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Claude Debussy Movies

Imagery inspired much of this Impressionist composer's work: footsteps in the snow, dead leaves, fireworks, clouds, moonlight, the overwhelming presence of the sea, ancient festivals, circus and Greek mythological figures, caricatures of officials, Poe's stories, children's games, gardens in the rain, shadows, golden fish, an engulfed cathedral, and much more. One orchestral and one piano set are entitled Images, and another Images oubliées (Forgotten Images).
Debussy's music has been quoted in approximately 55 films, his popular piano work Clair de lune (Moonlight) occurring in seven of them, including the elegant and gently soulful Mui du du xanh (The Scent of Green Papaya, 1993), Down and Out in Beverly Hills (1986), and The Right Stuff (1983). The music is often heard in a "motivated" manner with a character playing the piano within the scene. Two of Debussy's ballets figure in director Herbert Ross' turbulently romantic Nijinsky (1980). The film re-creates as accurately as possible the original Ballets Russe staging and choreography. Before the presentation of Vaslav Nijinsky's first and scandalous choreography (1912) to Debussy's tone poem L'Aprés-midi d'un faune (The Afternoon of a Faun, 1894), the movie includes a scene of Nijinsky and impresario Diaghilev in Greece studying ancient vases containing two-dimensional movements that later appear on-stage. From the languid, lovely recurring chromatic flute melody (similar to Salomé's aria in the Saint-Saëns opera) to the ephemeral, shimmering strings and otherworldly harp glissandi, all parts of this seminal composition create a seamless accompaniment to a warm afternoon in a mythological forest. The gradually mounting restlessness of the audience and then outraged reaction to Nijinsky's sensual and sexual movements are perfectly depicted in the film.
Also included is an excerpt from Jeux (Games [1912-1913]), commissioned directly for Nijinsky's originally "shocking" choreography about the amorous games of three young men looking for a lost tennis ball. That became changed to the flirtatious gestures among two young women and a young man dressed in tennis clothes. In this brilliant score, Debussy breaks from his earlier rich-bodied orchestrations toward fragmented pointillistic writing and continually evolving harmonies, an organic music in which all elements of the composition grow from the simplest cell. (Many of the composer's earlier works were written to satisfy the proportions of the Golden section and the Fibbonacci series). Jeux is filled with mystery, things hinted at but not fully said, sensuality, fleeting gestures, and joyfulness lightly touched upon.
Debussy's opera Pelléas et Mélisande, with its subtle melodies and fantasy libretto by Maurice Maeterlinck, has been fully realized in four television productions: in 1987 for French TV, in 1992 in a French/U.K. collaboration, and in 1999 in separate French and U.K. TV films. The mystic, symbolic, and romantic elements of this work provide rich imagery for filmmakers. There is a mystery concerning the composer's possible association with a sub-rosa society known as the Prieuré de Sion and the encoding of clues about an ancient Christian secret within this opera still to be explored by some enterprising filmmaker.
Other works by Debussy quoted in films include the delightful piano prelude in cakewalk rhythm, Général Lavine -- eccentric, in Milou en mai (1990); one of the composer's finest songs, Spleen from the Ariettes oubliées, heard in Camille Claudel (1988); the Quintet, Op. 16 in Escalier C (1985), a television production of The Martyrdom of St. Sebastian (1984); the exquisite orchestral tone-poems Trois Nocturnes in Ken Russell's portrait of a genius, Savage Messiah (1972); the well-known flute solo Syrinx in Syrinx (1965); and the hypnotic piano piece En bateau in Lotusblumsten (1936). ~ "Blue" Gene Tyranny, Rovi
2009  
 
Claude Debussy's five-act 1902 lyric drama Pelléas et Mélisande receives an interpretation by the Theater an der Wien in this 2009 production. With a libretto by Maurice Maeterlinck, the opera stars Natalie Dessay as Mélisande, Stéphane Degout as Pelléas and Laurent Naouri as Golaud. Laurent Pelly designed the costumes and directs for the stage, Chantal Thomas did the sets, and ORF-Radiosymphonieorchester Wien and the Arnold Schoenberg Chor provide musical accompaniment.Bertrand de Billy conducts. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Natalie DessayStéphane Degout, (more)
 
