Based on novel by Pierre Dumarchais. The story of the aging pedant who sells his soul to Satan in exchange for youth and knowledge.Based on novel by Pierre Dumarchais. The story of the aging pedant who sells his soul to Satan in exchange for youth and knowledge.Based on novel by Pierre Dumarchais. The story of the aging pedant who sells his soul to Satan in exchange for youth and knowledge.
Photos
Claude Bertrand
- Roger
- (uncredited)
Louis Blanche
- L'aveugle
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsThe story takes place over 3 nights, beginning on Walpurgis Night, April 30, 1927. However, the third night, which should be May 2, the clients at Pigall's nightclub are listening to the radio and eagerly awaiting the news of Charles Lindbergh's arrival in France after his solo flight across the Atlantic, which took place on May 21, 1927.
- ConnectionsReferenced in A Room in Town (1982)
Featured review
Before his sad cinematic decline, over which it is probably kinder to pass in silence, the consistent quality of Claude-Autant Lara's output from 'Douce' in 1943 to 'En cas de Malheur' in 1958 is truly remarkable. His take on the Faust legend made during that period however is undeniably one of his weakest and despite its unique concept is unable to justify its running time of two hours.
This director's trademark bitterness and cynicism are here encapsulated in the portrayal of Mephistopheles by Yves Montand as a drug-trafficking nightclub owner, complete with gammy leg. He is at once both monstrous and pitiable and although miscast on paper Montand's charisma and wry Gallic charm enable him to pull it off, just about.
The film really belongs to Michele Morgan, an artiste of the utmost sensibilty and grace whose performance as the title character exhibits the qualities that made her and kept her a star. One admires her even more here as she is obliged to rise above the ineffably naff acting of Jean-Francois Calvé as Georges Faust. She has compensations however in her scenes with Montand, Massimo Girotti and two stalwarts of French stage and screen, Louis Seigner and Jean Debucourt.
Autant-Lara's preferred composer Réne Cloerec supplies the score whilst the Art Déco settings of Max Douy are sensational. The final scene is stunning in its simplicity but it does take an age to get there.
This director's trademark bitterness and cynicism are here encapsulated in the portrayal of Mephistopheles by Yves Montand as a drug-trafficking nightclub owner, complete with gammy leg. He is at once both monstrous and pitiable and although miscast on paper Montand's charisma and wry Gallic charm enable him to pull it off, just about.
The film really belongs to Michele Morgan, an artiste of the utmost sensibilty and grace whose performance as the title character exhibits the qualities that made her and kept her a star. One admires her even more here as she is obliged to rise above the ineffably naff acting of Jean-Francois Calvé as Georges Faust. She has compensations however in her scenes with Montand, Massimo Girotti and two stalwarts of French stage and screen, Louis Seigner and Jean Debucourt.
Autant-Lara's preferred composer Réne Cloerec supplies the score whilst the Art Déco settings of Max Douy are sensational. The final scene is stunning in its simplicity but it does take an age to get there.
- brogmiller
- Jan 24, 2023
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Marguerite of the Night
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime2 hours 5 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Marguerite de la nuit (1955) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer