The Earrings of Madame De...

|
List Price:
$14.99
Hungary Hotels Travel Price: $14.99
Subject To Change Without Notice
Availability: N/A
Manufacturer: Hollywood Select Video Starring: Charles Boyer, Danielle Darrieux, Vittorio De Sica, Jean Debucourt, Jean Galland Directed By: Max Ophüls
|
Average Customer Rating:     

|
|
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 9786303184210 Format: Black & White ISBN: 6303184219 Label: Hollywood Select Video Manufacturer: Hollywood Select Video Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Hollywood Select Video Release Date: 1994-07-15 Running Time: 100 Studio: Hollywood Select Video Theatrical Release Date: 1954-07-19
|
|
|
|
|
|
Editorial Reviews:
|
Considered by many critics to be Max Ophüls's finest work, The Earrings of Madame de... is an exquisitely sculpted romance masterpiece of surface manners, social graces, and meaningless gestures passed off as honor. Danielle Darrieux is the unnamed Madame, the spoiled wife of Charles Boyer, who is the epitome of the confident, cultured gentleman. Trapped by mutual consent in a loveless marriage, she occupies her days spending herself into debt and her evenings flirting with silly young suitors, while her husband dallies with his mistress. The veil of respectability that protects this perfect relationship of lies and indulgence is torn away by a pair of earrings she secretly sells to cover debts and her husband buys back for his mistress. In a circularity so loved by Ophüls, the jewels travel back to Madame as a present from a suitor (a suave and serious Vittorio De Sica) too serious to be dismissed by her husband. Ophüls is rather cool toward these characters, as if he pities their shallow façades. Madame is less overwhelmed by passion than enthralled by the idea of love: it's only in the absence of her attentive lover that her perfect comportment collapses, while her husband is propelled into action more by social expectation than jealousy. Ophüls's camera dances through the decor while watching the doomed game play out at a distance, capturing a culture of courtly manners petrified into meaningless ritual. --Sean Axmaker
|
|
|
Spotlight customer reviews:
|
Customer Rating:      Summary: Even great movies can be unsatisfactory Comment: I was looking forward to viewing this almost universally acclaimed movie. But the quality of the (ancient) print on the video is poor, and it really interfered with my enjoyment of the film. Picture and sound need a lot of work. The subtitles are often illegible because they merge with the background. Also, since I know some French, I could tell the subtitles were wholly inadequate in conveying the content of the dialogue.
Nevertheless, I'd still rather see this stunted version of 'The Earrings of Madame de...' than not see it at all. There is an allure here, the possibility of being drawn into another world and another time, that makes me want to watch this again. I hope we won't have to wait forever for Criterion or whoever to produce a DVD of this movie. I'm sure movie lovers everywhere will rejoice once this film gets the complete makeover treatment, with remastered sound and picture, brand new subtitles, and hopefully some extras about the times, the people and the places in this special film.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A cassic only in vhs Comment: This great Ophuls film has the distinction of being one of the early classics with no dvd(US version). So only if you have a vcr can you home view it. It is almost worth buying one .FPB Ann Arbor
Customer Rating:      Summary: The Circularity of Life Comment: Max Ophul's The Earrings of Madame De... is an essential film. Filled with Ophul's magical camara work and fine performances all around it is a film to be watched and cherished by all serious film goers.
The film tells the story of a love triangle between Madame de (Danielle Darrieux), her husband (Charles Boyer) and an Itallian diplomat (Vittorio de Sica). On its face its a soap opera plain and simple but if one goes beyond the surface, the film is a play on the upper crust morals of Viennese society. Love is a thing that can be toyed with but never possessed. The earrings of the title enter the story on four occassions: first when they are seemingly unimportant and sold by Madame to pay some debts. They are then sold back to her husband who gives them to his mistress as she leaves for Constantinople. Sold there to once again pay gaming debts they come into the possession of Baron Fabrizio Donati who takes them to France.
