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The Brontë Sisters

The Brontë Sisters (French: Les Sœurs Brontë) is a 1979 French biographical drama film directed by André Téchiné, who co-wrote the screenplay with Pascal Bonitzer and Jean Gruault. The film stars Isabelle Adjani, Marie-France Pisier and Isabelle Huppert as the Brontë sisters. The cinematography was by Bruno Nuytten. It was a project that Téchiné wanted to make since 1972, but only after the favourable reception of Souvenirs d'en France (1975) and Barocco (1976), he was able to find the necessary financing. Produced by Gaumont, the film's originally running time was cut from three to less than two hours upon its release at the 1979 Cannes Film Festival.[1]

The Brontë Sisters
Theatrical release poster
FrenchLes Sœurs Brontë
Directed byAndré Téchiné
Written by
Produced by
  • Yves Gasser
  • Yves Peyrot
  • Klaus Hellwig
Starring
CinematographyBruno Nuytten
Edited byClaudine Merlin
Music byPhilippe Sarde
Production
companies
Distributed byGaumont
Release date
  • 9 May 1979 (1979-05-09) (France)
Running time
115 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

The film stars Isabelle Adjani as Emily, Marie-France Pisier as Charlotte and Isabelle Huppert as Anne. Pascal Greggory plays their brother Branwell Brontë. The plot centres on the sisters' sombre relationship with Branwell.

Set in a careful recreation of the period, the film follows the bleak lives of the four siblings in less than a ten-year span. It begins in 1834, when, at the age of seventeen, Branwell painted the famous portrait of his three sisters, in which he originally included his own image, and ends around 1852 when Charlotte, now a famous author, is the only surviving sibling.

Plot edit

Four young siblings: Charlotte, Branwell, Emily and Anne, live a stoic existence in a small village in the English country side. Their old father, an Anglican minister, a rigid spinster aunt and Tabby, the maid, complete their household. The siblings have artistic ambitions and rely upon each other for companionship. Branwell is a painter and a self-portrait with his sisters is worthy of the general admiration of the family. He wants to pursue a professional career, but only goes as far as to establish a friendship with Leyland, a sculptor. Emily's favorite pastime is to walk across the bleak moors that surround the village dressed as a man. Anne, the youngest of the siblings, is her companion. Charlotte, more ambitious than the others, convinces their reluctant aunt to give her money to go to Belgium in order to study French. Her idea is to eventually come back and open a school. With their aunt's money and permission, Charlotte and Emily go to Brussels. Once there, Charlotte falls secretly in love with her teacher Monsieur Heger, who is already married. Emily plays the piano at school, but has a hard time there and is teased by her classmates for being English and Protestant in a Catholic country. Meanwhile, in England, Anne finds employment as a governess, taking over the education of the daughter of a wealthy family.

While his sisters are away, Branwell deals alone with the death of their aunt. Her death makes Emily and Charlotte come back home. Emily is relieved and helps Branwell to find solace, taking him to the Black Bull Inn, the tavern and hotel of the town. Charlotte, on the other hand, lovesick, returns as soon as possible to Brussels to be reunited with Monsieur Heger, but her love is unrequited. Thanks to Anne, the aimless dreamer Branwell finds a steady job as the teacher of Edmund, the young son of the Robinson family, Anne's wealthy employers. Mr Robinson is strict, and, with his air of superiority, humiliates both Anne and Branwell. Mrs Robinson, flirty and unsatisfied, starts an ill-fated affair with Branwell. When Anne finds out about their relationship, she quits her job and returns home. Both Branwell and Charlotte have to deal with their broken hearts. After the death of her husband, Mrs Robinson sends Branwell a letter ending their affair.

