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Murmur of the Heart

Murmur of the Heart (French: Le souffle au cœur) is a 1971 French comedy-drama film written, produced and directed by Louis Malle. It stars Lea Massari, Benoît Ferreux and Daniel Gélin. Written as Malle's semi-autobiography, the film tells a coming-of-age story about a 14-year-old boy (Ferreux) growing up in bourgeois surroundings in post-World War II Dijon, France, with a complex relationship with his Italian-born mother (Massari).

Murmur of the Heart
Theatrical release poster
FrenchLe souffle au cœur
Directed byLouis Malle
Screenplay byLouis Malle
Produced by
  • Vincent Malle
  • Claude Nedjar
Starring
CinematographyRicardo Aronovich
Edited bySuzanne Baron
Music by
Production
companies
  • Nouvelles Éditions de Films
  • Marianne Productions
  • Vides Cinematografica
  • Franz Seitz Filmproduktion
Distributed byOrion Classics
Release dates
  • April 28, 1971 (1971-04-28) (France)
  • October 20, 1971 (1971-10-20) (Italy)
Running time
118 minutes[1]
Countries
LanguageFrench
Box office$1.1 million[2]

The film was screened at the 1971 Cannes Film Festival and was a box-office success in France. In the United States, it received positive reviews and a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay.

Plot

Laurent Chevalier is a 14-year-old boy living in Dijon in 1954 who loves jazz, always receives the highest grades in his class, and opposes the First Indochina War. He has an unloving father, Charles, a gynecologist; an affectionate Italian-born mother, Clara; and two older brothers, Thomas and Marc. Thomas and Marc are inveterate pranksters, while Laurent engages in taboos such as shoplifting and masturbation. Laurent also discovers that Clara has a lover, and upset by the adultery, runs to tell Charles, who, busy with his practice, angrily turns him away.

One night, Thomas and Marc take Laurent to a brothel, where Laurent loses his virginity to a prostitute, Freda, before they are disrupted by his drunken brothers. Upset, Laurent leaves for scouting camp, where he catches scarlet fever and is left with a heart murmur. Bedridden for a month, he is cared for and entertained by Clara and their maid, Augusta. Laurent's teacher at his Catholic school suggests that Laurent's illness has matured him, so that he has made progress in his studies, and urges Clara to treat him more like an adult.

As Laurent requires treatment at a sanatorium, he and Clara check into a hotel. Due to an error by Charles's secretary Solange, the hotel books both Clara and Laurent into a single room, and given that the hotel is completely full, no additional room is available. Laurent takes interest in two young girls at the hotel, Hélène and Daphne, and also spies on his mother in the bathtub. Though Laurent pursues Hélène, Hélène says she is not ready for sex; Laurent accuses her of being a lesbian. Clara temporarily leaves with her lover, but comes back distraught after their breakup; Laurent comforts her. After a night of heavy drinking on Bastille Day, Laurent and Clara have sex. Clara tells him afterward that this incest will not be repeated, but that they should not regret it. Laurent leaves their room, and after unsuccessfully trying to seduce Hélène, spends the night with Daphne.

Cast

Production

Malle wrote Murmur of the Heart partly as an autobiography. He said, "My passion for jazz, my curiosity about literature, the tyranny of my two elder brothers, how they introduced me to sex—this is pretty close to home."[3] Malle also suffered from a heart murmur and shared a hotel room with his mother during treatment. Aside from that, the film is fictional, and takes place later than Malle's childhood.[3] The humorous, earthy Italian mother is also a fictional character,[4] based more on a friend's mother than his own.[5] Malle asserted in interviews that the incest, in particular, is fictional.[6] He claimed that in writing the script, he had no intention to include it, but ended up doing so as he explored an intense mother-son relationship.[7]

The National Center of Cinematography objected to the screenplay's erotic scenes. Malle was surprised by the response.[7] With the Censorship Board denying funding, the film was financed with the help of Mariane Film, a French subsidiary of Paramount Pictures.[8] Given his love of jazz, and that Laurent steals a Charlie Parker album at the beginning of the film, Malle used Parker's music for the film score.[9]

