Children of Paradise - Criterion Collection (1946)
Facts
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Children of Paradise - Criterion Collection
DVD Price: You save 12%! As of Sep 5 23:53 EDT (details)
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| Directed by | Marcel Carné |
| Cast | Arletty, Jean-Louis Barrault, Pierre Brasseur, Pierre Renoir, María Casares and Jean Louis Barrault |
| Theatrical Release | November 15, 1946 |
| DVD Release | January 22, 2002 |
| Running Time | 190 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 037429151723 |
| Buy this item | $34.99 at Amazon.com As of Sep 5 23:53 EDT (details) 2 DVD, Criterion, Usually ships in 24 hours, Black & White, DVD-Video, Subtitled, NTSC Languages: English (Subtitled), French (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono) Or 40 new from $28.36, 11 used from $28.43, 1 collectible from $39.99 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Most overrated film in history? |
It's gets a star for the crowd scenes, very well faked, not staged looking like the comparable Gone with the Wind (also a terribly overblown and boring soap opera.) Good reviews rave about "the trouble it had being filmed in occupied France" -- so, does that make every film made in occupied countries better? The only good actor in the film is Arletty, and even she seems to smirk at the inane "dialogue of love", which is totally unbelievable at all times. If the French are truly like this, no wonder they lost every modern war! The only other plus goes to the fine Criterion print: I hear that it's a major improvement over the theatrical or VHS versions, but that still won't fix the boring plot, the length, the cutesy mimes, or the over-acting. It's too bad they just did't film a Dickens novel with the same crew. August 14, 2008
| The Children of Paradise |
| Rife with Style and Substance... |
| A Play in Two CDs |
After all the false starts, it was too late to watch the second CD so, after playing the beginning and hearing the actor's French instead of the "expert's" English, I called it a night. Today I watched (and listened to) the second CD and was completely blown away. I could only surmise that I was really missing the effect of the first CD by not getting the audio effect; especially, the inflections and emotions of the actor's voices. I was reading the same subtitles but, this time around, there was a world of knowledge and meaning in everything that was being said. I recognize the absence of all the previous night's frustration as well as the presence of the effects of a good night's sleep may have combined to aid the impact of the second CD. I also surmised that setting the stage can be laborius at times (like reading a book that doesn't take off until page 220). However, my two observations from this experience are 1) always watch a foreign language film in it's original audio with subtitles in order to get the real effect of the movie. I know people who won't watch a foreign movie unless it's dubbed already (and many of the older, lesser movies are that way). I tell these friends that they are leaving much of the film's artistry in the hands of someone whose real talent is having a flexible speaking tempo that fits the movements of the screen actor's mouth. My second observation is that no one should pass judgement on "Les Enfant's du Paradis" until they've watched the whole movie. Don't worry, it didn't take long into the second CD before greatness started spewing forth.
"Les Enfants du Paradis" is a stunning portrate of a group of people in 19th Century France and their relationships with one another. They are all from different backgrounds and economic levels but their actions and inactions affect one another. That's the plot of many movies (especially if you throw out the part about 19th Century France). However, in this movie, the dialogue is virtually Shakespearean (come to think of it, some of the dialogue IS Shakespearean). I found myself awed by the depth of meaning in the words that I was reading (and hearing with the excellent acting once I got the audio). If special effects and action are your thing, this is not your movie. However, if the slings and arrows of misguided fortune enchant your artistic appreciation, this movie is a must. January 13, 2008
| A divine film from the Past |
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