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IMDb > La note bleue (1991)

La note bleue (1991) More at IMDbPro »

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Overview

User Rating:
5.3/10   118 votes
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Director:
Andrzej Zulawski
Writer:
Andrzej Zulawski (writer)
Contact:
View company contact information for La note bleue on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
5 June 1991 (France) more
Genre:
Drama | Music | Romance more
User Comments:
The Definitive Film of the Romantic Age! more

Cast

  (Cast overview, first billed only)
Janusz Olejniczak ... Frédéric Chopin
Marie-France Pisier ... Aurore Dudevant, alias George Sand

Sophie Marceau ... Solange Sand
Noemi Nadelmann ... Pauline Viardot

Féodor Atkine ... Eugène Delacroix

Aurélien Recoing ... Auguste Clésinger
Benoît Le Pecq ... Maurice Sand (as Benoît Lepecq)
Roman Wilhelmi ... Adalbert Grzymala
Grazyna Dylong ... Laure Czosnowska
Pavel Slaby ... Jean
Gilles Détroit ... Fernand de Préaulx
Redjep Mitrovitsa ... Alexandre Dumas fils
Beatrice Buchholz ... Augustine Brault
Serge Ridoux ... Louis Viardot
Serge Renko ... Ivan Tourgueniev
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Additional Details

Runtime:
135 min
Country:
France | Germany
Language:
French
Color:
Color
Sound Mix:
Dolby
Filming Locations:
France more
Company:
Erato Films more

Fun Stuff

Movie Connections:
Version of Impromptu (1991) more

FAQ

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11 out of 11 people found the following comment useful:-
The Definitive Film of the Romantic Age!, 7 April 2004
Author: david melville (dwingrove@qmuc.ac.uk) from Edinburgh, Scotland

Exquisitely portraying the last days of 19th century Europe's most infamous 'celebrity romance,' the Franco-Polish director Andrzej Zulawski has made a film that defines an era. Just as the Middle Ages (for us cinephiles) will always be Bergman's The Seventh Seal, or the Belle Epoque will always be Visconti's Death in Venice, so the Romantic Age will always be (for the lucky few who've had a chance to see it) Zulawski's La Note Bleue.

The fact that the Bergman and Visconti films are world-famous, while Zulawski's has barely been heard of outside his small circle of diehard fans, should be enough to convince you (if you're not convinced already) that distribution of world cinema really has hit rock-bottom in the Age of Miramax. Trust me, La Note Bleue is an unqualified masterpiece! Having seen it once, I would happily sell my soul for a chance to see it again.

The story itself is a familiar one. The exiled Polish composer Chopin (played by Janusz Olejniak, a real-life Polish pianist with no prior acting experience) is living with his mistress, the romantic novelist George Sand (Marie-France Pisier) in her idyllic country retreat at Nohant. After years of tempestuous on-and-off passion, Chopin still loves his lady, but his eye is turning more and more towards her provocative and nubile daughter (Sophie Marceau).

How is their 'conflict' resolved? Well, it isn't, really - for the simple reason that nothing in life ever truly is. The turbulent trio entertain a houseful of illustrious guests. Among them are the writer Alexandre Dumas, fils (mourning the death of his real-life Lady of the Camellias) and the opera diva Pauline Viardot (trilling some sublime Bellini arias on the soundtrack). Sand's handsome but sinister son models puppet look-alikes of all the guests. Acrobats from a travelling circus float among the trees, like diaphanous orange phantoms.

Each one of the performances is flawless. As George Sand, Marie-France Pisier is every inch the seductive but maddening 'monstre sacre' of so much literary myth. Sophie Marceau is irresistible as her daughter - half-Lolita, half-Lady Macbeth - the first stage of her evolution from Gallic teenage sexpot to mature actress. As for Olejniak, I can only believe he was an acting neophyte because Zulawski said so himself.

In every word and gesture, every sublimely beautiful image of this film, you see the Romantic Era come to life. You sit in awe, nod your head dumbly, and think "Yes, it was really like this!" If it wasn't, History got it wrong.

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