2008  
 
This musical release from Turkish concert pianist Gulsin Onay captures a live performance by the virtuoso, recorded at the Lincoln Theater in Miami Beach in 2008. Some of the pieces featured in the performance include Robert Schumann's "ABEGG variations, Op. 1", and Frederic Chopin's "Variations brillantes Op. 12". ~ Cammila Collar, Rovi

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Starring:
Gülsin Onay
 
2007  
 
The Opera National de Paris mounted this production of choreographer Roland Petit's ballet Proust: Or How the Heart Skips a Beat, adapted from Marcel Proust's A La Recherche du temps perdu. The production stars Eleonora Abbagnato, Hervé Moreau, Stéphane Bullion and Manuel Legris and features music by such composers as Beethoven, Debussy, Fauré and Franck. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Eleonora AbbagnatoHervé Moreau, (more)
 
2006  
 
After achieving international recognition in the 1950's with such films as Det Sjunde Inseglet (aka The Seventh Seal), Smultronstället (aka Wild Strawberries) and Sommarnattens Leende (aka Smiles of a Summer Night), Ingmar Berman became one of the world's best known filmmakers for his emotionally intense portraits of souls in crisis, but the man himself developed a reputation for zealously guarding his privacy throughout his long and distinguished career. In 2004, Bergman sat for a series of interviews with filmmaker Marie Nyreroed, a longtime friend and confidant, for a documentary produced for Swedish television, and the results became Bergman Complete, a three-part series which explored the man and his work in depth. The first segment focuses on Bergman's life as a filmmaker, as he discusses his best-known pictures and his working methods. Part two concentrates on Bergman's lesser-known career in the theater, which he rates higher than his work in the cinema, and features reminiscences from actor Erland Josephson. In the final chapter, Bergman invites the filmmakers into his home on Faro Island and talks about his private life, including his hobbies, the emotions that drive his work, and his personal weaknesses. After receiving its premiere on Swedish television, Bergman Complete played at a number of international film festivals, including the 2006 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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1984  
 
Originally filmed at a concert in Chile during May of 1984, this performance includes selections from Beethoven (Sonata #7 in D Minor), Schubert (Klavierstucke #1 in R Flat Minor), Chopin (Ballade #3 in A Flat Major), Liszt (Sonetto Del Petrarca #104), and Debussy (L'isle Joyeuse).

~ Tracie Cooper, Rovi

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1984  
 
In 1982, director and writer Thomas Mitscherlich decided to make a docudrama on the intense relationship between himself and his famous father, Alexander Mitscherlich, the head of the Sigmund Freud Institute from 1960-1976 and a distinguished psychoanalyst himself. As both confront each other and the camera, viewers become privy to discourses that reveal the father-son relationship and at the same time are entertained by the humor and insights that lighten the material -- as in the fictional scene where Mitscherlich encounters a woman on the train who questions what he is doing to his "parental god." Mitscherlich's recounting of his years spent as a child growing up in an environment of intellectual ferment is similarly lightened in spots. The elder Mitscherlich died while the film was partially completed, so in many ways, it became a eulogy to him as well as to his relationship with his son (who still claims Herbert Marcuse as his real mentor). ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Thomas Mitscherlich
 
1982  
 
Hugues (Idwig Stephane) is so overcome by the death of his wife Blanche (Eve Lyne) that he creates a shrine to her memory made up of photographs, some jewelry, and odds and ends that she possessed, as well as a braid of her hair. When Hugues sees Jeanne (Eve Lyne again), a ballet dancer, he is struck by her resemblance to his dead wife and he becomes obsessed with her, like he is with all the other objects he enshrined to his former wife. Jeanne develops feelings of sympathy and affection for Hugues, but is constantly put off by his rejection. Finally, she desecrates the objects that Hugues has so carefully assembled, and that is when his true nature shatters the mask that he has worn until that moment. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Idwig Stephane
 