The Baron begins a flirtation with Madame which eventually turns to love. He makes a gift of the earrings. The Madame who now cherishes the earrings because of their giver now must face the consequences of her having sold them and lied to her husband. The General demands the Baron take the jewels back and they are once again ought by the General. They make their way to a niece who sells them back to the same merchant. Finally purchased once again by Madame they are left on a church altar as an offering to save the Baron who is now involved in a duel with the General.
The travels of the earrings are used by Ophuls to represent the circularity of life. This favorite device of Ophuls was used in both Lola Montes and La Ronde. This is an excellent film that deserves to be seen. The film for some reason passed into the public domain and there is no American version of a restored print. The version I viewed was by Timeless Media and was truly horrible. The subtitles are often not readable. Much of the film is not translated and the print quality goes from merely bad to truly awful. But unfortunately this is the only version available.
If you want to see one of the greatest films by one of cinema's truly unique directors see this film. I only wish watching it were not so much a chore.
Highly recommended.
Customer Rating:      Summary: LOVE AND HONOUR Comment: I first saw this movie in a dubbed version on the local CBC station. (One of the benefits of living in a border town with Canada.) At first I was put off because it seemed to be about the foibles of a rich, silly woman. But then the camera work drew me in. I'd never seen a camera move so beautifully. It wasn't like watching a movie at all but rather eavesdropping on its characters. Then suddenly this silly woman changes and the movie got darker and the characters more and more complex. At its end I was so moved that I thought I must remember the title in case I ever get the chance of seeing it in a theatre. Which I did about 10 years later. This time in its original form at that temple to movies the Bleecker Street Cinema (alas, gone these many years) in NYC. The print was probably terrible but that wouldn't have mattered. If CHILDREN OF PARADISE takes place in the Paris of Balzac MADAME DE is in the Paris of de Maupassant. It always reminds me of his story USELESS BEAUTY and the director Max Ophuls filmed 3 de Maupassant stories as LE PLAISIR just a few years before. At the beginning of this movie Madame de hums lightly as she sorts through her jewels & furs looking for something she can sell without regret to pay off some debts which she means to hide from her husband, a general. She settles on a pair of heart shaped diamond earrings. 'If only he hadn't given them on our wedding day', she muses knowing she will need to invent a very convincing lie to account for their disappearance. She puts the lie in motion at the opera during a performance of Gluck's ORPHEE. The irony here is not made apparent until later when Madame de meets a baron, a diplomat, and what begins as just another flirtation, entered knowingly to pass the time & amuse herself, grows and becomes so much more until finally Madame de, her husband & her lover are no longer the players in this tragedy but the played. At the end the camera fades on the image of the heart shaped earrings placed upon an altar dedicated to the saint she often prayed to. Max Ophuls isn't much known in this country although his Hollywood film LETTER FROM AN UNKNOWN WOMAN does have a following. But this film belongs right at the top among the great films: CITIZEN KANE, SHOESHINE etc. and THE PASSION OF JOAN OF ARC with whom Madame de might have something in common. If Danielle Darrieux (Madame de), Charles Boyer (Monsieur de)and Vittorio De Sica (the Baron) have ever been better I should like to know where for THAT I wish to see. I have kept from discussing plot & character because I think this is a movie that should be discovered on one's own. At that final close-up of those earrings you come away knowing you've seen something & that's not nothing.
Customer Rating:      Summary: One of Max Ophuls most elegant and saddest films, with superb performances by Boyer, Darrieux and De Sica Comment: What a sad, elegant film this is. The Earrings of Madame de... takes us into the fin de siecle Parisian world of the mannered rich, where the act of amorous intimacy is as much an expected social obligation as it is a personal pleasure, where a serious discussion about serious things is considered as indiscrete as loving one's spouse.
