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The Grand Maneuver

The Grand Maneuver (French: Les Grandes Manœuvres) is a 1955 French comedy-drama romance film written and directed by René Clair, and starring Michèle Morgan and Gérard Philipe. It was released in the United Kingdom and Ireland as Summer Manoeuvres, and in the United States under the title The Grand Maneuver. It is a romantic comedy-drama set in a French provincial town just before World War I, and it was René Clair's first film to be made in colour.

Les Grandes Manœuvres
The Grand Maneuver
Film poster
Directed byRené Clair
Written byRené Clair (screenplay and dialogue)
Jérôme Géronimi (adaptation)
Jean Marsan (adaptation)
Produced byRené Clair
André Daven
StarringMichèle Morgan
Gérard Philipe
CinematographyRobert Lefebvre
Edited byLouisette Hautecoeur
Denise Natot
Music byGeorges Van Parys
Production
companies
Filmsonor
Rizzoli Film
S.E.C.A.
Cinétel
Distributed byCinédis
Release date
  • 26 October 1955 (1955-10-26)
Running time
107 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Box office$39.8 million[1]
5,302,963 admissions (France)[2]

Plot edit

Armand de la Verne, a lieutenant in the French cavalry and a notorious seducer, undertakes a bet that he will "obtain the favours" of a woman selected secretly by lot, before his company departs for its summer manoeuvres in a month's time. His target turns out to be Marie-Louise Rivière, a Parisian divorcée who runs a milliner's shop, and who is also being courted by the serious and respectable Victor Duverger. Marie Louise's growing attraction towards Armand is tempered by her discoveries about his reputation, while Armand's calculated strategy becomes undermined by his genuine emotions. A subplot follows the parallel but simpler courtship of Armand's friend and fellow officer Félix and Lucie, the young daughter of a photographer.

Cast edit

Production edit

In René Clair's own words, "Love is the only concern of Les Grandes Manœuvres", and he added that the film was one of the countless variations to be made on the inexhaustible theme of Don Juan.[3] The film is set in a French garrison town in the period just before the First World War, the end of the Belle Époque. Describing the origins of the film, Clair said, "Having passed a part of my childhood near Versailles, I could not forget the cavalry officers, their galloping in the forest of Viroflay, the rumors of their adventures, a duel which the newspapers talked about and in which two of those officers died...."[4] Elsewhere he commented, "For me it is a very sentimental film, even more sentimental because it is situated in the period of my childhood. I put into it things that I saw."[5]

Clair's aim was to create a portrait of provincial life in the years before 1914, and close attention was paid to the fashions of the period and the rituals of military life.[6][7] Les Grandes Manœuvres was Clair's first film in colour, a medium he had wanted to use since his time in England in the late 1930s, because, he stated, "it would enable him to keep reality at a distance"[8] The production designer, Léon Barsacq, created sets in which muted colours were dominant, with furniture and accessories in black or white, and costumes mainly in beige or brown; they even sprayed the leaves of trees with yellow so that their shade of green would not be too bright. The only bold colour permitted was red, the red of the military uniforms.[7]

The film's budget was 222 million old francs; of this, Clair's salary was 20 million and Gérard Philipe's was 18 million.[9]

Filming began at the Studios de Boulogne on 28 April 1955, and continued until 2 July, after which the film was completed rapidly; editing had been largely determined during shooting, with few alternative shots being taken.[10] However, Clair hesitated between different endings for the film, two of which were actually filmed and shown to groups of friends to gauge their reaction. Although several favoured the more bitter and tragic ending, Clair adopted the one that was more delicate and low-key, as being more in keeping with his own manner.[11] Even so, it was the first of his films which "ended badly", and thus marked a departure in his style.[6]

Reception edit

The first screening of Les Grandes Manœuvres took place in Moscow, on 17 October 1955, as part of the first "French Film Week" (Semaine du cinéma français). (This provoked one attack in a French newspaper which criticised its selection for the USSR because it suggested that the French army had nothing better to do than to pursue female conquests. Clair had fuelled this complaint by declaring at his Moscow press conference that in life there was nothing more serious than love.)[12] The French première took place in Paris on 26 October 1955, and was generally well received by both press and public.[13] Those critics who were less than enthusiastic were at any rate respectful. Several of Clair's longtime supporters thought that it was his best film.[14] One of the few hostile reactions came from Claude Mauriac who objected that the performance of Gérard Philipe made a sympathetic character out of a complaisant seducer.[15] André Bazin observed that the film was "like those classics which do not claim originality in their material, only in the manner in which they move the pieces on the chess-board.... Les Grandes Manœuvres begins as vaudeville, continues as comedy, reaches drama, and culminates in tragedy."[16] A positive review by Jacques Doniol-Valcroze appeared in France-Observateur in November 1955 in which he wrote that everything about the film reminded him of an operetta: "We smile, laugh, are astonished, smile again and feel our hearts ache [-] it would be a mistake to underestimate Les Grandes Manoeuvres, as I understand some people have."[17]

