Claude Berri Movies
An actor turned director, producer, and screenwriter,
Claude Berri is known in France and abroad for making films that offer both comedic and dramatic explorations of the prejudices and anxieties that plague most people, and their alternately deleterious and hilarious repercussions. His work tends to be intensely personal and has oftentimes been informed by his own background as the child of Jewish immigrant parents.
Born as Claude Langmann in Paris on July 1, 1934, Berri grew up during the war years under the protection of his parents' gentile friends. As a young adult, he worked for a brief time as a furrier before becoming an actor. He made his screen debut in
Claude Autant-Lara's
Le Bon Dieu Sans Confession (1953). After playing a series of small roles in such films as
Claude Chabrol's
Les Bonnes Femmes (1960), Henri-Georges Cluzot's
La Verité (1960), and
Maurice Pialat's
Janine (1962), Berri made his directorial debut with the 1965 short
La Poulet. The film won an Oscar for Best Live Short and a prize at the Venice Film Festival, and Berri proceeded to release two more short films,
Les Baisers and
La Chance et L'Amour, the following year.
Berri wrote and directed his first feature-length film,
Le Vieil Homme et L'Enfant, in 1968. The story of a young Jewish boy (
Alain Cohen, who would go on to portray Berri's alter-ego in a number of his films) who befriends an anti-Semitic old man (famed Swiss actor
Michel Simon), the film was a deeply personal one for the director, and it earned international acclaim for its tender, unsentimental execution. After directing a comedy,
La Pistonné, which starred
Guy Bedos as a draft-dodger, Berri returned to more personal terrain with
Le Cinema de Papa in 1970. Featuring Berri as himself (and
Alain Cohen as his younger self), the film was the director's autobiographical exploration of his youth and teen years.
Between 1972 and 1975 Berri directed four films, all of which were (often satirical) comedies revolving around the sexual desires and peccadillos of the average French male. One of these,
La Première Fois (1976), covered the sexual awakening of Berri's alter ego (Cohen again) and also provided a glimpse of Jewish life in 1950s France. Berri subsequently tried his hand at straight romance with
Je Vous Aime (1980), which starred
Catherine Deneuve as a woman reflecting on the state of her love life and featured a cast that included
Gérard Depardieu,
Serge Gainsbourg, and
Jean-Louis Trintignant. During the early '80s much of Berri's energies were focused on producing -- in 1979, he set up his own production company, Renn Films, and he later established AMLF, his own distribution firm. Among the many films he went on to produce were
Roman Polanski's
Tess (1979),
Jean-Jacques Annaud's
L'Ours (1988) and
L'Amant (1992),
Patrice Chéreau's
La Reine Margot (1994), and
Josiane Balasko's
Gazon Maudit (1995).
As a director, Berri had one of his greatest successes to date with
Tchao Pantin (1983). A drama that starred the famed satirist
Coluche as an alcoholic gas station attendant who befriends a troubled young drug dealer (
Richard Anconina), the film was a huge critical success and won a number of Césars, including awards for Coluche and Anconina and a Best Director nomination for Berri. The director had further success with two more straight dramas,
Jean de Florette and its sequel,
Manon des Sources (both 1986). The films, which were adapted from Marcel Pagnol's story of greed, desire, and unrequited love in the early 20th century French countryside, both garnered large amounts of international praise, including (in the case of the former) a Best Film British Academy Award and (in the case of the latter), acting Césars for
Daniel Auteuil and
Emmanuelle Béart.
Berri did not direct another film until 1990, when he released
Uranus. A political satire set in a post-war French village peopled by falsely patriotic hypocrites, the film was a starring vehicle for Depardieu, who portrayed the village's fearless and ill-fated innkeeper. Depardieu was also the star of Berri's next feature,
Germinal (1993). An epic, passionate adaptation of Emile Zola's novel about the horrific living conditions in a 19th century French mining town, it was, at $30 million, the most costly French film ever made, and it served as another example of Berri's shift from lightweight filmmaking to gargantuan productions. Unfortunately for him, the film did not fare particularly well with either critics or audiences, and it was four years until he ventured back into the director's chair.
When he did, it was to make
Lucie Aubrac (1997), another political drama. Set during the French Resistance, it starred
Carole Bouquet as its titular heroine, a woman struggling to save her husband from the hands of the Gestapo. The film earned considerable transatlantic acclaim, and Berri followed it in 1999 with
La Debandade. The film found Berri back on familiar territory: a sex comedy about a man searching for a cure for his impotency, it starred Berri as its protagonist, the aptly named Claude Langmann, and
Fannie Ardant as his patient wife. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi

