Jacques Prévert Movies
Serious writers have never had an easy time surviving in the American film industry -- with the exception of a few sympathetic independent producers, Hollywood has generally ground up the work and reputations of serious authors trying to make careers in screenwriting, like so much chopped meat. In France, matters were very different, and no career better illustrated the difference than that of Jacques Prévert. An acclaimed poet, he successfully juggled that activity with a major career as a screenwriter, and only enhanced his reputation in both areas, rather than compromising his work.Prévert was born in Neuilly-sur-Seine on February 4, 1900, and in the late '20s he worked for an advertising agency, a period during which he also began authoring poetry. He emerged in 1930 as a leading member of the burgeoning surrealist movement, and in 1932 he joined the agitprop "Groupe Octobre," an ideologically motivated performing ensemble whose members also participated in the surrealist fantasy film L'Affaire Est Dans le Sac, co-authored by Prévert and directed by Jacques' younger brother Pierre Prévert. Both brothers took occasional acting jobs onscreen, and appeared in Jean Vigo's renowned L'Atalante (1934).
Jacques Prévert quickly emerged as a screenwriter and dialogue writer in the mid-'30s, starting with Ciboulette (1933) and L'Hôtel du Libre Échange (1934), in which he also appeared as an actor. In 1935, he wrote his first important screenplay, for Jean Renoir's Le Crime de Monsieur Lange, though equally notable that same year was his first collaboration with directer Marcel Carné for the seemingly ill-fated film Jenny. In Carné's view, the movie might well have come to nothing, based on the restrictions of the production and the original story; instead, with Prévert's help, Jenny turned out to be surprisingly decent, and successful. More importantly, Prévert and Carné found the ideal collaborator in each other, which was similar to the creative partnership between Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger (who were establishing their professional partnership in England around the same time).
Prévert and Carné quickly established the movement in French cinema called "poetic realism," which became the precursor to the American genre known as film noir. In Drôle de Drame (aka Bizarre, Bizarre) (1937), Quai des Brumes (aka Port of Shadows) (1938), and Le Jour Se Lève (1939), they generated some of the most startling movies ever made, and films that were tremendously influential overseas. Le Jour Se Lève was remade in America by Anatole Litvak as The Long Night (1947), an excellent film in its own right, and one that borrowed heavily from the original in many of its details. Those scripts revealed the characteristics most closely associated with Prévert's work, including a somewhat doom-laden sensibility and a free-flowing romanticism regarding youthful love, especially when contrasting such love with the corruption and cynicism of the world at large.
The Nazi occupation of France interrupted Prévert and Carné's partnership, and Prévert collaborated with other directors on Remorques (aka Stormy Waters [1939]), Le Soleil a Toujours Raison (1941), Les Visiteurs du Soir (aka The Devil's Envoys [1942]), Lumiere d'Été, and Adieu Léonard (both 1943). But in the years 1943-1945, Prévert and Carné generated the most acclaimed film ever to come out of France (and perhaps all of Europe), Les Enfants du Paradis (aka Children of Paradise). Despite all manner of challenges, including a massive script and huge crowd scenes, and the fact that it was being shot under the eyes of the occupying authorities, the movie was the highlight of Prévert's screen career, but it wasn't the only success that he achieved during this period.
In 1946, Prévert published Paroles, which became the biggest-selling volume of poetry ever published in France. The impact of Paroles was enhanced soon after by composer Joseph Kosma, who set some of it to music. A brace of international hit songs resulted, including "Les Feuilles Mortes" (aka "Autumn Leaves"), sung by Yves Montand in Les Portes de la Nuit (1946, directed by Carné), which was probably the simplest and most direct expression of Prévert's philosophy and art. Their writer/director partnership collapsed in 1948, following the cancellation of the movie La Fleur de L'Âge midway through production.