The film won two important French prizes, the Prix Louis-Delluc and the Prix Méliès.

Among English-language reviewers, there was consistency in their appreciation of Clair's wit and the visual elegance of his use of colour on the one hand, but on the other a disappointment at his perceived failure to bring sufficient emotional engagement to the film's later scenes. In the words of one British review, Les Grandes Manœuvres was "an exceptionally finished and civilised entertainment [and] not the least of its assets is the impeccable taste with which Clair, for the first time, manipulates colour"; but, "in negotiating the change to a serious ending, the film is less than wholly satisfactory".[18] Another said, "The film begins beautifully... The gently stylised movements, the light and even rhythm, set [Clair's] own personal tone of comedy.... Later developments, however, demand more than he seems prepared to give... it fails to convey human passions suddenly taking over."[19] This was echoed by an American reviewer: "[Clair] has shown true artistry in his use of pastel and vivid hues to capture even the nuances of dress, décor and elegance of a pre-World War I garrison town.... [The film] is a fragile and compassionate but rarely moving delineation of the grand passion."[20] An Irish review agreed that, "Rene Clair's Summer Manoeuvres is anything but a deeply "committed" film, and survives chiefly for its evocation of period.... [The film] does not quite compass the violent change from manners to passion...".[21] A more sympathetic summary appeared in The Times: "Les Grandes Manoeuvres is a sigh for lost youth, for a lost generation, and for, perhaps, l'amour, as against love, and its only failing is that, in enchanting the senses, it fails to touch the heart."[22]

In 1974, the film was given an out-of-competition screening at the Cannes Film Festival.[23]

Clair himself considered Les Grandes Manœuvres (along with Le silence est d'or) to be the best of his post-war films.[24] However, it appeared at a time when the classical studio-bound style of French cinema which Clair represented was coming under attack from a new generation of French critics and filmmakers, and henceforth his films were generally less well received.[25]

References edit

  1. ^ "Les Grandes Maneuvres (1955)- JPBox-Office". Retrieved 1 February 2016.
  2. ^ "Box Office Success of Gerard Philipe films". Box Office Story.
  3. ^ René Clair, Four Screenplays; translated from the French by Piergiuseppe Bozzetti. (New York: Orion Press, 1970). p.323.
  4. ^ René Clair, Four Screenplays; translated from the French by Piergiuseppe Bozzetti. (New York: Orion Press, 1970). p.436.
  5. ^ Michel Aubriant & Hervé Le Boterf, "Entretien avec René Clair", in Cinémonde, 2 mai 1957, p.33; quoted in translation by Celia McGerr, René Clair. (Boston: Twayne, 1980). p.199.
  6. ^ a b Georges Charensol & Roger Régent, 50 Ans de cinéma avec René Clair. (Paris: Éditions de la Table Ronde, 1979). p.178.
  7. ^ a b Pierre Billard, Le Mystère René Clair. (Paris: Plon, 1998). p.356.
  8. ^ "...[il] proclame qu'elle lui servira à s'éloigner de la réalité": Pierre Billard, Le Mystère René Clair. (Paris: Plon, 1998). p.356.
  9. ^ Pierre Billard, Le Mystère René Clair. (Paris: Plon, 1998). p.3.
  10. ^ Pierre Billard, Le Mystère René Clair. (Paris: Plon, 1998). p.358; p.440.
  11. ^ Pierre Billard, Le Mystère René Clair. (Paris: Plon, 1998). p.358.
  12. ^ Pierre Billard, Le Mystère René Clair. (Paris: Plon, 1998). p.361-362.
  13. ^ Georges Charensol & Roger Régent, 50 Ans de cinéma avec René Clair. (Paris: Éditions de la Table Ronde, 1979). p.181.
  14. ^ Georges Charensol and Georges Sadoul, quoted in Pierre Billard, Le Mystère René Clair. (Paris: Plon, 1998). p.361-362; Jean de Baroncelli, writing in Le Monde: "Un enchantement. Un ravissement"; quoted by Georges Charensol & Roger Régent, 50 Ans de cinéma avec René Clair. (Paris: Éditions de la Table Ronde, 1979). p.181.
  15. ^ Claude Mauriac, "Lovelace et Iseult", in Le Figaro littéraire. 5 November 1955; quoted by Pierre Billard, Le Mystère René Clair. (Paris: Plon, 1998). p.361-362.
  16. ^ André Bazin, "L'Univers de René Clair", in L'Éducation nationale, 10 November 1955; quoted by Pierre Billard, Le Mystère René Clair. (Paris: Plon, 1998). p.363-364.
  17. ^ Quoted in Jean Douchet, French New Wave. (New York: D.A.P, 1999). p.27. ISBN 1-56466-057-5
  18. ^ "Les Grandes Manœuvres (Summer Manoeuvres)", in Monthly Film Bulletin, Feb. 1956, pp.15-16.
  19. ^ Gavin Lambert, "Les Grandes Manœuvres", in Sight & Sound, vol.25(3), Winter 1955/56, pp.146-147.
  20. ^ A.H. Weiler, "The Grand Maneuver", in The New York Times, 2 October 1956. Retrieved 11 August 2012.
  21. ^ Peter Connolly, review, in The Furrow (Maynooth, Ireland), Vol. 7, No. 11 (Nov. 1956), pp. 693-697. Retrieved 19 July 2012.
  22. ^ "Les Grandes Manoeuvres", in The Times (London), 10 January 1956, p.5, col.3.
  23. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Les Grandes Manoeuvres". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 19 July 2012.
  24. ^ Celia McGerr, René Clair. (Boston: Twayne, 1980). p.199.
  25. ^ David Thomson, A New Biographical Dictionary of Film. (London: Little, Brown, 2002). p.161.