Of the incest scene, Massari said, "We shot that scene last and it was a great concern throughout the entire shoot. On the last day Malle said to me, 'do what you want, if it comes out well we'll keep it, if not we'll do as I say.' I acted on instinct, loading the fact that the woman was drunk, and the scene stayed as is."[10]

Release

In France, the film had 2,652,870 admissions.[11] It was screened at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1971 and also played at the New York Film Festival in October 1971.[12]

On its re-release in the United States in 1989, it grossed $1,160,784.[13] In Region 1, The Criterion Collection released the film on DVD in 2006, along with Malle's films Lacombe, Lucien and Au revoir les enfants.[14]

Reception

Critical reception

 
Italian actress Lea Massari received positive reviews for her performance.

Roger Ebert gave the film a four-star review, comparing it favorably to The 400 Blows, and wrote of the incest that Malle "takes the most highly charged subject matter you can imagine, and mutes it into simple affection."[15] Judith Crist, writing for New York, praised the "remarkable" performances of Lea Massari, Benoît Ferreux and Daniel Gélin.[16] Richard Schickel, writing for Life, said he had a "strange enthusiasm" for the film, which he felt demonstrated "taste, charm and the most winning sentiment."[17] Variety staff complimented Ferreux and Massari's performances.[18] In The New York Times, Roger Greenspun wrote that the film "isn't very good" and "that it could probably have been made with as much distinction by any of those directors, all equally anonymous, who specialize in urban romantic comedy (or tragedy) of a sophistication that is supposed to be peculiarly French."[12] John Simon wrote that Murmur of the Heart treats incest charmingly but unsatisfactorily.[19]

In 1989, Desson Howe wrote in The Washington Post that the film maintained its "fresh intelligence and delicacy" and that "Malle's world of sarcastic, upper-middle-class brats seems to be Murmur's most enduring creation."[6] In 1990, Richard Stengel gave the film an A− in Entertainment Weekly, writing, "Almost everything about this coming-of-age story rings true, and Malle avoids any heavy-handed explanations of family behavior."[20] Critic Pauline Kael called Massari "superb".[21] In his 2002 Movie & Video Guide, Leonard Maltin gives the film three and a half stars, calling it a "fresh, intelligent, affectionately comic tale".[22]

Director Wes Anderson has cited Murmur of the Heart as an influence, saying he loved the characters Laurent and Clara. Of the incest, he said, "The stuff between him and the mother feels more kind of romantic almost—but also taboo and scary in a way, which makes it even more seductive."[23] Director Noah Baumbach has also named the film as an influence.[24] Rotten Tomatoes counted 16 favorable reviews out of 17 for a score of 94%.[25]

Accolades

Murmur of the Heart was nominated for Best Original Screenplay at the 1973 Academy Awards. It was also in competition, in the French part of the official selection, at the 1971 Cannes Film Festival.[26]

