Maria Chapdelaine
Maria Chapdelaine
| 14 December 1934 (USA)
Maria Chapdelaine Trailers

A young woman has three suitors on her father's logging ranch on the Quebec frontier.

Reviews
Cem Lamb

This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.

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Nayan Gough

A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.

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Donald Seymour

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

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Janis

One of the most extraordinary films you will see this year. Take that as you want.

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richard-1787

Today I read Maria Chapdelaine, the classic French-Canadian novel by Louis Hemon. This evening I watched Julian Duvivier's 1934 screen adaptation of it, with Jean Gabin and Madeleine Renaud. It's one remarkable film, folks. Often faithful to the novel, but sometimes different, when Duvivier thought of ways that only a great novelist or a great director could have used to tell his story. (Louis Hamon, the author of Maria Chapdelaine, was not a great novelist. An effective one, yes, but not a great one.) One of the things Duvivier uses repeatedly to great effect is juxtapositions of scenes that are happening simultaneously. (Hémon presents them consecutively.) The most remarkable example of this is his depiction of Christmas, when François Paradis is wandering through the forests in a terrible snow storm (recounted by Eutrope Gagnon in Chapter X of the novel), Maria is saying her rosary 1000 times in the hope it will cause the Virgin to send FP to her (depicted in Chapter IX of the novel), and in the church, largely empty, the priest does Christmas mass for the few parishioners who show up. The minutes when the younger daughter, Alma-Rose, sits in her father's lap and sings Christmas carols with him, juxtaposed to a choir singing the same music in the church in Péribonka, is remarkably moving. Another example of such juxtapositions is when Duvivier juxtaposes Eutrope's marriage proposal to Maria with Samuel's regrets at his wife's deathbed for the miserable life he has given her. Eutrope tries to make good the very life that Samuel realizes made his own wife miserable. Hémon makes that contrast over several chapters, but Duvivier does it with immediate juxtapositions, and it is very effective.My only real problem with this movie comes near the end. In the novel, Maria herself comes to a realization that she would rather remain in the north Canadian outback and carry on the 300 year old Franco-Canadian culture that survives there in the wilderness. It is a very powerful realization in the novel, and probably the single thing that made it a classic of French-Canadian literature. In the movie, those ideas get preached to her and the congregation as a whole by the local minister. It comes off as FAR less effective.But other than that, this is a wonderful movie, both as a work of art and as a documentary on the life of northern Canadian farmers and loggers in the first part of the twentieth century, at least as Hémon saw it during his six months there. Each time I watch it I enjoy it more.---------------------I watched Duvivier's juxtaposition of Chapters IX and X again today. It really is masterful.

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writers_reign

This was the first of seven occasions on which Julien Duvivier would direct Jean Gabin. It was Gabin's seventeenth film as an actor, Duvivier's thirty-third as a director. Gabin's billing was never less than that of co-star and eventually he was billed first, nevertheless there is more than a grain of truth in the allegations that Duvivier elevated Gabin from National to International stardom and this was an auspicious beginning to the screen partnership. In dramatic terms it's something of a feather merchant but it does have the advantage of being shot in the harsh environment of French-speaking Quebec which, to paraphrase Fred Allen, is a great place to live - if you're a caribou. Ostensibly Madeleine Renaud is the star as the eponymous heroine of a well-loved novel that was filmed several times. Gabin is the trapper with whom she falls in love and who leaves her to journey North in search of furs and a plan to return a wealthy man and marry her. Possibly illogically he decides to return just as a blizzard strikes, freezes to death and is devoured by wolves - it's not without the realms of probability that Hemingway remembered this when writing The Old Man And The Sea in which the ancient fisherman's catch rather than he himself is devoured by sharks. With more than a sideways nod to Nanook Of The North the photography is stunning and a true recording of a way of life that has gone the way of the Dodo and the entire film is a credit to all concerned.

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eric-spalding-386-706277

The movie seems like an attempt to represent Quebec for a French audience, with an emphasis on what's unusual about the province's language, landscape, religious and working practices, etc. There's a lot of music and singing as well (including "Alouette" and other familiar songs of the times), with ultimately only a wisp of a story.The title character, Maria Chapdelaine, is in love with François Paradis, and has to deal with his absence as he leaves to earn his livelihood as a fur trapper over the winter months. I won't say more about the story, because I would spoil the few surprises that it has to offer. Unless you have a fascination for rural life in Quebec in the 1930s, you will find the movie slow going.

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dbdumonteil

...you who love the French culture and without whom I could not have written these comments on Duvivier's earlier films which I had not seen for years."Maria Chapdelaine " is Canadian,you're going to tell me.But Duvivier almost treated Hémon's book as a musical.And all the songs we can hear are part (with the exception of "Alouette" ,pure Canadian stuff,but which is popular in France too)of the French national heritage.Songs of love "A la Claire Fontaine",François Paradis's favorite, country songs ("Marianne s'en Va-t-Au -Moulin" ), naughty ditties (the delightful "Son Voile qui Volait") ,Christmas carols ("Minuit Chrétiens "(aka "O Holy Night" ) and "IL est Né Le Divin Infant")and more more....More a chronicle than a real story,"Maria Chapdelaine" is one of the rare Duvivier movies which do not feature villains.No evil here but people who have to struggle hard all their life against a hostile nature (the horse falling in the snow is a beautiful metaphor) ;the only culture they get is religion ("Maria ,if you say 1,000 "Ave Maria" before Xmas,your dream will come true") or superstition (the bonesetter).Gabin's first part (and it will not be the last!)in a Duvivier's movie:Duvivier really MADE Gabin.Jean-Pierre Aumont appears in a part of a young man who has moved to the city.The cinematography is dazzling (even is the copy is as awful as you said ,Oystein):they say Ingmar Bergman used to dissect Duvivier's works.

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