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And God Created Woman (1956 film)

And God Created Woman (French: Et Dieu... créa la femme) is a 1956 French romantic drama film directed by Roger Vadim in his directorial debut and starring Brigitte Bardot. Though not her first film, it is widely recognized as the vehicle that launched Bardot into the public spotlight and immediately created her "sex kitten" persona, making her an overnight sensation.

And God Created Woman
French theatrical release poster
FrenchEt Dieu... créa la femme
Directed byRoger Vadim
Written by
Produced byRaoul Lévy
Starring
CinematographyArmand Thirard
Edited byVictoria Mercanton
Music byPaul Misraki
Production
companies
  • Iéna Productions
  • Union Cinématographique Lyonnaise
  • Cocinor
Distributed byCocinor
Release date
  • 28 November 1956 (1956-11-28) (France)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Budget$300,000 (est.)[1]
Box office
  • $12 million(U.S.)[2]
  • $21 million (Foreign)[3]
  • $33 million (World)
  • 3,919,059 admissions (France)[4]

When the film was released in the United States by Kingsley-International Pictures in 1957, it pushed the boundaries of the representation of sexuality in American cinema, and most available prints of the film were heavily edited to conform with the Hays Code censorial standards.[5]

An English-language remake also titled And God Created Woman was directed by Vadim and released in 1988.

Plot

The action is set in St Tropez. Juliette is an 18-year-old orphan in Saint-Tropez, France,[6][7] with a high level of sexual energy. She makes no effort to restrain her natural sensuality – lying nude in her yard, habitually kicking her shoes off and stalking about barefoot, and disregarding many societal conventions and the opinions of others. This behavior causes a stir and attracts the attention of most of the men around her.

Her first suitor is the much older and wealthy Eric Carradine. He wants to build a new casino in St Tropez, but his plans are blocked by a small shipyard on the stretch of land which he needs for the development; the shipyard is owned by the Tardieu family.

Antoine, the eldest of the three Tardieu brothers, returns home for the weekend to hear Carradine's proposal and Juliette is waiting for him to take her away with him. His intentions are short-term, and he spurns her by leaving St Tropez without her.

Tiring of her outrageous behavior, Juliette's guardians threaten to send her back to the orphanage, which will confine her until she is 21. To keep her in town, Carradine pleads unsuccessfully with Antoine to marry her. His infatuated and naive younger brother Michel sees his opportunity and proposes marriage to Juliette. Despite her love for Antoine, she accepts.

When Antoine is contracted to return home and work for Carradine, Juliette's behavior becomes increasingly disrespectful of her husband. In a huff, she takes one of the family's boats. When it develops engine trouble, she has to be saved by Antoine. Washed up together on a wild beach, she seduces him.

Juliette begins acting bizarrely. She takes to her bed, claiming to have a fever. She tells Christian, the youngest Tardieu brother, that she had sex with Antoine on the beach. Madame Tardieu, mother of the three boys, hears about it, tells Michel that he has to kick Juliette promptly. Michel goes to their room to talk with Juliette, but she has gone off to the Bar des Amis to drink and dance.

Michel tries to go looking for her, but Antoine locks him inside, telling him to forget her. Michel fights his brother for the key and heads out after Juliette.

Eric has been alerted that Juliette is making a spectacle of herself and comes to the bar to collect her. Juliette refuses to leave with him. Michel arrives but Juliette refuses to talk with him and continues an improvised and sexually suggestive dancing. When she ignores Michel's order to stop, Michel shoots at her. Eric steps in and is slightly wounded. Antoine offers to drive Eric to a doctor and they leave. Michel angrily slaps Juliette four times. She only smiles at him with satisfaction that she has provoked him to this behavior. En route to the doctor, Eric tells Antoine that he is going to reassign him to work elsewhere to put some distance between him and Michel and Juliette. He says: "That girl was made to destroy men". In the final scene, Michel and Juliette walk home together, hand in hand.

