Movies A-Z | Celebs | SiteMap | DVD | Advanced Search
   Home
 
   Movie Database News    In Theaters    Coming Soon    Future Movies    BoxOffice     Trailers     Scripts     Wallpapers     Directory  
  Home -

Atalante, L' (1934) - movie plots

Atalante, L' (1934)

User Rating
87%
(12 votes)
OverviewCommentsDVDsPhotosForumProduction InfoAdd to MyMovies 

Trivia (5)
Plot Description
Soundtrack
Wallpapers
Shooting Locations
Popularity

Directed by
Jean Vigo

Written by
Jean Guinée, Albert Riéra

Cast
Michel Simon, Dita Parlo, Jean Dasté, Gilles Margaritis, Louis Lefebvre [more]


DVD Release Date
• R1: Apr 22, 2003

Running Time
1 hour, 29 minutes

Country France

More info on IMDb.com

Other Titles
• L'Atalante
• Le Chaland qui passe



Sign up for our Newsletter!
Movie news in your email:

Your Name:

Your E-Mail Address:



 Synopses for Atalante, L' (1934)
1.

The story is so simple, it hardly exists: a young girl marries a mate aboard a river barge named L'Atalante; she grows bored and frustrated with the dull life that results; when the barge docks in Paris, she runs away, only to discover that she misses her husband. But the power of L'Atalante isn't in its story--it's in the way the camera captures the world in rich, dreamy images, steeping the audience in a viewpoint both innocent and stark. The simplest things are also implacable and confusing. The characters' personalities, and the ways they conflict, have the deep frustrations of real life, and not the easily resolved plot points of most romances. The culmination will leave you aching with happiness and lingering sorrow. Director Jean Vigo--who died of lung disease after completing the film--had an astonishing ability to make the real world translucent; cinematographer Boris Kaufman said, "He used everything around him: the sun, the moon, snow, night. Instead of fighting unfavorable conditions, he made them play a part." This film is a masterpiece, comparable to Satyajit Ray's Pather Panchali or the movies of Robert Bresson in its ability to be simultaneously effortless and devastatingly complex. --Bret Fetzer

  

2.Considered by critics to be one of the 20th century's best films, L'ATALANTE is the final work of French director Jean Vigo's (ZERO FOR CONDUCT) tragically brief, but brilliant career. After their wedding, Juliette (Dita Parlo) and Jean (Jean Daste) set out on L'Atalante, the river barge that Jean captains. In a scene representative of the film's lovely, poetic cinematography, Juliette, both desiring and fearing her new life, wistfully walks atop the length of the barge, wedding dress fluttering in the wind. The couple soon settles into wedded bliss, with the companionship of quirky, tattooed bargeman Pere Jules. He provides many of the film's unexpected comedic moments (watch for the plethora of cats, and the cigarette smoking belly button).

Trouble arises, however, as Jean continually foils Juliette's attempts to learn more of life by listening to the radio and exploring the barge's ports. When a charming traveling salesman/entertainer (Gilles Margaritis) entices Juliette with stories of the charm of Paris, she decides to venture out on her own. The question of whether Jean and Julliette's love will win out over their conflicting ideas, along with the naturalistic, dreamlike visual world that Vigo creates, will keep viewers enraptured to the end.
  

3.  Collectors Edition

This intoxicatingly inventive masterpiece is one of the world's great films. A simple and engaging plot is transformed into a kaleidoscope of dazzling digressions and offbeat characterizations complete with tour-de-force scenes that still seem fresh and startling.

Jean, the young captain of the barge L'Atalante, marries Juliette, a village girl who has never left home before. They sail away together along with a cabin boy and the colorful sailor Pere Jules, played by Michel Simon-in a legendary, uproarious and unpredictable performance forming the very heart of Vigo's magical, anarchic universe. Becoming bored, Juliette slips off the ship to discover the lights of Paris-forcing Jean into heartbreak.


Restored in 2001, this version of the film aims to be as faithful to the original as possible. Viewers can once again enjoy the luminous beauty of Boris Kaufman's evocative cinematography and the marvelous music of Maurice Jaubert in Jean Vigo's triumphant masterpiece as it was meant to be seen.  
  



Mooviees.com is not the official site for this film.
All editorial views and opinions expressed here are for entertainment purposes only.

 News Headlines
  • Rebecca Mader To Join "Goats" [Friday, Oct 10, 2008]
  • ABC Develops "V" Remake [Friday, Oct 10, 2008]
  • Eric bana is "Armored" [Friday, Oct 10, 2008]
  • Rogen is "With Cancer" [Friday, Oct 10, 2008]
  • Bayona Helms Moody's "Hater" [Friday, Oct 10, 2008]
  • Pacino & Pfeiffer In Lasorda Biopic? [Thursday, Oct 9, 2008]
  • Foxx Is A "Law Abiding Citizen" [Thursday, Oct 9, 2008]
  • Josh Brolin Is "Jonah Hex"? [Thursday, Oct 9, 2008]
  • Gosling Sought For "Green Lantern"? [Thursday, Oct 9, 2008]
  • Whitaker Does Louis Armstrong Biopic [Wednesday, Oct 8, 2008]



  • DVD | Home | BoxOffice | All Celebs | All Movies | Release Schedule | In Production | In Theaters
    Coming Soon | Future Movies | Trailers | Scripts | Wallpapers | Directory | Advanced Search | Knihy
    Copyright ©2002 Mooviees.com All rights reserved.
    This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in any form. Use of this site signifies your agreement to the terms of use.