"Madame de... is a most elegant lady," we are told, "distinguished, received everywhere. She seemed destined to a delightful, untroubled existence. Doubtless nothing would have happened but for the jewels." She (Danielle Darrieux) is married to the rich and assured General Andre de... (Charles Boyer). When she realizes she has debts she cannot pay and does not want her husband to learn of, she sells a pair of diamond earrings her husband gave her the day after they were married. She tells her husband a little lie, that the earrings were stolen. The jeweler, not knowing of the little lie, soon goes to the general, assuming he will want to buy them back. He does, but rather than embarrass his wife, he gives them to a mistress he is saying farewell to as she departs for Constantinople. And there, she sells the jewels to cover her gambling debts. The jewels soon appear in the window of an elegant Constantinople jewelry store where Baron Fabrizio Donati (Vittorio De Sica), an Italian diplomat soon on his way to Paris, buys them. And since fate and convenience work in mysterious ways, Donati meets Madame de in Paris and they fall into what passes for love by their class. Donati gives the earrings to Madame de as a sign of his love, not knowing they originally given to her by her husband. And Madame de must now tell a few more little lies. When her husband, the General, sees them, she must tell even more. From a story of amusing deceptions and brilliant social manners, the movie becomes a much darker and sadder story. Donati may be in love, but he understands the limits of their social class. Madame de may be in love, but for the first time in her life she moves beyond those limits. And the General? He may be worldly to a fault, he may even love his wife, but even he cannot accept becoming an object of smiles behind fans without taking some sort of action.
Ophuls immediately captures us with the elegance of both his camera and the dialogue, a mix of oblivious self-centeredness and matter-of-fact moral amusement. This was a time, for those who could afford it, before trophy mistresses learned to first demand gold wedding rings, before trophy wives required community property laws, prenuptial agreements and slick lawyers in custom-bought silk suits. Madame de lives in this world and thrives. Her downfall may be the result of the diamond earrings her husband gave her, but it certainly is that she actually fell in love. Not just in love, either, but in love with the memory of love.
What a pleasure it is to see subtle and experienced actors as Charles Boyer, Danielle Darrieux and Vittorio De Sica take their roles and bring them to life in such a way that we are forced to continually readjust our feelings toward their characters. When Boyer as the General comments to his wife that "a liar should have more sangfroid," he manages without effort to show amusement, indulgence, perhaps love, but also a little distaste, all in one line reading. All three expertly show us a class of society it's more satisfying to be amused by than to take seriously, yet all three succeed in making us take their characters not only seriously, but each one with a good deal of sympathy.
The Region Two DVD from Second Sight, available at Amazon UK, has a fine black-and-white transfer. There are two significant extras. The first is "Working with Max Ophuls." The second is a film essay on Ophuls by Tag Gallagher, identified as a film historian. It begins with this quote by Ophuls, "The camera exists to create a new art -- to show what can't be seen elsewhere, neither in theater nor in life." The essay shows us how Ophuls achieved this, and should be must viewing by any film student. Based on the reported quality of the VHS tapes of the movie, it sounds like it would be better to buy an all-region DVD player.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hungary Trips Books
Hungary Trips DVD
Hungary Trips Softwares
Hungary Trips Magazines
Hungary Posters
Hungary Art Prints
Hungary Travel 2007 Calendars
2007 Monthly Calendars
Hungary Hotels Travel Special Resources
Hungary Arts
Hungary Entertainment
Hungary Government
Hungary Business
Hungary Culture
Hungary Education
Hungary Health
Hungary Map
Hungary Beach
Hungary Festivals
Hungary Hotels
Hungary Museums
Hungary Theme Parks
Hungary Transportation
Food and Recipes
Sports & Recreation
Travel & Tourism
Hungary Destinations
Budapest, Hungary
Heviz, Hungary
Sopron, Hungary
Eger, Hungary
Szeged, Hungary
Lake Balaton, Hungary
Hungary Hotels
Budapest Hotels
Heviz Hotels
Sopron Hotels
Szeged Hotels
|
Hungary Hotels Travel
Maintained by: Marketer Solutions | Link Building