External links edit

  • Les Grandes Manoeuvres at IMDb  
  • Les Grandes Manoeuvres at AllMovie
  • Les Grandes Manœuvres at Films de France

grand, maneuver, french, grandes, manœuvres, 1955, french, comedy, drama, romance, film, written, directed, rené, clair, starring, michèle, morgan, gérard, philipe, released, united, kingdom, ireland, summer, manoeuvres, united, states, under, title, romantic,. The Grand Maneuver French Les Grandes Manœuvres is a 1955 French comedy drama romance film written and directed by Rene Clair and starring Michele Morgan and Gerard Philipe It was released in the United Kingdom and Ireland as Summer Manoeuvres and in the United States under the title The Grand Maneuver It is a romantic comedy drama set in a French provincial town just before World War I and it was Rene Clair s first film to be made in colour Les Grandes ManœuvresThe Grand ManeuverFilm posterDirected byRene ClairWritten byRene Clair screenplay and dialogue Jerome Geronimi adaptation Jean Marsan adaptation Produced byRene ClairAndre DavenStarringMichele MorganGerard PhilipeCinematographyRobert LefebvreEdited byLouisette HautecoeurDenise NatotMusic byGeorges Van ParysProductioncompaniesFilmsonorRizzoli FilmS E C A CinetelDistributed byCinedisRelease date26 October 1955 1955 10 26 Running time107 minutesCountryFranceLanguageFrenchBox office 39 8 million 1 5 302 963 admissions France 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 5 References 6 External linksPlot editArmand de la Verne a lieutenant in the French cavalry and a notorious seducer undertakes a bet that he will obtain the favours of a woman selected secretly by lot before his company departs for its summer manoeuvres in a month s time His target turns out to be Marie Louise Riviere a Parisian divorcee who runs a milliner s shop and who is also being courted by the serious and respectable Victor Duverger Marie Louise s growing attraction towards Armand is tempered by her discoveries about his reputation while Armand s calculated strategy becomes undermined by his genuine emotions A subplot follows the parallel but simpler courtship of Armand s friend and fellow officer Felix and Lucie the young daughter of a photographer Cast editMichele Morgan as Marie Louise Riviere Gerard Philipe as Le lieutenant Armand de la Verne Jean Desailly as Victor Duverger Pierre Dux as Le Colonel Jacques Fabbri as L ordonnance d Armand Jacques Francois as Rodolphe Yves Robert as Le lieutenant Felix Leroy Brigitte Bardot as Lucie Lise Delamare as Juliette Duverger Jacqueline Maillan as Jeanne Duverger une soeur de Victor Magali Noel as Therese la chanteuse as Magali Noel Simone Valere as Gisele Monnet as Simone Valere Catherine Anouilh as Alice la fille du prefet Madeleine Barbulee as La dame au chapeau jaune Dany Carrel as Rose Mousse Gabrielle Fontan as Melanie la bonne des Duverger Viviane Gosset as La colonelle Judith Magre as Emilienne Arlette Thomas as Amelie la bonne de Marie Louise Raymond Cordy as Le photographe Olivier Hussenot as Le prefet Jacques Jouanneau as L ordonnance de Felix Jacques Morel as Monsieur Monnet Palau as Arthur as Pierre Palau Claude Rich as Le fiance d Alice Daniel Sorano as Le maitre d armesProduction editIn Rene Clair s own words Love is the only concern of Les Grandes Manœuvres and he added that the film was one of the countless variations to be made on the inexhaustible theme of Don Juan 3 The film is set in a French garrison town in the period just before the First World War the end of the Belle Epoque Describing the origins of the film Clair said Having passed a part of my childhood near Versailles I could not forget the cavalry officers their galloping in the forest of Viroflay the rumors of their adventures a duel which the newspapers talked about and in which two of those officers died 4 Elsewhere he commented For me it is a very sentimental film even more sentimental because it is situated in the period of my childhood I put into it things that I saw 5 Clair s aim