1972  
 
The late concert violinist David Oistrakh headlines this series of two classical recitals: one from 1967, in which he performs the world premiere of Dmitri Shostakovich's Violin Concerto No. 2, Op. 129 with the orchestral support of the Moscow Philharmonic, and another from 1972 - a joint performance of short works by Debussy, Sibelius, Dvorak and Schubert with the accompaniment of pianist Frida Bauer. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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1960  
 
This independent film by Ron Rice finds The Flower Thief (Taylor Mead) as a homosexual beatnik who walks around San Francisco. With a stolen flower, a teddy bear and an American flag, he gets into a series of misadventures that lead him up a hill before he descends in a children's wagon. Filmed in 1959 through 1960, the incidents foreshadowed the hippie movement by several years. Claude Debussy's music is used for the soundtrack in this early counter-culture feature. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

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Starring:
Taylor Mead
 
1960  
 
The original Italian is La Viaccia (the name of the family farm which motivates the plot). The death of a wealthy patriarch in 1885 sets off an interfamily power struggle. Son Ferdinando buys out his other relatives in order to gain full control over the dead man's property. But Ferdinando's country-bumpkin nephew Amerigo holds out. Amerigo's stance is weakened when he heads for the city and meets prostitute Bianca. To support her in the manner in which she is accustomed, Amerigo steals from his uncle. Disgraced in the eyes of his family, Amerigo decides to stay near his beloved Bianca by becoming a bouncer in her brothel. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Jean-Paul BelmondoClaudia Cardinale, (more)
 
 
 
 
In this classical performance film, acclaimed concert pianist Samson François interprets a series of twelve works by Fredric Chopin, Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Samson FrançoisStanislaw Skrowaczewski, (more)
 
 
 
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From the late 1940s until his untimely death in January 2000, Austrian-born Friedrich Gulda qualified as one of the world's most unique pianists. Initially one of the leading experts in the compositions of Beethoven, Brahms and Mozart, Gulda toured Europe and South America as a prodigy in his late teens, then took his Carnegie Hall bow a short time later. Gulda gained an offbeat reputation, however (and a wholly deserved one) for his equally pronounced interest in jazz, and his proclivity for performing classical and jazz interchangeably - often within the same concert, which led some to brand him a "terrorist pianist." Ergo, the musician represented one of the only figures in contemporary music who could simultaneously hold court with the likes of Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea and Karl Böhm. Gulda also staged slightly outrageous and absurd events from time to time, such as faking his own death and resurrection to shock and arouse the ire of listeners. The documentary Friedrich Gulda: So What - A Portrait pays homage to the late Gulda's life and career, by telling his story with a combination of rare archival and concert footage - all set to prerecorded narration by Gulda and Ulrich Mühe. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Ulrich MüheFriedrich Gulda, (more)
 
1994  
 
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This concert program features Sergiu Celibidache conducting the Munchner Philharmoniker through famous pieces by Maurice Ravel and Claude Debussy. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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Starring:
Sergiu Celibidache
 
1982  
 
The internationally renowned string quartet had been performing together for most of their adult lives when their lead violinist suddenly died, leaving the remaining three confused about their lives and careers. Up till then, all they had known were the rigors of constant practice and traveling. Music was everything, and they never took the time to sample Life's other pleasures. The trio decide to split up, but then a young violinist shows up and convinces them to reform the group and let him take over. He is one of the most talented players they have ever heard and the quartet once again makes sweet music. But as good as he is on stage, the youth is a wild man off stage who freely smokes dope, sleeps with fans, and parties whenever he can. Seeing that his private life has not affected the brilliance of his playing and even suspecting that it may even improve his playing, the three old players are thrown into personal tail spins as they look back at their own austere life choices. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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Starring:
Héctor AlterioOmero Antonutti, (more)
 