Prévert's reputation endured somewhat better than Carné's over the ensuing years, and he remained busy on all manner of films, including Albert Lamorisse's acclaimed short children's film Bim the Little Donkey (1950) and the huge international co-production Notre Dame de Paris (1957). In 1956, Columbia Pictures, with director Robert Aldrich and producer William Goetz, made a psychological/romantic thriller entitled Autumn Leaves. (Curiously, the story and screenplay might have worked better in the hands of Henri-Georges Clouzot.) For all of that exposure, and even the acclaim won by Lamorisse's movie, Prévert and Carné's collaborations together were considered the best screen work of either man. Prévert died of cancer at age 77. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
A triumph of animation for both children and adults, this engaging story was adapted from the fairy tale of The Shepherdess and the Chimney Sweep by Hans Christian Andersen. Director Paul Grimault worked with the late and gifted Jacques Prevert to create the wit, humor, and political nuances that enliven the story each step of the way. The tale is set in the kingdom of Takicardie ("runaway heartbeat") where a beguiling young shepherdess has fallen in love with a charming chimney sweep, and he reciprocates her feelings honorably and completely. Enter the king who wants the shepherdess for himself. A mockingbird, well aware of the situation, helps the lovers out -- until he and the chimney sweep are captured and thrown into the lion's den. Now the two of them have a real challenge on their hands if they want to save the shepherdess and defeat the king. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jean Martin, Pascal Mazzotti, (more)
Better known as The Hunchback of Notre Dame, this opulent French production is the second talkie version of Victor Hugo's famous novel. Buried under mounds of latex, Anthony Quinn does his best as the deformed bellringer Quasimodo, though he comes off more as a punchdrunk ex-pug than a literal interpretation of Hugo's tragic protagonist. Somewhat more effective within the film's framework is Gina Lollobrigida as gypsy dancing girl Esmerelda, whose friendship with Quasimodo motivates the story. As in previous adaptations of the Hugo novel, the villain Frolio (Alain Cluny), originally a priest, is given a less-controversial station in life: in this case, he is an alchemist rather than a man of the cloth. Otherwise, Notre Dame de Paris is one of the more faithful renditions of the original novel, even unto retaining Hugo's unhappy ending. When first released in the U.S. by Allied Artists, the film was titled Hunchback of Paris, to avoid a copyright conflict with RKO's 1939 adaptation of Hunchback of Notre Dame. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Gina Lollobrigida, Anthony Quinn, (more)
Few actresses other than Joan Crawford could have successfully pulled off the melodramatic excesses of Autumn Leaves. Though a very attractive fortysomething, Crawford remains aloof from romance until she meets Cliff Robertson, a young man half her age. An ardent and persistent suitor, Robertson finally breaks down her resistence to marriage. After a few weeks of wedded bliss, Crawford is confronted by Vera Miles, who claims to be Robertson's first wife. Miles further insists that Robertson is mentally unbalanced...and his subsequent behavior seems to bear this out. What Crawford doesn't know-but the audience does-is that the real villains of the piece are Miles and her middle-aged lover, Robertson's own father (Lorne Greene). Autumn Leaves works far better on screen than it does in print, thanks to the virtuoso performances of practically everyone in the cast. And, as anyone who's listened to top-40 radio during the past four decades already knows, the film also yielded a hit title song, written by Joseph Kosma, Jacques Prevert, and Johnny Mercer and performed during the credits by Nat King Cole. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Joan Crawford, Cliff Robertson, (more)
The animated feature La Bergere et le Ramoneur (Shepherdess and the Chimneysweep) was one of the most expensive French films of its time. Not exactly a children's story, the film is set in an imaginary kingdom, where the despotic ruler runs roughshod over the populace. The ruler eventually meets his match in the form of a wisecracking bird. Many of the sight gags have a grim and gloomy edge to them, but this doesn't make them any less funny. English-language prints of La Bergere et le Ramoneur boasted such voiceover talents as Peter Ustinov, Claire Bloom and Denham Elliot. The original French version (with voices supplied by the likes of Pierre Brasseur and Anouk Aimee) won an award at the Venice Film Festival, despite protests from animator Pierre (Le Petit Soldat) Grimault, who grumbled that the film had been taken away from him and radically altered before its release. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