Cast

Production

By the mid-1950s Roger Vadim was an established screenwriter and had written several movies starring his then wife Brigitte Bardot. Producer Raoul Levy wanted Vadim to write and direct a film starring Bardot, and suggested he adapt the book The Little Genius by Maurice Garçon. Vadim disliked the book and came up with a new story, one based on a trial of a woman who had been the mistress of three different brothers, and who killed one of them. Vadim was particularly taken with the attitude of the woman towards her lovers, the jury and the police. Levy liked Vadim's idea and obtained finance.[8]

Levy succeeded in raising finance from Columbia, who would provide color and CinemaScope provided Curt Jurgens was given a role. The parts of the brothers had already been cast so Vadim rewrote the script in two days to expand the part of an arms dealer so it could be offered to Jurgens.[8]

Reception

Box office

The film was a big hit in France, one of the ten most popular films at the British box-office in its year of release[9] and the biggest foreign-language film ever in the United States at the time.[10][11] (With rentals of $4 million. It held the record until La Dolce Vita.[12])

The film was extremely popular in Kansas City, where it played for a year at the Kimo Theatre grossing over $100,000, a record for Kansas City at the time.[13] In Europe,this movie have smashed attendance records from Norway to the Middle East.[14] It earned over $8 million, more than France's biggest export — "the Renault Dauphine".[15]

In the United States the film was released by Kingsley-International, a subsidiary of Columbia Pictures as Columbia was forbidden to release a film with nudity and adult themes. The Catholic Legion of Decency gave it a "C" for "Condemned" rating. A Columbia spokesman stated that the film would have received twice as many bookings with a less restrictive "B" rating, but would only have done half the business.[16]

Critical response

When the film was released in the United States, Bosley Crowther, the film critic for The New York Times, found Brigitte Bardot attractive but the film lacking and was not able to recommend it. He wrote: "Bardot moves herself in a fashion that fully accentuates her charms. She is undeniably a creation of superlative craftsmanship. But that's the extent of the transcendence, for there is nothing sublime about the script of this completely single-minded little picture. ...We can't recommend this little item as a sample of the best in Gallic films. It is clumsily put together and rather bizarrely played. There is nothing more than sultry fervor in the performance of Mlle. Bardot, and Christian Marquand and Jean-Louis Trintignant are mainly heavy-breathers as her men".[17]

Film critic Dennis Schwartz wrote: "The breezy erotic drama was laced with some thinly textured sad moments that hardly resonated as serious drama. But as slight as the story was it was always lively and easy to take on the eyes, adding up to hardly anything more than a bunch of snapshots of Bardot posturing as a sex kitten in various stages of undress. The public loved it and it became a big box-office smash, and paved the way for a spate of sexy films to follow. What was more disturbing than its dullish dialogue and flaunting of Bardot as a sex object, was that underneath its call for liberation was a reactionary and sexist view of sex".[18]

Rotten Tomatoes reports a 71% approval rating based on 14 reviews, with an average rating of 6.6/10.[19]

Censorship

When released in the United States, the film was condemned by the National Legion of Decency.[20]

Police made attempts to suppress its screening in the U.S.[21][22]

Paperback novelization

Approximately five years after the film's release, in 1961, Popular Library published a series of three screenplay novelizations based on mainstream foreign films known for pushing sexual boundaries in cinema, and this film was among them. The by line is that of "new bestselling French author Simone Colette", but no such author ever existed. Rather it's a pseudonym for American authorship, devised to tie the trio of novelizations together. Whether it served as a single author pseudonym or a "house name" for several writers is unknown. The copyright is assigned to the publisher and screenwriters Vadim & Lévy are nowhere mentioned.