References

  1. ^ "Murmur of the Heart (1971)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved April 15, 2016.
  2. ^ "Murmur if the Heart". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved February 9, 2021.
  3. ^ a b Sragow, Michael. "Murmur of the Heart: All in the Family". The Criterion Collection. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  4. ^ Benson, Sheila (6 April 1989). "Movie Review : Malle Dissects French Family Life in 'Murmur of the Heart'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  5. ^ "Malle's Murmur Still Packs a Punch". Orlando Sentinel. 21 April 1989. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  6. ^ a b Howe, Desson (21 April 1989). "Murmur of the Heart". The Washington Post. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  7. ^ a b Brian Kellow (2011). "introduction". Pauline Kael: A Life in the Dark. Penguin.
  8. ^ Chèze, Thierry (9 November 2011). "Shame, Michael... Y a-t-il des sujets tabous au cinéma?". L'Express. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  9. ^ Richard A. Macksey (2004). "Louis Malle". Film Voices: Interviews from Post Script. State University of New York Press. p. 233. ISBN 0791461556.
  10. ^ "Interviste - Lea Massari". cinecitta.com. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  11. ^ "Le Souffle Au Coeur". AlloCiné. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  12. ^ a b Greenspun, Roger (18 October 1971). "Movie Review: Murmur of the Heart". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  13. ^ "Murmur of the Heart (Re-issue)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  14. ^ Murray, Noel (10 May 2006). "Four by Louis Malle". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  15. ^ Ebert, Roger (1 January 1971). "Murmur of the Heart". Rogerebert.com. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  16. ^ Judith Crist (18 October 1971). "A Boy's Best Friend". New York. p. 76.
  17. ^ Richard Schickel (12 November 1971). "Deft handling of an old taboo". Life. p. 16.
  18. ^ Variety Staff (31 December 1970). "Review: 'Le Souffle Au Cœur'". Variety. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  19. ^ Simon, John (2005). John Simon on Film: Criticism 1982-2001. Applause Books. p. 434.
  20. ^ Stengel, Richard (23 March 1990). "Murmur of the Heart (1990)". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  21. ^ Pauline Kael (1991). 5001 Nights at the Movies. Macmillan. p. 503.
  22. ^ Leonard Maltin, ed. (2001). Leonard Maltin's 2002 Movie & Video Guide. A Signet Book. p. 939.
  23. ^ Monahan, Mark (9 March 2002). "Film-makers on film: Wes Anderson". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 13 July 2014.
  24. ^ Denby, David (24 October 2005). "Family Matters". The New Yorker. Retrieved 13 July 2014.
  25. ^ "Murmur of the Heart (1971)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  26. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Murmur of the Heart". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-04-12.
  27. ^ "The 45th Academy Awards". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  28. ^ "National Society of Film Critics". Filmfacts. American Film Institute. 14: 766. 1971.
  29. ^ Crist, Judith (17 January 1972). "I've Got a Little List (And Who Doesn't?)". New York. p. 54.