1948  
 
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In Portrait of Jennie, Joseph Cotten plays an artist, Eben Adams, who is unable to bring any true feeling to his work. While painting in Central Park one morning, Eben makes the acquaintance of a schoolgirl named Jennie (Jennifer Jones), who prattles on about things that happened years ago. Intrigued at her thorough knowledge of the past, Eben is about to converse with her further, but Jennie has vanished. Over the next few months, Eben meets Jennie again and again -- and each time she seems to have aged by several years. He paints her portrait, which turns out to be more full of expression and emotion than anything he's previously done. His curiosity peaked by Jennie's enigmatic nature, Eben uncovers evidence that he has been conversing -- and falling in love -- with the ghost of a girl who died years earlier in a hurricane. On the eve of the hurricane's anniversary, Eben rushes to meet Jennie at the site where she was supposedly killed. As a new storm rages, Jennie vanishes for good, but not before declaring that the love she and Eben have shared will live forever. Rescued from the storm, Eben convinces himself that Jennie was a mere figment of his imagination. Then he notices that he stills clutches her scarf in his hand. He looks at his portrait of Jennie (the only Technicolor shot in this otherwise black-and-white film) and understands what she meant when she said that their love would endure throughout eternity; it will do so through Cotten's art, both the portrait at hand and all future portraits. Based on the novel by Robert Nathan, Portrait of Jennie is one of the most beautifully assembled fantasies ever presented onscreen. Producer David O. Selznick's unerring eye for "rightness" enabled him to select the perfect stars, supporting cast (Lillian Gish, Ethel Barrymore, David Wayne, Cecil Kellaway, et al.), director, cinematographer (Joseph August), and composer (Dimitri Tiomkin, who based his themes on the works of Debussy), and blend everything into one ideally balanced package. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Joseph CottenJennifer Jones, (more)
 
1930  
 
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L'Âge d'Or begins as a documentary about the habits of scorpions, utilizing library footage and silent-style intertitles. Amid the rocks of an inlet, archbishops are seen chanting by a beggar-soldier (Max Ernst), who then makes a long journey back to his hideout. He informs his fellow beggar-soldiers that the "Mallorcans" have arrived and it is time to bear arms and fight. But this small group of soldiers is weak and exhausted through starvation, and only one of them survives the trip back. The Mallorcans, a caravan of wealthy dignitaries and their servants, arrive to lay a cornerstone commemorating the now skeletal archbishops. The ceremony is interrupted by the screams of lovemaking, and the couple is separated by gendarmes and led away. The man (Gaston Modot), whom we later learn is a government official of some standing, establishes his nasty and anti-social character through the kicking a dog. The ceremony continues; a title card identifies this as the foundation of Imperial Rome. The next sequence intercuts scenes of the girl (Lya Lys), who is the daughter of a wealthy marquis, lost in a world of erotic fantasy, with scenes of the man being led down the street by the gendarmes. The man finally produces diplomatic papers, and is released.

The marquis (Ibanez) and marquise (Germaine Noizet) throw a large party at their villa, where a number of strange events occur without the slightest notice from the guests. A momentary distraction is caused when the gamekeeper shoots his son over a minor incident. The government official arrives at the party and is soon in pursuit of the girl, although the social nature of the event, at first, keeps them apart. The marquise accidentally spills a little wine over the government official's hand, and he slaps her, exciting the girl. (Alfred Hitchcock would later echo this very scene in Strangers on a Train.) The girl and the government official are finally allowed to consummate their fetishistic desires to the strains of Wagner in an extended love scene in the garden. This is interrupted when the conductor (Duchange) of the concert nearby has a headache and walks off the podium, directly into the arms of the girl. The government official gets a phone call, where he is told that his actions have resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands of the "women, children, and old people" he is sworn to protect. He curses the caller, and enraged, he goes to his apartment to rip apart pillows and to hurl several objects, including an archbishop, out the window. The final sequence begins with a series of lengthy, and increasingly agitated, intertitles announcing that the Duc de Blangis (Lionel Salem) and his henchmen are due to emerge from 120 days of debauchery inside a secluded castle. When the party does emerge, the duke is seen to be missing his beard. ~ David Lewis, Rovi

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Starring:
Gaston ModotLya Lys, (more)