References

  1. ^ Scheuer, Philip K. (20 July 1965). "Vadim Is Frank On, Off Screen". Los Angeles Times. p. C8.
  2. ^ "France's Brigitte Bardot". Entertainment Weekly.
  3. ^ "And God Created Woman".
  4. ^ Box office information for film in France at Box Office Story
  5. ^ And God Created Woman at AllMovie.
  6. ^ Stephens, Chuck. "And God Created Woman". The Criterion Collection. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  7. ^ "And God Created Woman". www.tcm.com. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  8. ^ a b Vadim, Roger (1986). Bardot, Deneuve, Fonda. Simon and Schuster. pp. 78–94.
  9. ^ Most Popular Film of the Year. The Times (London, England), Thursday, 12 Dec 1957; p. 3; Issue 54022
  10. ^ "Top Grossers of 1958". Variety. 7 January 1959. p. 48. Please note figures are for US and Canada only and are domestic rentals accruing to distributors as opposed to theatre gross
  11. ^ "Sex-Kitten Unravels Film 'Art'". Variety. 29 October 1958. p. 1. Retrieved 10 March 2019 – via Archive.org.
  12. ^ "O'Seas Films $69,000,000 in US". Variety. 2 May 1962. p. 18.
  13. ^ Quinn, John (4 February 1959). "Bureau of Missing Business: Kansas City's Boffo with Bardot". Variety. p. 15. Retrieved 4 July 2019 – via Archive.org.
  14. ^ "Cinema: BB". Time. 11 November 1957. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  15. ^ Brian, Bell (1 October 2001). Insight Guide French Riviera. Insight Guides. ISBN 978-1585731480.
  16. ^ pp. 114-115 Balio, Tino The Foreign Film Renaissance on American Screens, 1946–1973 University of Wisconsin Press; 1st Edition (November 5, 2010).
  17. ^ Crowther, Bosley (22 October 1957). "French Import: Brigitte Bardot Stars in God Created Woman". The New York Times. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  18. ^ Schwartz, Dennis. Ozus' World Movie Reviews, film review, 3 April 2004. Last Retrieved 18 June 2008.
  19. ^ And God Created Woman at Rotten Tomatoes. Last Retrieved 8 December 2022.
  20. ^ Motion Pictures Classified by the National Legion of Decency, February 1936 – October 1959. New York. 1959. Retrieved 3 April 2017.
  21. ^ "COURT BARS BLOCKING OF FRENCH-MADE FILM". Los Angeles Times. 27 December 1957. p. 5.
  22. ^ "FILM SEIZURE ATTACKED: Mayor of Philadelphia Says Action May Be Illegal". The New York Times. 13 February 1958. p. 23.