Branwell's life takes a dark turn. He gives himself over to drinking and becomes addicted to opium. During a windy night, a fire starts in his bedroom and he has to be rescued from amongst the flames by his sisters. Sneaking into Emily's bedroom and searching amongst her things, Charlotte discovers Emily's poems. Deeply impressed, she finally is able to convince the reluctant Emily to have them published. Soon the three sisters have their poems, and later a novel each, published. Reviews of Emily's novel, Wuthering Heights, are particularly harsh. However, the novels of Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell, the pen names adopted by the three sisters, are the talk of London literary circles. Speculations about the sex and identity of the Bells force Charlotte and Anne to go to London to introduce themselves to George Smith, Charlotte's publisher.

Unaware of his sisters literary accomplishments, Branwell dies of marasmus exacerbated by heavy drinking. Emily, stricken by tuberculosis, refuses all medical treatment, insisting on carrying on with her household chores. When she finally agrees to send for a doctor, it is too late, and she dies. Anne is also terminally ill with tuberculosis. Following her wishes, Charlotte takes her to see the ocean for the first time, and Anne dies during that trip.

Charlotte is the only survivor among the four siblings. Left alone with her elderly father, she pursues her literary career and begins a romantic relationship with Arthur Nicholls, her father's curate. In the company of Mr. Nicholls and her publisher, Mr Smith, Charlotte goes to the opera in London and meets the famous author William Thackeray.

Cast edit

Background edit

Since the silent era, Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre and Emily's Wuthering Heights have been adapted in to film multiple times. The most famous adaptations were director William Wyler's Wuthering Heights in 1939, (a film starring Laurence Olivier, Merle Oberon and David Niven) and Jane Eyre, a film starring Orson Welles and Joan Fontaine under the direction of Robert Stevenson in 1943.

The lives of the three Brontë sisters did not attract the same level of interest in Hollywood, even though biographies and semi-fictional books based on the lives has been published. The only Hollywood production made about the Brontës was Devotion, a film directed by Curtis Bernhardt in 1946 that had tried to capitalise on the success of Jane Eyre two years earlier. Starring Ida Lupino as Emily, Olivia de Havilland as Charlotte, Nancy Coleman as Anne and Arthur Kennedy as Branwell, Devotion made no effort at historical accuracy. It portrays Emily as being in love with reverend Nichols who is in love with Charlotte. The film, made as potboiler romance, had no resemblance to the actual lives of the Brontë sisters and was decried by Brontë enthusiasts for its blatant inaccuracies.[citation needed]

The Brontës of Haworth, a four-part drama made for Yorkshire television, was broadcast in 1973 with a script written by Christopher Fry; directed and produced by Marc Miller. Emily was played by Rosemary McHale, Charlotte by Vickery Turner, Anne by Ann Penfold and Branwell by Michael Kitchen. Shot on authentic locations, The Brontës of Haworth was very well received.[citation needed]

Téchiné biopic on the Brontë, conceived in the early 1970s, was only the third project on the famous authors lives and the first accurate portrayal of them to be made on film.[citation needed]

Only one production has taken the story of the Brontë family since then, To Walk Invisible, a British television film first aired on BBC on 29 December 2016. Written and directed by Sally Wainwright, it focused on the eventful (1846-1848) period during which the four Bronte sibling were back at the parsonage. While the three sisters became published authors, their brother fell in a spiral of self-destruction. To Walk Invisible cast was headed by Finn Atkins as Charlotte, Charlie Murphy as Anne, Chloe Pirrie as Emily, Adam Nagaitis as Branwell and Jonathan Pryce as their father, Patrick Brontë.[citation needed]

Casting edit

The film is notable for casting three of France's most famous actress of the time: Isabelle Adjani as Emily, Marie-France Pisier as Charlotte and Isabelle Huppert as Anne. Marie-France Pisier, known for her work in the films of François Truffaut, had won back to back César Awards as best supporting actress in Téchiné’s two previous films Souvenirs d’en France and Barocco. She had developed a friendship with Téchiné while working for him. From the cast of Barocco also came Adjani, who was the female lead in that film. Isabelle Adjani had come to international attention under the direction Truffaut in The Story of Adele H, playing the mentally disturbed daughter of Victor Hugo. She and the cinematographer Bruno Nuytten, who had photographed Barocco, where then a couple and she gave birth to their son around the time of the film’s released. Nuytten famously went to direct Adjani in Camille Claudel, an artistic success for both.

