VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,5/10
6033
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaSet during occupied France, a faithless woman finds herself falling in love with a young priest.Set during occupied France, a faithless woman finds herself falling in love with a young priest.Set during occupied France, a faithless woman finds herself falling in love with a young priest.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Nominato ai 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 vittoria e 1 candidatura in totale
Emmanuelle Riva
- Barny
- (as Emmanuele Riva)
Marco Behar
- Edelman
- (as Marco Béhar de la Comédie Française)
Marc Eyraud
- Anton
- (as Marc Heyraud)
Recensioni in evidenza
I discovered this one recently in my local market on a double DVD with a film called "Les Grandes Gueules". It was interesting to see Belmondo in the rôle of a priest and I thought his dialogue and ideas were very convincing indeed ! Emanuelle Riva, I know less but she put in a good performance too. The outcome, nevertheless, is predictable and, as is often the case in French films unfortunately, ends on a pessimistic note ! Although the film is in black and white and from 1961, picture and sound quality are reasonably good. I was most pleased to see Belmondo in this rôle which changes somewhat from stuntman and the usual commissaires de police ! I am moderately religious so was interested in the theme and ideas of the film. That said, on the other hand, to someone who is anti-religion, heathen or atheist, the film might indeed appear uninteresting and boring !
I saw it at different ages. and I perceived it as one of films who transforms , in profound sense, its viewer. in a special, precise manner. it is not simple to define the sense of this change. and, for not give a to subjective answer, you say only than Belmondo did the role of his life, fragile, delicate, dramatic, so simple, and Riva preserves the flavors of "Hiroshima , mon amour", using in inspired manner. it is a war film, a religious one and a love story. and something more who , after the final scene, is reflected by a state of soul. that could be all.
This is a movie that is partly about Christianity, but it doesn't only speak to a Christian audience. First and foremost, this is a movie about characters facing difficult realities, and finding different sorts of solace in each other.
I must say, Leon Morin was a fantastic character. I'm sure its due to a combination of great acting and writing. It's the kind of priest that you can imagine having long talks with, and the kind of person you can both disagree with and show great respect. I'm sure this movie has opened up the eyes of many when it comes to what a catholic priest can be.
The backdrop of the story, the second world war in a French town, is interesting, and even though it's not really a war movie, the war is always present in one way or the other.
While watching the movie, there were times that I thought it was too slow, but after finishing it, those moments were all forgotten. The movie doesn't have a complex plot, or all that dramatic scenes. But there's so much going on between the characters, that it captures you on two levels. One is the conversations themselves, with arguments for and against God (etc.), but the other is decoding the feelings that the characters have for each other. It's easy to expect a cliché, but the movie handled the situation really well.
I must say, Leon Morin was a fantastic character. I'm sure its due to a combination of great acting and writing. It's the kind of priest that you can imagine having long talks with, and the kind of person you can both disagree with and show great respect. I'm sure this movie has opened up the eyes of many when it comes to what a catholic priest can be.
The backdrop of the story, the second world war in a French town, is interesting, and even though it's not really a war movie, the war is always present in one way or the other.
While watching the movie, there were times that I thought it was too slow, but after finishing it, those moments were all forgotten. The movie doesn't have a complex plot, or all that dramatic scenes. But there's so much going on between the characters, that it captures you on two levels. One is the conversations themselves, with arguments for and against God (etc.), but the other is decoding the feelings that the characters have for each other. It's easy to expect a cliché, but the movie handled the situation really well.
For someone seeking a movie that approaches faith, spirituality, and doubt in an intelligent, respectful manner, without pushing any particular agenda, Jean-Pierre Melville's Léon Morin, Priest may well be an excellent choice. It is a thinking film that does not tell anyone what to think, a wry film that does not take its subject lightly, and a contentious film that does not devolve into belligerence.
Perhaps you are weary of watching incendiary exposés in which smug non-believers do their best to make fools of people who are devout but not particularly articulate, quick witted, or well educated. It could be that you are interested in religious discussions that offer more than joking, mocking, and self-righteous phonies trying to out-Jesus one another in the name of social status.
Maybe you find no appeal in films that feature religion as little more than a means of identifying who to blow up, or perchance you have had enough of seeing reasonable questions about religious dogma summarily cast aside as blasphemy by a bunch of mindless sheep* that would not know their savior from a hole in the ground.
These are all cases that bode well for Léon Morin, Priest being a good movie to watch, because it is nothing like Religulous, Bruce Almighty, or Saved!
Instead, Léon Morin, Priest is a tale with a lot of smart dialogue between a young priest and an avowed atheist, several scenes depicting the occupation of France during World War II, some appropriate humor to keep things from getting too heavy, and a few romantic elements that won't even make grandma blush. Well OK, she might blush once or twice, but that is about it, and really, it's good for her.