was to create a portrait of provincial life in the years before 1914 and close attention was paid to the fashions of the period and the rituals of military life 6 7 Les Grandes Manœuvres was Clair s first film in colour a medium he had wanted to use since his time in England in the late 1930s because he stated it would enable him to keep reality at a distance 8 The production designer Leon Barsacq created sets in which muted colours were dominant with furniture and accessories in black or white and costumes mainly in beige or brown they even sprayed the leaves of trees with yellow so that their shade of green would not be too bright The only bold colour permitted was red the red of the military uniforms 7 The film s budget was 222 million old francs of this Clair s salary was 20 million and Gerard Philipe s was 18 million 9 Filming began at the Studios de Boulogne on 28 April 1955 and continued until 2 July after which the film was completed rapidly editing had been largely determined during shooting with few alternative shots being taken 10 However Clair hesitated between different endings for the film two of which were actually filmed and shown to groups of friends to gauge their reaction Although several favoured the more bitter and tragic ending Clair adopted the one that was more delicate and low key as being more in keeping with his own manner 11 Even so it was the first of his films which ended badly and thus marked a departure in his style 6 Reception editThe first screening of Les Grandes Manœuvres took place in Moscow on 17 October 1955 as part of the first French Film Week Semaine du cinema francais This provoked one attack in a French newspaper which criticised its selection for the USSR because it suggested that the French army had nothing better to do than to pursue female conquests Clair had fuelled this complaint by declaring at his Moscow press conference that in life there was nothing more serious than love 12 The French premiere took place in Paris on 26 October 1955 and was generally well received by both press and public 13 Those critics who were less than enthusiastic were at any rate respectful Several of Clair s longtime supporters thought that it was his best film 14 One of the few hostile reactions came from Claude Mauriac who objected that the performance of Gerard Philipe made a sympathetic character out of a complaisant seducer 15 Andre Bazin observed that the film was like those classics which do not claim originality in their material only in the manner in which they move the pieces on the chess board Les Grandes Manœuvres begins as vaudeville continues as comedy reaches drama and culminates in tragedy 16 A positive review by Jacques Doniol Valcroze appeared in France Observateur in November 1955 in which he wrote that everything about the film reminded him of an operetta We smile laugh are astonished smile again and feel our hearts ache it would be a mistake to underestimate Les Grandes Manoeuvres as I understand some people have 17 The film won two important French prizes the Prix Louis Delluc and the Prix Melies Among English language reviewers there was consistency in their appreciation of Clair s wit and the visual elegance of his use of colour on the one hand but on the other a disappointment at his perceived failure to bring sufficient emotional engagement to the film s later scenes In the words of one British review Les Grandes Manœuvres was an exceptionally finished and civilised entertainment and not the least of its assets is the impeccable taste with which Clair for the first time manipulates colour but in negotiating the change to a serious ending the film is less than wholly satisfactory 18 Another said The film begins beautifully The gently stylised movements the light and even rhythm set Clair s own personal tone of comedy Later developments however demand more than he seems prepared to give it fails to convey human passions suddenly taking over 19 This was echoed by an American reviewer Clair has