Pascal Greggory was an unknown actor with only few minor acting credits in films, but he was chosen above Alain Delon and Patrick Dewaere for the role of Branwell. He went on to play Adjani’s brother in La Reine Margot (1994) in which he had the role of Henri III. Huppert, Adjani and Greggory were only in their mid-twenties when the film was made.

Isabelle Huppert had risen to prominence in The Lacemaker (French: La Dentellière) (1977). One of her earlier roles had been in Liliane de Kermadec's Aloïse, a film written by Téchiné. Huppert and Adjani famously did not get along which made the production of The Brontë Sisters difficult.

Patrick Magee, a veteran Irish actor known for his work in two Stanley Kubrick's films, A Clockwork Orange and Barry Lyndon, took the role of the father. He spoke his lines in English and was dubbed into French

Music edit

The music for the film was arranged by Philippe Sarde, a brother of Alain Sarde, who had produced Téchiné's two previous films and was executive producer of The Brontë Sisters. Philippe Sarde had written original music for Souvenirs d’en France and Barocco, but in The Brontë Sisters he arranged adaptions of classical pieces on place of an original score. Gioachino Rossini overture to Tancredi and music from Robert Schumann, where among the compositions used following the mold of Stanley Kubrick reused of classical music in his films.

Reception edit

The film was ill received at its premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1979, where Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now eclipsed other films in competition. However, The Brontë Sisters's reputation has grown since then. Today it is seen as an accurate representation of the lonely and bleak lives of the Brontë siblings.[by whom?]

Home media edit

The Brontë Sisters was remastered and re-released as part of the Cohen Film Collection by the Cohen Media Group. It came out on DVD and Blu-ray on July 30, 2013.

Both editions include an audio commentary with film critic Wade Major and Brontë scholar Sue Lonoff de Cuevas. They also include Dominique Maillet's 2012 The Ghosts of Haworth, an hour-long documentary on the conception, making, and reception of the film through interviews with Téchiné, co-writer Pascal Bonitzer, Brontë-scholar Claire Bazin, costumier Christian Gasc, and actor Pascal Gregory. Two theatrical trailers, one for the original 1979 French release and one from the recent theatrical re-release complete the extra features.[2]

Previously to 2013, the film had been released on DVD only in region 2. It was released in Spain in French with Spanish subtitles or dubbed in Spanish as the options offered, but it is currently out of print.[3] The film was released on DVD in Sweden in 2009 as part of a box set of Brontë-related films.

Gaumont released a Region B Blu-ray in France on 9 May 2012.[4]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Participation

References edit

  1. ^ "Festival de Cannes: The Bronte Sisters". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 24 May 2009.
  2. ^ . Cohen Media Group. Archived from the original on 10 March 2016.
  3. ^ . Culturalianet. Archived from the original on 20 November 2016. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  4. ^ "Les soeurs Brontë". Gaumont Film Company. Archived from the original on 13 February 2013.

Bibliography edit

  • Marshall, Bill, André Téchiné, Manchester University Press, 2007, ISBN 0-7190-5831-7