- 1983
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Yves Montand stars in this French seriocomedy as a middle-aged waiter. He has long harbored dreams of becoming a singer, and is also anxious to prove he's as virile as he was when he started pushing plates. Montand gets a chance to rev up his sexual energy and his musical skills when an old flame (Nicole Garcia) reenters his life after 17 years. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Yves Montand, Nicole Garcia, (more)

- 1983
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L'Homme Blesse is known in English-speaking countries as The Wounded Man. Jean-Hughes Anglade is a lonely, isolated young man who lets no one get close to him. He meets a street hustler and comes out of his shell, going 180 degrees into gay Obsession. Though he has yet to physically approach the object of his affection, Anglade builds up so much unrequited lust that it explodes with horrible results. L'Homme Blesse isn't rated, but viewership should definitely be confined to those older than 21--and even some of them may not be ready for it. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jean-Hugues Anglade, Vittorio Mezzogiorno, (more)

- 1982
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The setting for this story is Rahatlcoum, a Roman colony in North Africa, but the "colonists" watch television, have gay bars, trade unions, and traffic problems -- something like the "Flintstones" in an Afro-French incarnation, slipping around on Monty Pythonesque dialogue. A gay Jules César's (Michel Sarrault) expensive vacation causes the population to grumble and gripe, they would rather have mechanic Ben Hur Marcel (Coluche) take Jules' place as their exalted leader. Once she gets out of jail, Cleopatra (Mimi Coutellier) declares that old Ben is actually her long-lost half-brother, and lo and behold, Marcel of the chariot taxis is named the new pharaoh, Aminemphet. French critics loved this film and American critics hated it, leading one to suspect that being French helps considerably in responding to its humor. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Coluche, Michel Serrault, (more)

- 1981
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Gerard Barbier (Michel Coluche) has taken on a temporary job at a small elementary school and soon finds himself involved in sticky situations that challenge his inventiveness. In one such instance, a suicidal fellow-teacher has to be rushed to the hospital and the only available vehicle is an oversized tractor trailer, hardly the ticket for charging down the road. This is the first of four planned films for French comedic star Coluche, working under director Claude Berri. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Coluche, Josiane Balasko, (more)

- 1980
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In one of Coluche's earlier films, the late French comedian stars in this standard comedy by Claude Zidi as the inept police inspector, Michel Clement. The senior Clement was a spectacular policeman, and Michel finds it particularly difficult to try and walk in his father's footsteps without tripping. At the moment he is after Roger Morzini (Gerard Depardieu), a dangerous gangster who eventually kidnaps Marie-Anne Prossant (Dominique Lavanant). She is a journalist traveling with Michel as he tries to track down Morzini. Her objective was to get an interview with the gangster, and now she has more than she bargained for. Meanwhile, Michel tries to get his act together and rescue her. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Coluche, Gérard Depardieu, (more)

- 1980
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Claude Berri abandons his usual straightforward brand of filmmaking for the French I Love All of You. Catherine Deneuve plays a 35-year-old career woman who doesn't think she has time for a lasting relationship. Thus, her love life has been, and probably always will be, a series of trysts and one-night stands. The Alain Resnais-like continuity hopscotches between past, present and future as Deneuve ruminates on her empty emotional life. Originally titled Je Vous Aime, the film is also known as I Love You All (which sounds like something Scarlett O'Hara might say). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Catherine Deneuve, Jean-Louis Trintignant, (more)

- 1979
- PG
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In Roman Polanski's adaptation of Thomas Hardy's Tess of the D'Urbervilles, Nastassja Kinski plays Tess, a poor British peasant girl sent to live with her distant and wealthy relatives, the D'Urbervilles. Though Tess' father had hoped that the girl would be permitted a portion of the D'Urberville riches, he is in for a major disappointment: Tess' new housemates are not D'Urbervilles at all, but a social-climbing family that has bought the name. Tess won three Oscars, including a "Best Cinematography" statuette for the late Geoffrey Unsworth and his successor Ghislain Cloquet. The film also served to catapult Nastassja Kinski to stardom. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Nastassja Kinski, Leigh Lawson, (more)

- 1977
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In this frothy and sexy French farce, a pair of middle-aged pals go on a vacation with their two teenage daughters. The trouble begins when one of the friends gets entangled with the others' daughter. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jean-Pierre Marielle, Victor Lanoux, (more)

- 1976
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Having covered a great deal of autobiographical ground in The Two of Us (1967) director Claude Berri offers us further glimpses into his formative years in The First Time. Once more, Alaine Cohen plays Berri's young alter ego. This time, Cohen is on the verge of sexual awakening--and he's not sure exactly how to react to this. We are also shown what it is like to grow up Jewish in the France of the early 1950s; it's not always easy, of course, but one can survive when armed with humor and heart. The First Time was released in France as La Premiere Fois in 1976, two years before its American premiere. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Alain Cohen, Charles Denner, (more)