shown true artistry in his use of pastel and vivid hues to capture even the nuances of dress decor and elegance of a pre World War I garrison town The film is a fragile and compassionate but rarely moving delineation of the grand passion 20 An Irish review agreed that Rene Clair s Summer Manoeuvres is anything but a deeply committed film and survives chiefly for its evocation of period The film does not quite compass the violent change from manners to passion 21 A more sympathetic summary appeared in The Times Les Grandes Manoeuvres is a sigh for lost youth for a lost generation and for perhaps l amour as against love and its only failing is that in enchanting the senses it fails to touch the heart 22 In 1974 the film was given an out of competition screening at the Cannes Film Festival 23 Clair himself considered Les Grandes Manœuvres along with Le silence est d or to be the best of his post war films 24 However it appeared at a time when the classical studio bound style of French cinema which Clair represented was coming under attack from a new generation of French critics and filmmakers and henceforth his films were generally less well received 25 References edit Les Grandes Maneuvres 1955 JPBox Office Retrieved 1 February 2016 Box Office Success of Gerard Philipe films Box Office Story Rene Clair Four Screenplays translated from the French by Piergiuseppe Bozzetti New York Orion Press 1970 p 323 Rene Clair Four Screenplays translated from the French by Piergiuseppe Bozzetti New York Orion Press 1970 p 436 Michel Aubriant amp Herve Le Boterf Entretien avec Rene Clair in Cinemonde 2 mai 1957 p 33 quoted in translation by Celia McGerr Rene Clair Boston Twayne 1980 p 199 a b Georges Charensol amp Roger Regent 50 Ans de cinema avec Rene Clair Paris Editions de la Table Ronde 1979 p 178 a b Pierre Billard Le Mystere Rene Clair Paris Plon 1998 p 356 il proclame qu elle lui servira a s eloigner de la realite Pierre Billard Le Mystere Rene Clair Paris Plon 1998 p 356 Pierre Billard Le Mystere Rene Clair Paris Plon 1998 p 3 Pierre Billard Le Mystere Rene Clair Paris Plon 1998 p 358 p 440 Pierre Billard Le Mystere Rene Clair Paris Plon 1998 p 358 Pierre Billard Le Mystere Rene Clair Paris Plon 1998 p 361 362 Georges Charensol amp Roger Regent 50 Ans de cinema avec Rene Clair Paris Editions de la Table Ronde 1979 p 181 Georges Charensol and Georges Sadoul quoted in Pierre Billard Le Mystere Rene Clair Paris Plon 1998 p 361 362 Jean de Baroncelli writing in Le Monde Un enchantement Un ravissement quoted by Georges Charensol amp Roger Regent 50 Ans de cinema avec Rene Clair Paris Editions de la Table Ronde 1979 p 181 Claude Mauriac Lovelace et Iseult in Le Figaro litteraire 5 November 1955 quoted by Pierre Billard Le Mystere Rene Clair Paris Plon 1998 p 361 362 Andre Bazin L Univers de Rene Clair in L Education nationale 10 November 1955 quoted by Pierre Billard Le Mystere Rene Clair Paris Plon 1998 p 363 364 Quoted in Jean Douchet French New Wave New York D A P 1999 p 27 ISBN 1 56466 057 5 Les Grandes Manœuvres Summer Manoeuvres in Monthly Film Bulletin Feb 1956 pp 15 16 Gavin Lambert Les Grandes Manœuvres in Sight amp Sound vol 25 3 Winter 1955 56 pp 146 147 A H Weiler The Grand Maneuver in The New York Times 2 October 1956 Retrieved 11 August 2012 Peter Connolly review in The Furrow Maynooth Ireland Vol 7 No 11 Nov 1956 pp 693 697 Retrieved 19 July 2012 Les Grandes Manoeuvres in The Times London 10 January 1956 p 5 col 3 Festival de Cannes Les Grandes Manoeuvres festival cannes com Retrieved 19 July 2012 Celia McGerr Rene Clair Boston Twayne 1980 p 199 David Thomson A New Biographical Dictionary of Film London Little Brown 2002 p 161 External links editLes Grandes Manoeuvres at IMDb nbsp Les Grandes Manoeuvres at AllMovie Les Grandes Manœuvres at Films de France Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Grand Maneuver amp oldid 1188807319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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