External links edit

  • The Brontë Sisters at IMDb  
  • The Brontë Sisters at AllMovie  
  • The Brontë Sisters at AlloCiné (in French)  
  • Soundtrack Collector

brontë, sisters, this, article, about, film, literary, family, brontë, family, french, sœurs, brontë, 1979, french, biographical, drama, film, directed, andré, téchiné, wrote, screenplay, with, pascal, bonitzer, jean, gruault, film, stars, isabelle, adjani, ma. This article is about the film For the literary family see Bronte family The Bronte Sisters French Les Sœurs Bronte is a 1979 French biographical drama film directed by Andre Techine who co wrote the screenplay with Pascal Bonitzer and Jean Gruault The film stars Isabelle Adjani Marie France Pisier and Isabelle Huppert as the Bronte sisters The cinematography was by Bruno Nuytten It was a project that Techine wanted to make since 1972 but only after the favourable reception of Souvenirs d en France 1975 and Barocco 1976 he was able to find the necessary financing Produced by Gaumont the film s originally running time was cut from three to less than two hours upon its release at the 1979 Cannes Film Festival 1 The Bronte SistersTheatrical release posterFrenchLes Sœurs BronteDirected byAndre TechineWritten byAndre Techine Pascal Bonitzer Jean Gruault a Produced byYves Gasser Yves Peyrot Klaus HellwigStarringIsabelle Adjani Marie France Pisier Isabelle Huppert Pascal Greggory Helene Surgere Roland Bertin Alice Sapritch Xavier Depraz Patrick MageeCinematographyBruno NuyttenEdited byClaudine MerlinMusic byPhilippe SardeProductioncompaniesAction Films Gaumont FR3Distributed byGaumontRelease date9 May 1979 1979 05 09 France Running time115 minutesCountryFranceLanguageFrenchThe film stars Isabelle Adjani as Emily Marie France Pisier as Charlotte and Isabelle Huppert as Anne Pascal Greggory plays their brother Branwell Bronte The plot centres on the sisters sombre relationship with Branwell Set in a careful recreation of the period the film follows the bleak lives of the four siblings in less than a ten year span It begins in 1834 when at the age of seventeen Branwell painted the famous portrait of his three sisters in which he originally included his own image and ends around 1852 when Charlotte now a famous author is the only surviving sibling Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Background 4 Casting 5 Music 6 Reception 7 Home media 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Bibliography 11 External linksPlot editFour young siblings Charlotte Branwell Emily and Anne live a stoic existence in a small village in the English country side Their old father an Anglican minister a rigid spinster aunt and Tabby the maid complete their household The siblings have artistic ambitions and rely upon each other for companionship Branwell is a painter and a self portrait with his sisters is worthy of the general admiration of the family He wants to pursue a professional career but only goes as far as to establish a friendship with Leyland a sculptor Emily s favorite pastime is to walk across the bleak moors that surround the village dressed as a man Anne the youngest of the siblings is her companion Charlotte more ambitious than the others convinces their reluctant aunt to give her money to go to Belgium in order to study French Her idea is to eventually come back and open a school With their aunt s money and permission Charlotte and Emily go to Brussels Once there Charlotte falls secretly in love with her teacher Monsieur Heger who is already married Emily plays the piano at school but has a hard time there and is teased by her classmates for being English and Protestant in a Catholic country Meanwhile in England Anne finds employment as a governess taking over the education of the daughter of a wealthy family While his sisters are away Branwell deals alone with the death of their aunt Her death makes Emily and Charlotte come back home Emily is relieved and helps Branwell to find solace taking him to the Black Bull Inn the tavern and hotel of the town Charlotte on the other hand lovesick returns as soon as possible to Brussels to be reunited with Monsieur Heger but her love is unrequited Thanks to Anne the aimless dreamer Branwell finds a steady job as the teacher of Edmund the young son of the Robinson family Anne s wealthy employers Mr Robinson is strict and with his air of superiority humiliates both Anne and Branwell Mrs Robinson flirty and unsatisfied starts an ill fated affair with Branwell When Anne finds out about their relationship she quits her job and returns home Both Branwell