- 1975
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In this crime comedy, a jealous chauvinistic husband worries more about his wife's fidelity than her safety after she is taken hostage by a bank robber. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Juliet Berto, Claude Berri, (more)

- 1972
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French director Claude Berri wrote, directed, and stars in this comedy as Claude, a bookstore owner whose personal life, like his struggling business, is failing. Claude is trapped in a loveless marriage to Isabelle (Juliet Berto), who does not seem to possess any sexual attraction to her husband or affection for her children. The only activity Isabelle does seem to relish is shopping, which means spending Claude's hard-earned income. Then salvation arrives in the form of a business brainstorm. Claude transforms the bookstore into a sex shop, selling everything from leather bondage paraphernalia to pornography; soon business takes off. The proprietorship of the sex shop and his friendship with a sexually uninhibited customer, Jacqueline (Nathalie Delon), open up new possibilities for Claude, and he realizes that he's been repressed. Although he encourages Isabelle to join him in his new erotic adventures, she is at first reluctant to embrace the swinging lifestyle; the couple's attempts at a ménage à trois are disastrous. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jean-Pierre Marielle, Claude Piéplu, (more)

- 1970
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Claude Berri plays himself as he relates his own experiences through youth and adolescence. His father (Yves Robert) owns a profitable fur shop but longs to be an actor like his father and grandfather before him. Initially, Claude's father hopes his son will take over the fur shop, but he later gives in to Claude's desire to become involved in filmmaking and even pursues a late-blooming career move as a thespian himself. Alain Cohen portrays the younger Claude who must set a good example for his young sister. Henia Ziv plays the stereotypical Jewish mother who holds the family together. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Yves Robert, Claude Berri, (more)

- 1970
- R
Claude (Guy Bedos) is content with his life. He has a girlfriend Tania (Zorica Lozic) and he aspires to become an actor. When he receives his draft notice, a friend convinces Claude he can get out of military service with his connections in Paris. When the connections fall through, Claude is sent for basic training outside Paris before being shipped off to Algeria. His stops in Morocco and Algeria are uneventful as far as military action goes. He returns home with few bad memories of his army life until he meets a friend wounded in the conflict. Claude Pieplu is the Commandant who tries but can't get Claude out of his military obligations. Georges Geret plays the gruff Sergeant who takes a liking to the pacifistic soldier in this comedy drama. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Guy Bedos, Yves Robert, (more)

- 1968
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The original French title of Marry Me, Marry Me was Mazel Tov ou le Marriage, which was more appropriate to the ethnic ambience of this Claude Berri confection. Director Berri effectively casts himself as the protagonist, a Jewish encyclopedia salesman who impregnates the daughter (Elisabeth Wiener) of a Brussels diamond merchant. Anxious to do the right thing by marrying the girl, the salesman must first win the approval of her family. He takes English lessons from a beauteous British woman (Prudence Harrington), falling in love with her in the process. Coming to the conclusion that to marry into his expectant girlfriend's family would be a major mistake for all concerned, the salesman proposes to his tutor. When this falls through, he ends up with Girl Number One after all -- which turns out not to be so painful a proposition as he originally thought. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Claude Berri, Elisabeth Wiener, (more)

- 1968
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Having been forced into minor parts for several years by a debilitating illness, veteran film actor Michel Simon made a triumphant return to leading roles in the charming, poignant The Two of Us (Le Vieil Homme et L'Enfant). Simon plays a likeable old soak with one significant character flaw: he is a flagrant anti-Semite. During the Nazi occupation of Paris, 8-year-old Jewish lad Alain Cohen is sent to the country, there to live with the parents of his family's Catholic friends. One of those parents is, inevitably, Simon. Taking a liking to Alain, and unaware that the boy is Jewish, Simon attempts to introduce the lad to the doctrine of anti-Semitism. The boy plays along with the old man, teasing him about his prejudices. Despite their obvious philosophical differences, Simon and Alain form a strong and affectionate bond. Director Claude Berri, whose films have often touched upon the Jewish experience in France, once more draws from his own experiences to weave a sensitive, seriocomic scenario. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Michel Simon, Alain Cohen, (more)

- 1967
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In this children's drama, a 10-year old boy becomes deeply troubled after his mother abandons him and he must go through a series of foster families. He finally finds one and finds himself befriended by a kindly grandmother with whom he really bonds. Unfortunately, she suddenly dies, and the boy is unable to cope. He begins causing trouble and winds up in a special school. Fortunately, he knows that he can return to the family when he is released. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Michel Tarrazon, Linda Gutemberg, (more)

