Manon des Sources (1986 film)
Manon des sources | |
---|---|
Directed by | Claude Berri |
Written by | Claude Berri Gérard Brach |
Produced by | Pierre Grunstein Alain Poiré |
Starring | Yves Montand Daniel Auteuil Emmanuelle Béart Hippolyte Girardot |
Cinematography | Bruno Nuytten |
Edited by | Hervé de Luze Geneviève Louveau |
Music by | Jean-Claude Petit |
Distributed by | Pathé Distribution (EU) Orion Classics (USA) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 113 minutes |
Countries | France Italy Switzerland |
Language | French |
Box office | 56.4 million € |
Manon des sources (French pronunciation: [manɔ̃ de suʁs]; meaning Manon of the Spring) is a 1986 French language period film directed by Claude Berri, as the second part of a diptych with Jean de Florette, released the same year.
Both are the adaptation of Marcel Pagnol’s 1963 two-volume novel The Water of the Hills, itself an adaptation of his own 1952 film Manon of the Spring, which became the novel’s second part.[1][2][3]
The two films are ranked No. 60 in Empire magazine's "The 100 Best Films of World Cinema" in 2010.[4]
Plot
[edit]Ten years after the events of Jean de Florette, Jean’s daughter Manon lives in the Provençal countryside near Les Romarins, the farm that her father once owned. She has taken up residence with an elderly Piedmontese squatter couple who teach her to live off the land, tending to a herd of goats and hunting for birds and rabbits. Ugolin Soubeyran, also called Galinette by his uncle César, has begun a successful business growing carnations at Les Romarins with his uncle, César Soubeyran—also known as Papet—thanks to the water provided by the spring there.
After seeing her bathe nude in the mountains, Ugolin develops an interest in Manon. When he approaches her, she seems disgusted by his vileness and almost certainly by the memory of his involvement in her father's downfall. But Ugolin's interest in Manon becomes obsessive, culminating in sewing a ribbon from her hair onto his chest. At the same time, Manon becomes interested in Bernard, a handsome and educated schoolteacher recently arrived in the village.
As a small child, Manon had suffered the loss of her father, who died from a blow to the head while using explosives in an attempt to find a water source. César and Ugolin then bought the farm cheaply from his widow—Manon's mother—and unblocked the spring. Manon witnessed this as a child. The two men profited directly from his death. When she overhears two villagers talking about it, Manon realises that many in the village knew of the crime but had remained silent, for the Soubeyran family was locally important. While searching for a goat that fell into a crevice above the village, Manon finds the underground source of the spring that supplies water to the local farms and village. To take her revenge on both the Soubeyrans and the villagers, who knew but did nothing, she stops the flow of water using the iron-oxide clay and rocks found nearby.
The villagers quickly become desperate for water to feed their crops and run their businesses. They come to believe that the water flow had been stopped by some Providence to punish the injustice committed against Jean. Manon publicly accuses César and Ugolin, and the villagers admit their own complicity in the persecution of Jean. They had never accepted him as he was an outsider and was physically deformed. César tries to evade the accusations, but an eyewitness, a poacher who was trespassing on the vacant property at the time, steps forward to confirm the crime, shaming both César and Ugolin. Ugolin makes a desperate attempt to ask Manon for her hand in marriage, but she rejects him. The Soubeyrans flee in disgrace. Rejected by Manon, Ugolin hangs himself from a tree, apparently ending the Soubeyran line.
The villagers appeal to Manon to take part in a religious procession to the village's fountain because she is orphaned, hoping that acknowledging the injustice will restore the flow of water to the village. With the assistance of Bernard, Manon unblocks the spring in advance, and the water arrives at the village at the moment that the procession reaches the fountain. Manon marries Bernard.
Meanwhile, César has been broken by his nephew's suicide. Delphine, an old acquaintance of his, returns to the village and tells him that Florette, his sweetheart from that period, had written to him to tell him she was carrying their child. Receiving no reply from him, she had tried to abort it. Florette left the village, married a blacksmith from nearby Créspin, and the child was born alive but a hunchback.
César, away on military service in Africa, never received her letter and did not know that she had given birth to his child. In a cruel twist of fate, Jean, the man he drove to desperation and death without having met him, was the son he had always wanted. Realizing now she is related to him, César sadly watches a pregnant Manon hurry home at night, wishing to reconcile with his only grandchild, but knowing it will never happen.
Devastated, and lacking the will to live any longer, César dies quietly in his sleep. In a letter he leaves his property to Manon, whom he recognises as his natural granddaughter and the last of the Soubeyrans.
Cast
[edit]- Emmanuelle Béart as Manon
- Yves Montand as César Soubeyran/'Le Papet'
- Daniel Auteuil as Ugolin
- Hippolyte Girardot as Bernard Olivier
- Margarita Lozano as Baptistine
- Yvonne Gamy as Delphine
- Gabriel Bacquier and Ève Brenner as singers at the wedding
Production
[edit]The sequence in which Manon bathes naked posed some difficulties. Being modest, Emmanuelle Béart was reluctant to undress in front of the crew. In an effort to resolve the situation, Claude Berri undressed and dived naked into the water to break the ice. As a result, Béart followed suit.[5] Shooting ran from 22 April 1985 to 27 December 1985.[6]
Reception
[edit]Box office
[edit]The film was a domestic and international success, grossing nearly $4 million in US sales.[7]
Critical response
[edit]On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 79% of 28 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.60/10.[8]
Awards
[edit]- 1987: César Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role – Emmanuelle Béart[9]
- 1987: National Board of Review Award for Best Foreign Language Film (shared with Jean de Florette)[10]
References
[edit]- ^ The Duxorcist, Walker, Manon of the Spring, The Dead, Happy New Year, 1987 – Siskel and Ebert Movie Reviews
- ^ Roger Ebert
- ^ Spirituality & Practice
- ^ "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema – 60. Jean de Florette". Empire. 23 September 2019.
- ^ "Manon des Sources : lumineuse Emmanuelle Béart". www.premiere.fr. 16 September 2015. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
- ^ "Manon of the Spring (1987)". tcm.com. Turner Classic Movies, Inc. Retrieved 2 July 2024.
- ^ KLADY, LEONARD (8 January 1989). "Box Office Champs, Chumps : The hero of the bottom line was the 46-year-old 'Bambi'". Retrieved 16 December 2017 – via LA Times.
- ^ "Manon des Sources". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 17 September 2023.
- ^ "Award Winners & Nominees". Académie des César. Retrieved 24 August 2023.
- ^ "Best Foreign Language Film Archives".
External links
[edit]- Manon des Sources at IMDb
- Manon des Sources at AllMovie
- Manon des Sources at Rotten Tomatoes
- Trailer (1986) at YouTube
- Review by Vincent Canby (registration required) at The New York Times
- 1986 films
- 1986 drama films
- French drama films
- Swiss drama films
- 1980s French-language films
- French films about revenge
- Italian films about revenge
- Films based on French novels
- Films based on works by Marcel Pagnol
- Films directed by Claude Berri
- Films set in France
- Films with screenplays by Claude Berri
- Films with screenplays by Gérard Brach
- Films about squatting
- French-language Swiss films
- 1980s Italian films
- 1980s French films
- Films featuring a Best Supporting Actress César Award–winning performance
- Films scored by Jean-Claude Petit