External links

created, woman, 1956, film, created, woman, french, dieu, créa, femme, 1956, french, romantic, drama, film, directed, roger, vadim, directorial, debut, starring, brigitte, bardot, though, first, film, widely, recognized, vehicle, that, launched, bardot, into, . And God Created Woman French Et Dieu crea la femme is a 1956 French romantic drama film directed by Roger Vadim in his directorial debut and starring Brigitte Bardot Though not her first film it is widely recognized as the vehicle that launched Bardot into the public spotlight and immediately created her sex kitten persona making her an overnight sensation And God Created WomanFrench theatrical release posterFrenchEt Dieu crea la femmeDirected byRoger VadimWritten byRoger Vadim Raoul LevyProduced byRaoul LevyStarringBrigitte Bardot Curd Jurgens Jean Louis TrintignantCinematographyArmand ThirardEdited byVictoria MercantonMusic byPaul MisrakiProductioncompaniesIena Productions Union Cinematographique Lyonnaise CocinorDistributed byCocinorRelease date28 November 1956 1956 11 28 France Running time95 minutesCountryFranceLanguageFrenchBudget 300 000 est 1 Box office 12 million U S 2 21 million Foreign 3 33 million World 3 919 059 admissions France 4 When the film was released in the United States by Kingsley International Pictures in 1957 it pushed the boundaries of the representation of sexuality in American cinema and most available prints of the film were heavily edited to conform with the Hays Code censorial standards 5 An English language remake also titled And God Created Woman was directed by Vadim and released in 1988 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical response 5 Censorship 6 Paperback novelization 7 References 8 External linksPlot EditThe action is set in St Tropez Juliette is an 18 year old orphan in Saint Tropez France 6 7 with a high level of sexual energy She makes no effort to restrain her natural sensuality lying nude in her yard habitually kicking her shoes off and stalking about barefoot and disregarding many societal conventions and the opinions of others This behavior causes a stir and attracts the attention of most of the men around her Her first suitor is the much older and wealthy Eric Carradine He wants to build a new casino in St Tropez but his plans are blocked by a small shipyard on the stretch of land which he needs for the development the shipyard is owned by the Tardieu family Antoine the eldest of the three Tardieu brothers returns home for the weekend to hear Carradine s proposal and Juliette is waiting for him to take her away with him His intentions are short term and he spurns her by leaving St Tropez without her Tiring of her outrageous behavior Juliette s guardians threaten to send her back to the orphanage which will confine her until she is 21 To keep her in town Carradine pleads unsuccessfully with Antoine to marry her His infatuated and naive younger brother Michel sees his opportunity and proposes marriage to Juliette Despite her love for Antoine she accepts When Antoine is contracted to return home and work for Carradine Juliette s behavior becomes increasingly disrespectful of her husband In a huff she takes one of the family s boats When it develops engine trouble she has to be saved by Antoine Washed up together on a wild beach she seduces him Juliette begins acting bizarrely She takes to her bed claiming to have a fever She tells Christian the youngest Tardieu brother that she had sex with Antoine on the beach Madame Tardieu mother of the three boys hears about it tells Michel that he has to kick Juliette promptly Michel goes to their room to talk with Juliette but she has gone off to the Bar des Amis to drink and dance Michel tries to go looking for her but Antoine locks him inside telling him to forget her Michel fights his brother for the key and heads out after Juliette Eric has been alerted that Juliette is making a spectacle of herself and comes to the bar to collect her Juliette refuses to leave with him Michel arrives but Juliette refuses to talk with him and continues an improvised and sexually suggestive dancing When she ignores Michel s order to stop Michel shoots at her Eric steps in and is slightly wounded Antoine offers to drive Eric to a doctor and they leave Michel angrily slaps Juliette four times She only smiles at him with satisfaction that she has provoked him to this behavior En route to the doctor Eric tells Antoine that he is going to reassign him to work elsewhere to put some distance between him and Michel and Juliette He says That girl was made to destroy men In the final scene Michel and Juliette walk home together hand in hand Cast EditBrigitte Bardot as Juliette Hardy Curd Jurgens as Eric Carradine Jean Louis Trintignant as Michel Tardieu Marie Glory as Mme Tardieu Georges Poujouly as Christian Tardieu Christian Marquand as Antoine Tardieu Jane Marken as Madame Morin Jean Tissier as M Vigier Lefranc Isabelle Corey as Lucienne Jacqueline Ventura as Mme Vigier Lefranc Jacques Ciron as The Secretary of Eric Paul Faivre as M Morin Jany Mourey as The Orphanage Representative Philippe Grenier as Perri Jean Lefebvre as The Man who wanted to dance Leopoldo Frances as The Dancer Jean Toscano as ReneProduction EditBy the mid 1950s Roger Vadim was an established screenwriter and had written several movies starring his then wife Brigitte Bardot Producer Raoul Levy wanted Vadim to write and direct a film starring Bardot and suggested he adapt the book The Little Genius by Maurice Garcon Vadim disliked the book and came up with a new story one based on a trial of a woman who had been the mistress of three different brothers and who killed one of them Vadim was particularly taken with the attitude of the woman towards her lovers the jury and the police Levy liked Vadim s idea and obtained finance 8 Levy succeeded in raising finance from Columbia who would provide color and CinemaScope