This French classic tells the story of a little boy who tries to retrieve his pet donkey from the rich family that now owns him. ~ All Movie Guide
Per its title, Lovers of Verona is an updated adaptation of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. The film was a joint project of those felicitous collaborators, screenwriter Jacques Prevert and director Andre Cayatte. The star-crossed lovers are portrayed by Serge Reggiani and Anouk Aimee, cast respectively as the poverty-stricken son of a glassblower and the daughter of a disgraced nobleman. While playing bit roles in a stage production of Romeo and Juliet, Angelo (Reggiani) and Georgia (Aimee) are suddenly promoted to the leading parts. Predictably, hero and heroine begin acting out their characters in real life as well as on stage. Not so predictably, their romance is challenged not by modern-day counterparts to the Montagues and the Capulets, but by the lovers' own heightened sensitivities to their social differences. Following the worldwide success of Lovers of Verona (it was released in Italy in 1949, then internationally in 1951), director Andre Cayatte was given what one historian has described as "carte blanche" in the French film industry; put simply, the man could do no wrong. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Anouk Aimée, Serge Reggiani, (more)
Bellman was based on the novel Horseman of Riouclare by Claude Boncompain. Lucien Coedel stars in this steadily-paced melodrama as an alpine bell-ringer. His job is to toll the village bells in order to prevent strangers from getting lost in the snowy peaks. Somewhere along the line, Coedel snaps, and begins abusing his position in order to murder tourists and passersby. The Bellman was originally released in France as Sortileges. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
With his business in the doldrums, travel agent Grandpa Piuff (Sinoel) comes up with a cute gimmick. Why not book customers on a "surprise" voyage, with no set itinerary or destination? Vacationers are delighted with the notion, and before long a group of tourists and sightseers have embarked on a journey to goodness-knows-where. Their revelry is threatened by the wicked machinations of rival travel agent Grosbois (Rene Bourbon) and larcenous political insurrectionist Mikhail (Etienne Decroux). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Maurice Baquet, Martine Carol, (more)
Marcel Carne's 1946 production La Porte de la Nuit was released in the U.S. four years later as Gates of the Night. Scripted by Carne's longtime collaborator Jacques Prevert, the film is set in Paris just after its liberation from the Nazis. The script points out that this was not only a time for rejoicing, but a period of guilt and remorse, especially for those who cooperated with the Nazis, overtly or otherwise. In one of his first starring roles, Yves Montand plays a former member of the French underground who carries on a furtive romance with the wife (Nathalie Nattier) of a wealthy man. Others essential to the action are Sergi Reggiani as a snivelly informer and Christian Simon as a ubiquitous (and obviously symbolic) street musician. A box-office disappointment in France, Gates of the Night did somewhat better abroad. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Pierre Brasseur, Serge Reggiani, (more)
Even in 1945, Marcel Carné's Children of Paradise was regarded as an old-fashioned film. Set in the Parisian theatrical world of the 1840s, Jacques Prévert's screenplay concerns four men in love with the mysterious Garance (Arletty). Each loves Garance in his own fashion, but only the intentions of sensitive mime-actor Deburau (Jean-Louis Barrault) are entirely honorable; as a result, it is he who suffers most, hurdling one obstacle after another in pursuit of an evidently unattainable goal. In the stylized fashion of 19th-century French drama, many grand passions are spent during the film's totally absorbing 195 minutes. Amazingly, the film was produced over a two-year period in virtual secrecy, without the knowledge of the Nazis then occupying France, who would surely have arrested several of the cast and production staff members (including Prévert) for their activities in the Resistance. Children of Paradise has gone on to become one of the great romantic classics of international cinema. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Arletty, Jean-Louis Barrault, (more)