External links

murmur, heart, hong, kong, taiwanese, film, french, souffle, cœur, 1971, french, comedy, drama, film, written, produced, directed, louis, malle, stars, massari, benoît, ferreux, daniel, gélin, written, malle, semi, autobiography, film, tells, coming, story, ab. For the Hong Kong Taiwanese film see Murmur of the Hearts Murmur of the Heart French Le souffle au cœur is a 1971 French comedy drama film written produced and directed by Louis Malle It stars Lea Massari Benoit Ferreux and Daniel Gelin Written as Malle s semi autobiography the film tells a coming of age story about a 14 year old boy Ferreux growing up in bourgeois surroundings in post World War II Dijon France with a complex relationship with his Italian born mother Massari Murmur of the HeartTheatrical release posterFrenchLe souffle au cœurDirected byLouis MalleScreenplay byLouis MalleProduced byVincent Malle Claude NedjarStarringBenoit Ferreux Lea MassariCinematographyRicardo AronovichEdited bySuzanne BaronMusic bySidney Bechet Gaston Freche Charlie Parker Henri RenaudProductioncompaniesNouvelles Editions de Films Marianne Productions Vides Cinematografica Franz Seitz FilmproduktionDistributed byOrion ClassicsRelease datesApril 28 1971 1971 04 28 France October 20 1971 1971 10 20 Italy Running time118 minutes 1 CountriesFrance Italy West GermanyLanguageFrenchBox office 1 1 million 2 The film was screened at the 1971 Cannes Film Festival and was a box office success in France In the United States it received positive reviews and a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Release 5 Reception 5 1 Critical reception 5 2 Accolades 6 References 7 External linksPlot EditLaurent Chevalier is a 14 year old boy living in Dijon in 1954 who loves jazz always receives the highest grades in his class and opposes the First Indochina War He has an unloving father Charles a gynecologist an affectionate Italian born mother Clara and two older brothers Thomas and Marc Thomas and Marc are inveterate pranksters while Laurent engages in taboos such as shoplifting and masturbation Laurent also discovers that Clara has a lover and upset by the adultery runs to tell Charles who busy with his practice angrily turns him away One night Thomas and Marc take Laurent to a brothel where Laurent loses his virginity to a prostitute Freda before they are disrupted by his drunken brothers Upset Laurent leaves for scouting camp where he catches scarlet fever and is left with a heart murmur Bedridden for a month he is cared for and entertained by Clara and their maid Augusta Laurent s teacher at his Catholic school suggests that Laurent s illness has matured him so that he has made progress in his studies and urges Clara to treat him more like an adult As Laurent requires treatment at a sanatorium he and Clara check into a hotel Due to an error by Charles s secretary Solange the hotel books both Clara and Laurent into a single room and given that the hotel is completely full no additional room is available Laurent takes interest in two young girls at the hotel Helene and Daphne and also spies on his mother in the bathtub Though Laurent pursues Helene Helene says she is not ready for sex Laurent accuses her of being a lesbian Clara temporarily leaves with her lover but comes back distraught after their breakup Laurent comforts her After a night of heavy drinking on Bastille Day Laurent and Clara have sex Clara tells him afterward that this incest will not be repeated but that they should not regret it Laurent leaves their room and after unsuccessfully trying to seduce Helene spends the night with Daphne Cast EditLea Massari as Clara Chevalier Benoit Ferreux as Laurent Chevalier Daniel Gelin as Charles Chevalier Michael Lonsdale as Father Henri Ave Ninchi as Augusta Fabien Ferreux as Thomas Chevalier Marc Winocourt as Marc Chevalier Micheline Bona as Aunt Claudine Henri Poirier as Uncle Leonce Gila von Weitershausen as Freda Jacques Sereys as Doctor Corinne Kersten as DaphneProduction EditMalle wrote Murmur of the Heart partly as an autobiography He said My passion for jazz my curiosity about literature the tyranny of my two elder brothers how they introduced me to sex this is pretty close to home 3 Malle also suffered from a heart murmur and shared a hotel room with his mother during treatment Aside from that the film is fictional and takes place later than Malle s childhood 3 The humorous earthy Italian mother is also a fictional character 4 based more on a friend s mother than his own 5 Malle asserted in interviews that the incest in particular is fictional 6 He claimed that in writing the script he had no intention to include it but ended up doing so as he explored an intense mother son relationship 7 The National Center of Cinematography objected to the screenplay s erotic scenes Malle was surprised by the response 7 With the Censorship Board denying funding the film was financed with the help of Mariane Film a French subsidiary of Paramount Pictures 8 Given his love of jazz and that Laurent steals a Charlie Parker album at the beginning of the film Malle used Parker s music for the film score 9 Of the incest scene Massari said We shot that scene last and it was a great concern throughout the entire shoot On the last day Malle said to me do what you want if it comes out well we ll keep it if not we ll do as I say I acted on instinct loading the fact that the woman was drunk and the scene stayed as is 10 Release EditIn France the film had 2 652 870 admissions 11 It was screened at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1971 and also played at the New York Film Festival in October 1971 12 On its re release in the United States in 1989 it grossed 1 160 784 13 In Region 1 The