- 1965
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In this acclaimed court-métrage -- an Oscar winner for Best Live Action Short in 1965 -- a French boy develops a strong bond with a rooster that his parents are planning to cook for dinner. To avert this crisis, he tries to convince his parents that the rooster is actually a hen, and leaves an egg beside it every day at the table to prove this. Director Claude Berri later went on to direct such acclaimed features as The Two of Us, and produced projects including Jean de Florette and Germinal. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi
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- 1965
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A couple finds that their love is not accepted by society in the land of liberty, fraternity, and equality in this drama. Françoise (Françoise Giret) is a college student who is friendly with a group of idealistic bohemians living together in a Paris flat. An artist living with the beats introduces Françoise to Daniel (Gordon Heath), a medical student she spotted at a student cafeteria. Françoise is quite taken with Daniel, who is bright, friendly, compassionate, and handsome. However, Daniel is also black, and while Françoise, who is white, is not concerned with his race, she discovers not everyone around her is so open-minded. After several months together, Françoise discovers she's pregnant; her parents are shocked and demand that she have an abortion, and Daniel isn't certain what they should do, though his brave actions after a young black boy is abused by the police help her make up her mind. More thoughtful and less exploitive than its American release title would lead one to expect My Baby Is Black (released in France as Les Laches Vivent d'Espoir) was written and directed by Claude Bernard-Aubert. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- 1965
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- 1964
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By 1964, it was possible for a major studio to make a film touching upon the Spanish Civil War without having to answer to some senate investigating committee or other. Based on Emeric Pressburger's novel A Mouse on Sunday, Behold a Pale Horse stars Gregory Peck as a war veteran who continues waging a one-man offensive years after hostilities have officially ceased. Exiled to France, Peck is lured back to Spain by vengeful police captain Anthony Quinn. Priest Omar Sharif advises Peck that he's being tricked, but Peck is determined to return to Spain to bid farewell to his dying mother Mildred Dunnock. Halfway through, the film bogs down into ponderous preachifying and moralizing, but overall the film is worth a glance. In 1966, Behold a Pale Horse was scheduled to be telecast on a major American network, but was cancelled at the last minute, reportedly at the behest of the Spanish government. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Gregory Peck, Anthony Quinn, (more)

- 1964
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- 1962
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The seven major sins receive treatment from some of France's greatest directors in this lively portmanteau. "Anger" by Dhomme, chronicles a single horrific day when every bowl of soup in France is found to contain a fly. This causes a devastating nationwide revolt. "Envy" by Molinaro tells the story of a chambermaid whose dream of sleeping with a millionaire comes true. Unfortunately, she goes back to work and finds herself still consumed with jealousy. De Broca's "Gluttony" provides one of the film's most enjoyable episodes as it follows the exploits of a voracious family heading off for a funeral. "Lust" by Demy is set at a Parisian sidewalk cafe and eavesdrops upon the lusty conversation between two young men, one of whom has x-ray eyes that enable him to see through women's clothing. "Laziness" by Godard features real life matinee idol Constantine as a movie star who finds himself too sluggish to respond to the starlet trying so hard to seduce him. "Pride" by Roger Vadim tells the satirical tale of a philandering wife who changes her mind and stays with her husband after learning that her happy home is being threatened by another woman. Finally in Chabrol's "Greed," young men who have pooled their meager resources to buy a prostitute, fight for the chance to be with her. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Marie-José Nat, Jacques Charrier, (more)

- 1962
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- 1961
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In this romantic comedy, voluptuous Parisian model Sophie (Brigitte Bardot) is angered when she learns that her boyfriend Phillipe, a photographer, has been playing around with Barbara, an American heiress. Alain, another man, who has secretly loved her for years, suggests she get even by making love to him. Sophie has a better idea, she will follow her Corsican family traditions and simply shoot him. Alain warns the photographer who takes his new girl and flees for the Alps with Sophie and Alain in hot pursuit. In the scenic mountains, Sophie and the 'other' woman meet. Together they decide the men are not worth the effort and begin to despise them. This film contains the once-controversial "nude" dance scene with Bardot (who actually wore a body stocking). ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Michel Subor, Jacques Riberolles, (more)

- 1960
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- Add Les Bonnes Femmes to Queue
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The four young women work at the same place and each has to put up with a lecherous supervisor who talks out of one side of his mouth about good morals while the other side has the opposite message. One of the women, Jane (Bernadette Lafont) fixes herself up in a somewhat vulgar manner and goes out to pick up men, which fails to produce any real love. Another wants to marry a man whose family runs a respectable store. Another sings -- incognito -- with a pop band, while the last, Jacqueline (Clothilde Joano) is pursued by a biker. The film details their doomed attempts to find romance. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Bernadette Lafont, Clotilde Joano, (more)