Pierre Prevert directed this amusing comedy, one of three which he co-wrote with his better-known brother Jacques Prevert. Pop singer Charles Trenet stars as a rich moron who is targeted for murder by a shady enemy (Pierre Brasseur). Brasseur blackmails a criminal (Julien Carette) into killing Trenet, but both escape into the countryside, where they encounter some funny situations and odd locals. Prevert was forced by the film's producer to cast Trenet, and rumors of trouble on the set were plentiful, but none of it appears to have affected the film, which remains a light and engaging romp. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Pierre Brasseur, Charles Trenet, (more)
The French upper class is chastised in this socially conscious drama that centers on a naive young woman who travels to a mountain resort to be with her fiancé. She is expecting a romantic weekend, but she is terribly disappointed to discover that the wealthy patrons are naught but soulless vessels living only to suck the life out those less fortunate. She is really shocked to discover that her own lover has become one of these useless dilettantes who unfeelingly destroys their relationship when he finds it boring. The young woman then meets a man who works on a local dam. It is he that instills real values in her and saves her from a greedy fellow who wants her. In the end, the girl and the worker run away together. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Madeleine Renaud, Paul Bernard, (more)
Originally released in 1942 as Les Visiteurs du Soir, The Devil's Envoys is another masterful collaboration between actress Arletty, writer Jacques Prevert and director Marcel Carne, who would team up one year later for the brilliant Les Enfants Du Paradis. The film is predicated on the 15th century French legend, wherein the Devil, disturbed by the encroaching forces of Good, sends his envoys to Earth to drive the citizens to despair. The Devil, played by Jules Berry in a subtly Hitler-like fashion (a chancy artistic decision in the days of the Occupation), is thwarted when his agents are unable to overcome the power of true love. Even after the lovers are turned to stone for defying His Satanic Majesty, their hearts continue to beat for each other. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Arletty, Jules Berry, (more)
Originally filmed and released in 1941 as Remorques, this heavy-breathing French melodrama was distributed stateside in 1946 as Stormy Waters. The film was a typical Jean Gabin vehicle, replete with two-fisted action, star-crossed romance and intense emotional turbulence. Gabin plays Laurent, a salvage-boat captain who rescues a merchant vessel from a storm-tossed sea. The vessel's far-from-grateful captain (Jean Marchat) manages to skip without paying Laurent his salvage money, leaving behind his wife Catherine (Michele Morgan). Tending to Catherine's injuries until they reach port, Laurent falls in love with the woman, despite the fact that he is already married to the seriously ill Yvonne (Madeleine Renaud). It takes a lot of doing, but Laurent eventually ends his affair and allows his own wife to expire believing that he's been 100% faithful. An enormous success in France, Stormy Waters was picked up for American distribution by MGM, which surprisingly buried the film in its second-string houses. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jean Gabin, Madeleine Renaud, (more)
Marcel Carne and Jacques Prevert's classic of French poetic realism stars Jean Gabin in one of his most famous roles as Francois, a rough, barrel-chested loner who hides out in his apartment awaiting for the police to arrive. Francois has killed a man in a crime of passion, the slimy lothario Valentin (Jules Berry). As he listens in the darkness of his Normandy apartment to the police sirens closing in and getting louder, he recalls the two women that he loved -- Francoise (Jacqueline Laurent) and Clara (Arletty) -- and the evil Valentin, who stole both their hearts and forced Francois into this melancholy plight. The film was later re-made in Hollywood as The Long Night. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jean Gabin, Jules Berry, (more)