provided Curt Jurgens was given a role The parts of the brothers had already been cast so Vadim rewrote the script in two days to expand the part of an arms dealer so it could be offered to Jurgens 8 Reception EditBox office Edit The film was a big hit in France one of the ten most popular films at the British box office in its year of release 9 and the biggest foreign language film ever in the United States at the time 10 11 With rentals of 4 million It held the record until La Dolce Vita 12 The film was extremely popular in Kansas City where it played for a year at the Kimo Theatre grossing over 100 000 a record for Kansas City at the time 13 In Europe this movie have smashed attendance records from Norway to the Middle East 14 It earned over 8 million more than France s biggest export the Renault Dauphine 15 In the United States the film was released by Kingsley International a subsidiary of Columbia Pictures as Columbia was forbidden to release a film with nudity and adult themes The Catholic Legion of Decency gave it a C for Condemned rating A Columbia spokesman stated that the film would have received twice as many bookings with a less restrictive B rating but would only have done half the business 16 Critical response Edit When the film was released in the United States Bosley Crowther the film critic for The New York Times found Brigitte Bardot attractive but the film lacking and was not able to recommend it He wrote Bardot moves herself in a fashion that fully accentuates her charms She is undeniably a creation of superlative craftsmanship But that s the extent of the transcendence for there is nothing sublime about the script of this completely single minded little picture We can t recommend this little item as a sample of the best in Gallic films It is clumsily put together and rather bizarrely played There is nothing more than sultry fervor in the performance of Mlle Bardot and Christian Marquand and Jean Louis Trintignant are mainly heavy breathers as her men 17 Film critic Dennis Schwartz wrote The breezy erotic drama was laced with some thinly textured sad moments that hardly resonated as serious drama But as slight as the story was it was always lively and easy to take on the eyes adding up to hardly anything more than a bunch of snapshots of Bardot posturing as a sex kitten in various stages of undress The public loved it and it became a big box office smash and paved the way for a spate of sexy films to follow What was more disturbing than its dullish dialogue and flaunting of Bardot as a sex object was that underneath its call for liberation was a reactionary and sexist view of sex 18 Rotten Tomatoes reports a 71 approval rating based on 14 reviews with an average rating of 6 6 10 19 Censorship EditWhen released in the United States the film was condemned by the National Legion of Decency 20 Police made attempts to suppress its screening in the U S 21 22 Paperback novelization EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Approximately five years after the film s release in 1961 Popular Library published a series of three screenplay novelizations based on mainstream foreign films known for pushing sexual boundaries in cinema and this film was among them The by line is that of new bestselling French author Simone Colette but no such author ever existed Rather it s a pseudonym for American authorship devised to tie the trio of novelizations together Whether it served as a single author pseudonym or a house name for several writers is unknown The copyright is assigned to the publisher and screenwriters Vadim amp Levy are nowhere mentioned References Edit Scheuer Philip K 20 July 1965 Vadim Is Frank On Off Screen Los Angeles Times p C8 France s Brigitte Bardot Entertainment Weekly And God Created Woman Box office information for film in France at Box Office Story And God Created Woman at AllMovie Stephens Chuck And God Created Woman The Criterion Collection Retrieved 6 September 2021 And God Created Woman www tcm com Retrieved 6 September 2021 a b Vadim Roger 1986 Bardot Deneuve Fonda Simon and Schuster pp 78 94 Most Popular Film of the Year The Times London England Thursday 12 Dec 1957 p 3 Issue 54022 Top Grossers of 1958 Variety 7 January 1959 p 48 Please note figures are for US and Canada only and are domestic rentals accruing to distributors as opposed to theatre gross Sex Kitten Unravels Film Art Variety 29 October 1958 p 1 Retrieved 10 March 2019 via Archive org O Seas Films 69 000 000 in US Variety 2 May 1962 p 18 Quinn John 4 February 1959 Bureau of Missing Business Kansas City s Boffo with Bardot Variety p 15 Retrieved 4 July 2019 via Archive org Cinema BB Time 11 November 1957 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 5 November 2021 Brian Bell 1 October 2001 Insight Guide French Riviera Insight Guides ISBN 978 1585731480 pp 114 115 Balio Tino The Foreign Film Renaissance on American Screens 1946 1973 University of Wisconsin Press 1st Edition November 5 2010 Crowther Bosley 22 October 1957 French Import Brigitte Bardot Stars in God Created Woman The New York Times Retrieved 28 December 2020 Schwartz Dennis Ozus World Movie Reviews film review 3 April 2004 Last Retrieved 18 June 2008 And God Created Woman at Rotten Tomatoes Last Retrieved 8 December 2022 Motion Pictures Classified by the National Legion of Decency February 1936 October 1959 New York 1959 Retrieved 3 April 2017 COURT BARS BLOCKING OF FRENCH MADE FILM Los Angeles Times 27 December 1957 p 5 FILM SEIZURE ATTACKED Mayor of Philadelphia Says Action May Be Illegal The New York Times 13 February 1958 p 23 External links EditAnd God Created Woman at IMDb And God Created Woman an essay by Chuck Stephens at the Criterion Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title And God Created Woman 1956 film amp oldid 1145143545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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