and Charlotte have to deal with their broken hearts After the death of her husband Mrs Robinson sends Branwell a letter ending their affair Branwell s life takes a dark turn He gives himself over to drinking and becomes addicted to opium During a windy night a fire starts in his bedroom and he has to be rescued from amongst the flames by his sisters Sneaking into Emily s bedroom and searching amongst her things Charlotte discovers Emily s poems Deeply impressed she finally is able to convince the reluctant Emily to have them published Soon the three sisters have their poems and later a novel each published Reviews of Emily s novel Wuthering Heights are particularly harsh However the novels of Currer Ellis and Acton Bell the pen names adopted by the three sisters are the talk of London literary circles Speculations about the sex and identity of the Bells force Charlotte and Anne to go to London to introduce themselves to George Smith Charlotte s publisher Unaware of his sisters literary accomplishments Branwell dies of marasmus exacerbated by heavy drinking Emily stricken by tuberculosis refuses all medical treatment insisting on carrying on with her household chores When she finally agrees to send for a doctor it is too late and she dies Anne is also terminally ill with tuberculosis Following her wishes Charlotte takes her to see the ocean for the first time and Anne dies during that trip Charlotte is the only survivor among the four siblings Left alone with her elderly father she pursues her literary career and begins a romantic relationship with Arthur Nicholls her father s curate In the company of Mr Nicholls and her publisher Mr Smith Charlotte goes to the opera in London and meets the famous author William Thackeray Cast editIsabelle Adjani as Emily Bronte Marie France Pisier as Charlotte Bronte Isabelle Huppert as Anne Bronte Pascal Greggory as Branwell Bronte Patrick Magee as Reverend Bronte Helene Surgere fr as Mrs Robinson Roland Bertin as Mr Nicholls Alice Sapritch as Aunt Elizabeth Xavier Depraz as Monsieur Heger Adrian Brine as Mr Robinson Julian Curry as Mr Smith Rennee Goddard as Tabby the maid Jean Sorel as Leyland Roland Barthes as William Makepeace ThackerayBackground editSince the silent era Charlotte Bronte s Jane Eyre and Emily s Wuthering Heights have been adapted in to film multiple times The most famous adaptations were director William Wyler s Wuthering Heights in 1939 a film starring Laurence Olivier Merle Oberon and David Niven and Jane Eyre a film starring Orson Welles and Joan Fontaine under the direction of Robert Stevenson in 1943 The lives of the three Bronte sisters did not attract the same level of interest in Hollywood even though biographies and semi fictional books based on the lives has been published The only Hollywood production made about the Brontes was Devotion a film directed by Curtis Bernhardt in 1946 that had tried to capitalise on the success of Jane Eyre two years earlier Starring Ida Lupino as Emily Olivia de Havilland as Charlotte Nancy Coleman as Anne and Arthur Kennedy as Branwell Devotion made no effort at historical accuracy It portrays Emily as being in love with reverend Nichols who is in love with Charlotte The film made as potboiler romance had no resemblance to the actual lives of the Bronte sisters and was decried by Bronte enthusiasts for its blatant inaccuracies citation needed The Brontes of Haworth a four part drama made for Yorkshire television was broadcast in 1973 with a script written by Christopher Fry directed and produced by Marc Miller Emily was played by Rosemary McHale Charlotte by Vickery Turner Anne by Ann Penfold and Branwell by Michael Kitchen Shot on authentic locations The Brontes of Haworth was very well received citation needed Techine biopic on the Bronte conceived in the early 1970s was only the third project on the famous authors lives and the first accurate portrayal of them to be made on film citation needed Only one production has taken the story of the Bronte family since then To Walk Invisible a British television film first aired on BBC on 29 December 2016 Written and directed by Sally Wainwright it focused on the eventful 1846 1848 period during which the four Bronte sibling were back at the parsonage While the three sisters became published authors their brother fell in a spiral of self destruction To Walk Invisible cast was headed by Finn Atkins as Charlotte Charlie Murphy as Anne Chloe Pirrie as Emily Adam Nagaitis as Branwell and Jonathan Pryce as their father Patrick Bronte citation needed Casting editThe film