Derborence (film)

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Directed byFrancis Reusser
Written byFrancis Reusser
Christiane Grimm
Jacques Baynac
Based onDerborence by Charles-Ferdinand Ramuz
StarringIsabel Otero
Jacques Penot
Maria Machado
Derborence
Directed byFrancis Reusser
Written byFrancis Reusser
Christiane Grimm
Jacques Baynac
Based onDerborence by Charles-Ferdinand Ramuz
StarringIsabel Otero
Jacques Penot
Maria Machado
CinematographyEmmanuel Machuel
Edited byFrancis Reusser
Christine Benoît
Release date
  • 1985 (1985)
Running time
102 minutes
CountriesSwitzerland
France
LanguageFrench

Derborence is a 1985 French-Swiss film directed by Francis Reusser, adapted from Charles-Ferdinand Ramuz’s novel, about a young wife whose husband is presumed dead after a mountain landslide. The film was screened in competition at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival, was also shown at festivals including Montreal and Locarno, and won the César Award for Best French-Language Film in 1986.[1][2][3]

Antoine and Thérèse are newly married when Antoine goes with Séraphin to the alpine pasture. When a landslide is believed to have killed everyone on the mountain, Thérèse, who is pregnant, struggles to come to terms with the loss. Antoine later returns alive, but his reappearance unsettles the village. Believing that Séraphin may still be alive, he goes back into the mountains, and Thérèse follows him.[1]

Cast

The cast includes:[4]

  • Isabel Otero as Thérèse
  • Jacques Penot as Antoine
  • Maria Machado as Aline, Thérèse's mother
  • Jean-Marc Bory as Nendaz
  • Bruno Cremer as Séraphin

Production

The film was adapted from Charles-Ferdinand Ramuz’s 1934 novel of the same name.[1][5]

Reception

Awards

The film won the César Award for Best French-Language Film in 1986.[3]

Critical response

Filmdienst described the film as a mythical story of romantic love, but criticised its superficial widescreen imagery and loud effects.[4] Filmbulletin argued that its form and content were out of sync, and criticised Reusser’s emphasis on technique and effects over the story itself.[5]

Digitisation

The film was digitised in 2020 by the Cinémathèque suisse.[2]

Festival screenings

References

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