Adapted from a novel by Jacques Prevert, Port of Shadows (Quai des brumes) stars that eternal victim of society, Jean Gabin. Having deserted the French army, Gabin ducks into a back alley and meets the lovely Michelle Morgan. He becomes her champion by taking on her evil "protectors" (Michel Simon, Pierre Brasseur), but loses his last bid for freedom--and his life--in the process. Irredeemably gloomy, Port of Shadows was a primary influence in the "film noir" genre pursued by Hollywood in the 1940s. The film was the first of three collaborations between writer Jacques Prevert and director Marcel Carne, culminating in the incomparable Les Enfants du Paradis (1944). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Michèle Morgan, Jean Gabin, (more)
Marcel Carne's first film as director -- one of seven collaborations with screenwriter Jacques Prevert -- was this average crime story. Francoise Rosay stars as Jenny, who manages a sleazy nightclub owned by the nasty Benoit (Charles Vanel). Jenny runs afoul of Benoit, as well as her own daughter (Lisette Lanvin), when she becomes romantically involved with gangster Lucien (Albert Prejean). Miffed, Benoit and his thuggish hunchbacked assistant (Jean-Louis Barrault) try to break up the lovers while Jenny's daughter competes for Lucien's affections. Carne had previously been an assistant to director Jacques Feyder, so it should come as no surprise that his first solo assignment starred Rosay, Feyder's real-life wife. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Charles Vanel, Françoise Rosay, (more)
Jean Renoir was the director of The Crime of Monsieur Lange, but this French film might just as well have been made in Hollywood by Frank Capra. The titular Lange (Rene Lefevre) is an author of wild west novels. When the owner of the company that publishes Lange's works absconds with the company funds, Lange rallies the employees together to create their own publishing house. The publisher returns, disguised as a priest, and demands a share of the profits. Lange responds by killing the bounder. The grateful employees help Lange to escape prosecution, allowing him to leave the country with his lovely fiancee (Florelle). Jacques Prevert adapted the screenplay of The Crime of Monsieur Lange from a story by Renoir and Jean Castanier. Stage actor Jules Berry makes his film debut in the role of the shady publisher. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jules Berry, René Lefèvre, (more)
In a comedy-farce that runs from black humor to slapstick, this story is one in which a mystery writer is caught unawares by his cousin, a vicar, who shows up unannounced for a visit. Since the servants have just walked out, the writer's wife hides out from the vicar, taking care of the cooking, cleaning and other household chores. To explain his wife's absence as hostess, the writer concocts an excuse which only makes the vicar convinced that he has done away with his spouse. Things go from bad to worse and eventually Scotland Yard is called in to clear things up. ~ Tana Hobart, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Michel Simon, Françoise Rosay, (more)
Un Oiseau Rare (Rare Bird) is a wide-ranging satire of several mid-1930s aberrations, including giveaway contests, advertising campaigns and pretentious summer resorts. In a virtual repeat of his role in Rene Clair's Last Billionaire, Max Dearly plays Melleville, an eccentric millionaire who wants to find out how those less fortunate than himself muddle through life. Disguising himself as an impoverished contest winner, Melleville signs in at a fancy hotel. Meanwhile, the actual winner, impecunious Jean Berthier (Pierre Brasseur), also shows up at the hotel, where through a series of silly misunderstandings he's assumed to be the wealthy Melleville. The mistaken-identity angle is played to the hilt, with both Melleville and Berthier learning a lot of life's lessons the hard way. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Max Dearly, Pierre Brasseur, (more)
The most acclaimed (and sentimental) film in Jean Vigo's short career. L'Atalante is the name of the barge owned by Jean (Jean Daste), who marries the lovely Juliette (Dita Parlo) at the film's beginning. Juliette comes to live aboard the barge, for Jean makes his living on the Seine. The arrival of a woman on board disrupts the small crew, but they do their best to make her welcome. The solitude and boredom soon take their toll on Juliette, so Jean brings her ashore for a night at a cafe in Paris. He becomes jealous of a flirtation between Juliette and a peddler, and when she leaves the ship again later, Jean casts off from the port. This dark love story is also peppered with hallucinations and unusual camerawork. A restored version was made available in 1990. ~ John Voorhees, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Dita Parlo, Jean Dasté, (more)
- Starring:
- Etienne Decroux, Lucien Raimbourg, (more)

















