule … Le jeune et talentueux cinéaste français n’a rien inventé, il ne fait que reprendre la sauce d’Hôtel du Nord avec légèreté pour l’adapter au Paris d’aujourd’hui!






    ©-DR- HOTEL DU NORD p15

    29/01/2014 18:17

    ©-DR- HOTEL DU NORD  p15







    ©-DR-HOTEL DU NORD de Marcel Carné (1938) p16

    29/01/2014 18:19

    ©-DR-HOTEL DU NORD de Marcel Carné (1938) p16


    L'Analyse de DVD Classik(fin)

    Cependant, si l’ambiance fonctionne à merveille, il manque à Hôtel du Nord l’intensité dramatique et la poésie des plus grandes œuvres de Carné. Contrairement au Quai des Brumes, Drôle de drame ou Les enfants du paradis, le décor de l’hôtel finit par l’emporter sur le récit. Carné a beau s’efforcer pour donner de la puissance à son dernier acte (le plan en contre-plongée sur Jouvet de retour de Marseille est à ce titre impressionnant) c’est au final l’hôtel et ses cris, ses rires et ses pleurs que le public retiendra. Il est clair que Jeanson, en qui Carné avait toute confiance, s’est emparé du scénario pour en faire un écrin à dialogues. Dès lors, il n’est pas faux de constater qu’il manque ici la patte d’un grand dramaturge…

    Ne cherchons pas bien loin, il manque Prévert tout simplement ! Le poète qui, aux côtés de Carné, donna naissance au Quai des brumes ou Les enfants du Paradis nourrit ces films d’une puissance dramatique et poétique qui manquent à Hôtel du Nord. Reste néanmoins une oeuvre étonnante de vie, un spectacle à cœur ouvert sur le Paris des années trente. Alors désuet ce troisième long métrage de Carné ? A l’instar de La grande illusion ou de La règle du jeu de son collègue Jean Renoir, Hôtel du Nord demeure un fantastique témoignage de l’époque. Témoignage traité à la fois avec sobriété et modernité que les jeunes amoureux du cinéma peuvent encore et toujours déguster avec passion.






    ©-DR- HOTEL DU NORD p17

    29/01/2014 18:22

    ©-DR- HOTEL DU NORD  p17


    Brilliant

    Author: Jonno-B from Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
    22 July 1999

    This is an excellent film, and is the sort of treasure that one can only catch through sporadic cinema showings, as it is unavailable on video/DVD. The way that the film begins with the two lovers arriving, and ends with them leaving (although quite a lot happens in between, and they don't stay in one place during this time), gives you a sense of closure, and a feeling that all is right with the world. If you get a chance to see this film, then do. I can't wait to see it again, and wish that it could be put on general release.
    *

    *






    ©-DR-HOTEL DU NORD de Marcel Carné (1938) p18

    29/01/2014 18:25

    ©-DR-HOTEL DU NORD de Marcel Carné (1938) p18


    Faded, but gorgeous.

    Author: Darragh O' Donoghue (hitch1899_@hotmail.com) from Dublin, Ireland
    22 September 1999

    Fragile Carne, just before his great period. Although it is sometimes hesitantly directed, and marred by longueurs, HOTEL DU NORD is full of the faded charm and beauty typical of French films of the late 1930s, as well as a relative lightness of touch unusual with this director. All of his great virtues are here: the cramped interiors broken up by gliding, complex, delicious camera movements; a melancholy deployment of light and shade; remarkable, wistful sets by Alexander Trauner, which are so evocative that they, as the title suggests, take on a shaping personality of their own; the quietly mournful music of Maurice Jaubert; a seemingly casual plot about romance, tragedy and fatalism that casts a noose over its characters; extraordinary performances by some of the greatest players of all time, in this case Louis Jouvet and Arletty.

    In fact, the film's biggest failing, and I find myself astonished (as someone who usually, didactically, minimises its importance) to admit it, is its script. It has plenty of wit and poignancy, but without the poetry and irony regular Carne collaborator Jacques Prevert brought to their best films, it cannot avoid slipping into cliche (even if it is only cliche in hindsight).Ostensibly set in the boarding house, the film sets up its opening idea of community with two interconnecting tales of doomed love, and emotional, metaphysical and actual isolation The doomed love scenario is the one that works least well.

    Annabella is very beautiful, but not very good at doing tragic, while Aumont's callowness, brilliantly appropriate though it may be, by its nature obtrudes any real, felt, romance. Maybe it's just me, but I find it hard to sympathise with a couple, so young, so attractive, who, after only a few months, are so racked with despair that they have to shoot each other. Their high-flown lines are rather embarrassing too. Of course, this affair is not meant to be plausible - they are symbolic of youth, hope and possibility being crushed in France, or maybe France itself, despairing, resigned, waiting for death. For symbols to be truly powerful, they must convince on a narrative level, which, I feel, they don't quite here.What saves this plot is its connection with the story of M. Edmond, a character linked to the great tradition of French gangsters.

    Although we only learn it gradually, he is a killer in hiding, living off the prostitute played by Arletty, having dobbed in his accomplices. In his previous 'role' - and the theatricality of his position is crucial - he had one set of traits; in hiding he has assumed their complete opposite. Living a rather aimless life, he is profoundly shaken by the lovers' pact, and becomes fatalistic, realising the folly of trying to cheat death.In this way - the admission that one is less a person than a collection of signs, and that death is an unavoidable reality the most powerful masculinity must succumb to - Edmond is like a romantic prototype of Melville's clinical killers. With one exception - he gives briefly into hope, a delusion which only strenghtens - if that's not too much of an unbearable irony - his fatal resolve.

    All this could have been trite if it wasn't for the truly amazing performance of Louis Jouvet. I had studied his theatrical work at college, but this was my first taste of his screen talents, and he reveals himself to be worthy of the greats - Grant, Mastroianni, Clift, Mason, Mitchum, Cotten - giving a quiet nobility to a role which is more of a conception (he, needless to say, is allegorical too) than an actual person. Edmond begins the film a minor supporting character, but emerges as a tragic hero of some force. Like all those major actors, Jouvet's brilliance lies in what he conceals.On a formal level, what amazes is Carne's grasping, ten years before its flourishing, of the techniques of the great Hollywood melodramas of Sirk, Ophuls, Ray and Minnelli.

    Although his theatricality lacks the fluidity and clear-eyed beauty of Sierck's contemporary German melodramas (check out the masterpieces ZU NEUEN UFERN and LA HABENERA), Carne's style truly fits his theme - that of entrapment, paralysis, resignation.The film's principle motif is that of water - the credits float and dissolve, the hotel stands by a waterway - but instead of Renoir's open river of possibility, we have a canal, stagnant and manmade, going nowhere. The film begins as it ends, and the setting never changes, except for one brief interlude from which both escapees are doomed to return. Characters can only escape through death - their entrapment is emphasised by the narrow rooms they occupy, the walls and frames that hold them captive, the windows that look out on an escape they can never achieve. Any hope at the end, therefore, is profoundly, if romantically, compromised.






    Début | Page précédente | 1383 1384 1385 1386 1387 1388 1389 1390 1391 1392 1393 1394 1395 1396 1397 1398 1399 1400 1401 | Page suivante | Fin
    [ Annuaire | VIP-Site | Charte | Admin | Contact tellurikwaves ]

    © VIP Blog - Signaler un abus