Hécate

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Directed byDaniel Schmid
Screenplay byPascal Jardin
Daniel Schmid
Based onHécate et ses chiens by Paul Morand
Produced byMarcel Hoehn
Hécate
Directed byDaniel Schmid
Screenplay byPascal Jardin
Daniel Schmid
Based onHécate et ses chiens by Paul Morand
Produced byMarcel Hoehn
StarringBernard Giraudeau
Lauren Hutton
CinematographyRenato Berta
Edited byNicole Lubtchansky
Music byCarlos d'Alessio
Production
companies
T&C Film AG
Distributed byGaumont Distribution
Release date
  • 1982 (1982)
Running time
105 minutes
CountrySwitzerland
LanguageFrench

Hécate is a 1982 Swiss drama film directed and co-written by Daniel Schmid. Adapted from Paul Morand’s novel Hécate et ses chiens, it stars Bernard Giraudeau and Lauren Hutton and follows a love story set in colonial-era Morocco. The film premiered in 1982 and was screened in competition at the 33rd Berlin International Film Festival in 1983. It was later screened at festivals including Buenos Aires, Ankara and Zurich.[1][2][3]

Adapted from Paul Morand’s novel Hécate et ses chiens,[3] the film follows Julien Rochelle, a young French diplomat posted to North Africa. Restless in a community of displaced colonial figures, he meets Clothilde, and their casual liaison develops into an obsession that continues to affect him years later.[1]

Cast

The cast includes:[2]

Reception

Awards and nominations

At the 1983 César Awards, Pascal Jardin and Daniel Schmid were nominated for Best Adaptation and Dialogue.[4]

Critical response

Filmo described Hécate as a work of grand cinema, a classical love story set in Morocco’s diplomatic circles and given an absorbing visual style by Schmid and cinematographer Renato Berta.[5] Filmdienst described the film as a colonial-era Moroccan love story that moves between melodrama and a subtly critical reinterpretation of male passion and self-destruction.[2]

Festival screenings

The film premiered in 1982.[1] It was screened in competition at the 33rd Berlin International Film Festival in 1983.[6] It was later screened at festivals including the Festival International du Film de La Rochelle in 1994, the Festival du Film de Genève in 1995, the 13th Buenos Aires International Independent Film Festival in 2011, the 24th Ankara International Film Festival in 2013, and the 12th Zurich Film Festival in 2016.[1]

See also

References

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