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Manon of the Spring | |
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Directed by | Marcel Pagnol |
Written by | Marcel Pagnol |
Produced by | Marcel Pagnol |
Starring | Jacqueline Pagnol Raymond Pellegrin Henri Vilbert |
Cinematography | Willy Faktorovitch |
Edited by | Jacques Bianchi Raymonde Bianchi |
Music by | Raymond Legrand |
Production company | Les Films Marcel Pagnol |
Distributed by | Gaumont Distribution |
Release date |
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Running time | 235 minutes |
Country | France |
Languages | French, Occitan |
Manon of the Spring (French: Manon des sources, pronounced [manɔ̃ de suʁs]) is a 1952 French two-part drama film directed by Marcel Pagnol and starring Jacqueline Pagnol, Raymond Pellegrin and Henri Vilbert.[1][2] It was shot at Marseille Studios and on location around La Treille and Aubagne. The film's sets were designed by the art director Eugène Delfau. It was released as two separate films, the second under the title Ugolin.
It was later turned by Pagnol into the novel The Water of the Hills, augmented with a prequel first part (Jean de Florette), and was adapted again as a 1986 film, alongside Jean de Florette.
Cast
- Jacqueline Pagnol as Manon des Sources
- Raymond Pellegrin as Maurice, L'Instituteur
- Henri Vilbert as Le Curé
- Rellys as Ugolin
- Fernand Sardou as Philoxène, le Maire
- Annie Roudier as La Mère de l'instituteur
- Edmond Ardisson as Ange, le Fontainier
- Henri Arius as Claudius, le Boucher
- André Bervil as Anatole, le Boulanger
- Charles Blavette as Pamphile, le Menuisier
- Jean-Marie Bon as Cabridan
- Marguerite Chabert as La Mère de Polyte
- Luce Dassas as Femme d'Ange
- Daxely as Josias, frère de Jonas
- Del Bosco as Jonas, frère de Josias
- Édouard Delmont as Anglade
- Alfred Goulin as Le grand Bossu
- Marcelle Géniat as Baptistine, la Piémontaise
- Jenny Hélia as Aricie, femme de Cabridan
- Christian Lude as L'Ingénieur
- Julien Maffre as Pétugue, le Forgeron
- Jeanne Mars as Nathalie
- Marthe Marty as Sidonie
- Milly Mathis as Amélie, la Femme du Menuisier
- Jean Panisse as Eliacin
- Henri Poupon as Le Papet
- René Sarvil as Le Brigadier
- Jean Toscan as Polyte
- Andrée Turcy as La Bouchère
- Jacques Valois as Le Directeur des Bauxites
- Robert Vattier as Monsieur Belloiseau
References
- ^ Crisp 2015, p. 245.
- ^ Hayward 2016, p. 42.
Sources
- Crisp, C. G. (2015). French cinema : a critical filmography. Volume 1, 1929-1939. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-01703-1. JSTOR j.ctt16gz9x6. OCLC 911179668.
- Hayward, Susan (2016). "Middlebrow Taste". In Faulkner, Sally (ed.). Middlebrow cinema. London: Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group. ISBN 978-1-315-63056-4. OCLC 945771729 – via Open Research Library.
Further reading
- Rege, Philippe (2009). Encyclopedia of French Film Directors. Vol. 1. Blue Ridge Summit: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6939-4. OCLC 956650128.