Let Joy Reign Supreme (1975)
Facts
| Directed by | Bertrand Tavernier |
| Cast | Philippe Noiret, Jean Rochefort, Jean-Pierre Marielle, Christine Pascal, Alfred Adam, Nicole Garcia and Marina Vlady |
| Theatrical Release | March 23, 1975 |
| Running Time | 114 minutes |
| Buy this item ... | 1 used from $72.95 |
Website Links
- Movie Review Query Engine - Directory of movie reviews.
- IMDb - Features plot summaries, reviews, cast lists, and theatre schedules.
- Art.com - Search for Let Joy Reign Supreme posters.
Similar Movies
User Reviews
Average user review:| DON'T WORRY, BE HAPPY |
| Victims of history |
As the enlightened libertine whose attempt to rule a corrupt kingdom is at odds with his debauched nature, Philippe Noiret gives one of his very best performances, avoiding the temptation to slip into ham or caricature in favor of a remarkably controlled and quietly affecting portrait of world-weary wisdom and self-awareness. His grief over the death of his favorite daughter is all too believable, his reaction all-too recognizably human as he buries himself in work because "I still can't feel it, so I'm working while I still can." Even Jean Rochefort's Abbé Dubois, who tries to blow up impoverished Breton noble Jean-Pierre Marielle's farcical plot for independence into a major conspiracy to secure a vacant archbishop's post despite being neither a Catholic nor able to remember how to say Mass, somehow avoids becoming a cartoon, their bitterly comic relationship tinged with real sadness. Like Marielle's doomed revolutionary (a near-master class in comic timing), they are as much victims of history as of their own ambitions.
Filmed with real panache and remarkable assurance (including many early examples of the long tracking shots Tavernier is so fond of), it constantly undercuts the picture-book image of the period. The Court of Versailles is so rat-infested that no-one thinks anything of nobles picking up a dead rodent or of police constables walking around with buckets for aristos to piss in, while the streets are filled with royal pressgangs forcing indigents and tramps into marriage before ending them to populate France's colonies in Louisiana and Mississippi that are the backbone of the fragile economy even if most nobles can't tell the difference between America and Africa. Michel Blanc, Christian Clavier, Thierry Lhermitte and Gerard Jugnot turn up in bit parts en route, though intriguingly Michael Powell's scenes hit the cutting room floor.
It's a film with wit and scope and real humanity: if Ridicule is a light lunch, this is a profoundly delightful full magnificent banquet of a movie.
Kino's Region 1 NTSC DVD has an acceptable 1.85:1 widescreen transfer with unsubtitled theatrical trailer and stills gallery as extras. August 19, 2007
| About the virtue of being a libertine.... |
More reviews at Amazon.com ...