* As it turns out, Melville was fresh out of mindless sheep when he made this film. Speculation remains unconfirmed as to whether or not this is due to his alleged reliance upon the virtually unknown Monty Python Sheep Shoppe, which, despite claims to the contrary, appears not to stock any variety of sheep.
Perhaps you are weary of watching incendiary exposés in which smug non-believers do their best to make fools of people who are devout but not particularly articulate, quick witted, or well educated. It could be that you are interested in religious discussions that offer more than joking, mocking, and self-righteous phonies trying to out-Jesus one another in the name of social status.
Maybe you find no appeal in films that feature religion as little more than a means of identifying who to blow up, or perchance you have had enough of seeing reasonable questions about religious dogma summarily cast aside as blasphemy by a bunch of mindless sheep* that would not know their savior from a hole in the ground.
These are all cases that bode well for Léon Morin, Priest being a good movie to watch, because it is nothing like Religulous, Bruce Almighty, or Saved!
Instead, Léon Morin, Priest is a tale with a lot of smart dialogue between a young priest and an avowed atheist, several scenes depicting the occupation of France during World War II, some appropriate humor to keep things from getting too heavy, and a few romantic elements that won't even make grandma blush. Well OK, she might blush once or twice, but that is about it, and really, it's good for her.
* As it turns out, Melville was fresh out of mindless sheep when he made this film. Speculation remains unconfirmed as to whether or not this is due to his alleged reliance upon the virtually unknown Monty Python Sheep Shoppe, which, despite claims to the contrary, appears not to stock any variety of sheep.
My thoughts about this film don't seem to follow any precise structural pattern. I will just note the things that struck me and leave it at that. This movie affected me as no other story set in an occupied country ever has. It has a dreamlike pace and texture.
Barny sees young Italian soldiers appearing in her town, their hats have plumes--are they with a circus?... She forms a passionate friendship with Sabine, her boss: there will be a scene in which Sabine's breasts are pressed against Barny's neck and shoulders... later we find that Sabine's brother has been deported to a concentration camp... Barny and two other women have their children (who are half-Jewish) baptised. They figure that the church will legitimize their kids in the eyes of the enemy... Barny and Léon start to debate the meaning of faith. Léon makes it clear to her that he is not available, but her yearnings know no bounds. Reading Papini as a substitute for sex... Barny is involved with the Resistance, will hide Jews if required to, but her emotional life must take precedence over these activities.
There is much more, but I will just say that Riva and Belmondo are superb. After seeing her in Hiroshima, mon amour--in which she played well, but not memorably so--I was startled with her accomplished acting here. Belmondo is tough and moving; Léon is no Don Camillo.
Barny sees young Italian soldiers appearing in her town, their hats have plumes--are they with a circus?... She forms a passionate friendship with Sabine, her boss: there will be a scene in which Sabine's breasts are pressed against Barny's neck and shoulders... later we find that Sabine's brother has been deported to a concentration camp... Barny and two other women have their children (who are half-Jewish) baptised. They figure that the church will legitimize their kids in the eyes of the enemy... Barny and Léon start to debate the meaning of faith. Léon makes it clear to her that he is not available, but her yearnings know no bounds. Reading Papini as a substitute for sex... Barny is involved with the Resistance, will hide Jews if required to, but her emotional life must take precedence over these activities.
There is much more, but I will just say that Riva and Belmondo are superb. After seeing her in Hiroshima, mon amour--in which she played well, but not memorably so--I was startled with her accomplished acting here. Belmondo is tough and moving; Léon is no Don Camillo.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe film won the Award of the City of Venice at the 22nd Venice International Film Festival. Jean-Paul Belmondo was also nominated for the Best Foreign Actor Award at the 16th British Academy Film Awards.
- BlooperAt 1:33:20, when the two elderly ladies are visiting Barny, the background behind the window is clearly fake, revealing it was a studio set.
- Citazioni
Léon Morin: The invisible church. It extends far beyond the visible church.
Barny: What is the invisible church?
Léon Morin: All human beings of goodwill.
- Versioni alternativeThe theatrical release version is 111-minute long, which is the version used for the 2011 Criterion DVD and Blu-Ray release. The remastered 4K version, used for the 2019 Kino Lorber Blu-Ray release, is the longer director's cut, at 128 minutes.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Le fils de Gascogne (1995)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- Léon Morin, Priest
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Montfort-l'Amaury, Yvelines, Francia(street scenes)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 72.078 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 9515 USD
- 19 apr 2009
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 72.908 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 57 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.66 : 1
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By what name was Leon Morin prete (1961) officially released in India in English?
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