is notable for casting three of France s most famous actress of the time Isabelle Adjani as Emily Marie France Pisier as Charlotte and Isabelle Huppert as Anne Marie France Pisier known for her work in the films of Francois Truffaut had won back to back Cesar Awards as best supporting actress in Techine s two previous films Souvenirs d en France and Barocco She had developed a friendship with Techine while working for him From the cast of Barocco also came Adjani who was the female lead in that film Isabelle Adjani had come to international attention under the direction Truffaut in The Story of Adele H playing the mentally disturbed daughter of Victor Hugo She and the cinematographer Bruno Nuytten who had photographed Barocco where then a couple and she gave birth to their son around the time of the film s released Nuytten famously went to direct Adjani in Camille Claudel an artistic success for both Pascal Greggory was an unknown actor with only few minor acting credits in films but he was chosen above Alain Delon and Patrick Dewaere for the role of Branwell He went on to play Adjani s brother in La Reine Margot 1994 in which he had the role of Henri III Huppert Adjani and Greggory were only in their mid twenties when the film was made Isabelle Huppert had risen to prominence in The Lacemaker French La Dentelliere 1977 One of her earlier roles had been in Liliane de Kermadec s Aloise a film written by Techine Huppert and Adjani famously did not get along which made the production of The Bronte Sisters difficult Patrick Magee a veteran Irish actor known for his work in two Stanley Kubrick s films A Clockwork Orange and Barry Lyndon took the role of the father He spoke his lines in English and was dubbed into FrenchMusic editThe music for the film was arranged by Philippe Sarde a brother of Alain Sarde who had produced Techine s two previous films and was executive producer of The Bronte Sisters Philippe Sarde had written original music for Souvenirs d en France and Barocco but in The Bronte Sisters he arranged adaptions of classical pieces on place of an original score Gioachino Rossini overture to Tancredi and music from Robert Schumann where among the compositions used following the mold of Stanley Kubrick reused of classical music in his films Reception editThe film was ill received at its premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1979 where Francis Ford Coppola s Apocalypse Now eclipsed other films in competition However The Bronte Sisters s reputation has grown since then Today it is seen as an accurate representation of the lonely and bleak lives of the Bronte siblings by whom Home media editThe Bronte Sisters was remastered and re released as part of the Cohen Film Collection by the Cohen Media Group It came out on DVD and Blu ray on July 30 2013 Both editions include an audio commentary with film critic Wade Major and Bronte scholar Sue Lonoff de Cuevas They also include Dominique Maillet s 2012 The Ghosts of Haworth an hour long documentary on the conception making and reception of the film through interviews with Techine co writer Pascal Bonitzer Bronte scholar Claire Bazin costumier Christian Gasc and actor Pascal Gregory Two theatrical trailers one for the original 1979 French release and one from the recent theatrical re release complete the extra features 2 Previously to 2013 the film had been released on DVD only in region 2 It was released in Spain in French with Spanish subtitles or dubbed in Spanish as the options offered but it is currently out of print 3 The film was released on DVD in Sweden in 2009 as part of a box set of Bronte related films Gaumont released a Region B Blu ray in France on 9 May 2012 4 See also editIsabelle Huppert on screen and stageNotes edit ParticipationReferences edit Festival de Cannes The Bronte Sisters festival cannes com Retrieved 24 May 2009 The Bronte Sisters Cohen Media Group Archived from the original on 10 March 2016 The Bronte Sisters Culturalianet Archived from the original on 20 November 2016 Retrieved 8 August 2009 Les soeurs Bronte Gaumont Film Company Archived from the original on 13 February 2013 Bibliography edit Marshall Bill Andre Techine Manchester University Press 2007 ISBN 0 7190 5831 7External links editThe Bronte Sisters at IMDb nbsp The Bronte Sisters at AllMovie nbsp The Bronte Sisters at AlloCine in French nbsp Soundtrack Collector Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Bronte Sisters amp oldid 1189838265, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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