Criterion Collection released the film on DVD in 2006 along with Malle s films Lacombe Lucien and Au revoir les enfants 14 Reception EditCritical reception Edit Italian actress Lea Massari received positive reviews for her performance Roger Ebert gave the film a four star review comparing it favorably to The 400 Blows and wrote of the incest that Malle takes the most highly charged subject matter you can imagine and mutes it into simple affection 15 Judith Crist writing for New York praised the remarkable performances of Lea Massari Benoit Ferreux and Daniel Gelin 16 Richard Schickel writing for Life said he had a strange enthusiasm for the film which he felt demonstrated taste charm and the most winning sentiment 17 Variety staff complimented Ferreux and Massari s performances 18 In The New York Times Roger Greenspun wrote that the film isn t very good and that it could probably have been made with as much distinction by any of those directors all equally anonymous who specialize in urban romantic comedy or tragedy of a sophistication that is supposed to be peculiarly French 12 John Simon wrote that Murmur of the Heart treats incest charmingly but unsatisfactorily 19 In 1989 Desson Howe wrote in The Washington Post that the film maintained its fresh intelligence and delicacy and that Malle s world of sarcastic upper middle class brats seems to be Murmur s most enduring creation 6 In 1990 Richard Stengel gave the film an A in Entertainment Weekly writing Almost everything about this coming of age story rings true and Malle avoids any heavy handed explanations of family behavior 20 Critic Pauline Kael called Massari superb 21 In his 2002 Movie amp Video Guide Leonard Maltin gives the film three and a half stars calling it a fresh intelligent affectionately comic tale 22 Director Wes Anderson has cited Murmur of the Heart as an influence saying he loved the characters Laurent and Clara Of the incest he said The stuff between him and the mother feels more kind of romantic almost but also taboo and scary in a way which makes it even more seductive 23 Director Noah Baumbach has also named the film as an influence 24 Rotten Tomatoes counted 16 favorable reviews out of 17 for a score of 94 25 Accolades Edit Murmur of the Heart was nominated for Best Original Screenplay at the 1973 Academy Awards It was also in competition in the French part of the official selection at the 1971 Cannes Film Festival 26 Award Date of ceremony Category Recipient s Result Ref s Academy Awards 27 March 1973 Best Original Screenplay Louis Malle Nominated 27 National Society of Film Critics 24 December 1971 Best Screenplay Louis Malle 3rd Place 28 New York Film Critics Circle 23 January 1972 Best Actress Lea Massari 5th Place 29 References Edit Murmur of the Heart 1971 Turner Classic Movies Retrieved April 15 2016 Murmur if the Heart Box Office Mojo Retrieved February 9 2021 a b Sragow Michael Murmur of the Heart All in the Family The Criterion Collection Retrieved 12 July 2014 Benson Sheila 6 April 1989 Movie Review Malle Dissects French Family Life in Murmur of the Heart Los Angeles Times Retrieved 3 September 2016 Malle s Murmur Still Packs a Punch Orlando Sentinel 21 April 1989 Retrieved 3 September 2016 a b Howe Desson 21 April 1989 Murmur of the Heart The Washington Post Retrieved 12 July 2014 a b Brian Kellow 2011 introduction Pauline Kael A Life in the Dark Penguin Cheze Thierry 9 November 2011 Shame Michael Y a t il des sujets tabous au cinema L Express Retrieved 3 September 2016 Richard A Macksey 2004 Louis Malle Film Voices Interviews from Post Script State University of New York Press p 233 ISBN 0791461556 Interviste Lea Massari cinecitta com Retrieved 5 August 2022 Le Souffle Au Coeur AlloCine Retrieved 3 September 2016 a b Greenspun Roger 18 October 1971 Movie Review Murmur of the Heart The New York Times Retrieved 12 July 2014 Murmur of the Heart Re issue Box Office Mojo Retrieved 3 September 2016 Murray Noel 10 May 2006 Four by Louis Malle The A V Club Retrieved 3 September 2016 Ebert Roger 1 January 1971 Murmur of the Heart Rogerebert com Retrieved 12 July 2014 Judith Crist 18 October 1971 A Boy s Best Friend New York p 76 Richard Schickel 12 November 1971 Deft handling of an old taboo Life p 16 Variety Staff 31 December 1970 Review Le Souffle Au Cœur Variety Retrieved 3 September 2016 Simon John 2005 John Simon on Film Criticism 1982 2001 Applause Books p 434 Stengel Richard 23 March 1990 Murmur of the Heart 1990 Entertainment Weekly Retrieved 12 July 2014 Pauline Kael 1991 5001 Nights at the Movies Macmillan p 503 Leonard Maltin ed 2001 Leonard Maltin s 2002 Movie amp Video Guide A Signet Book p 939 Monahan Mark 9 March 2002 Film makers on film Wes Anderson The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 13 July 2014 Denby David 24 October 2005 Family Matters The New Yorker Retrieved 13 July 2014 Murmur of the Heart 1971 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved 7 August 2019 Festival de Cannes Murmur of the Heart festival cannes com Retrieved 2009 04 12 The 45th Academy Awards Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Retrieved 3 September 2016 National Society of Film Critics Filmfacts American Film Institute 14 766 1971 Crist Judith 17 January 1972 I ve Got a Little List And Who Doesn t New York p 54 External links EditMurmur of the Heart at IMDb Murmur of the Heart at Rotten Tomatoes Murmur of the Heart at AllMovie Interview archive org Murmur of the Heart All in the Family an essay by Michael Sragow at the Criterion Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Murmur of the Heart amp oldid 1144487023, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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