Après l'amour (1948)
Directed by Maurice Tourneur

Drama / Romance

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Apres l'amour (1948)
The great French film actor Pierre Blanchar gives one of his most memorable performances in this inspired and rather poignant adaptation of a stage play by Henri Duvernois and Pierre Wolff.  Après l'amour had previously been adapted for cinema - first in 1924 by Maurice Champreux and then in 1931 by Léonce Perret.   It is a good example of the kind of romantic melodrama that was popular until the early 1950s - even if, like a Victorian novel, the ending has perhaps one plot twist too many.

This was the penultimate film to be made by Maurice Tourneur, a director who made a significant contribution to 'quality cinema' in the 1930s and 1940s with many important works - Les Gaietés de l'escadron (1932), Les Deux orphelines (1933), La Main du diable (1943) - although nowadays he is largely - and criminally - overlooked.  Tourneur's films have a distinctive look and feel which is informed by German expressionism and French poetic realism - note his use of light and shade to add depth and character to a situation and to heighten the emotional impact, in a way that is subtle and never contrived.

Like many of Tourneur's films, Après l'amour is beautifully shot, appropriating the moody film noir aesthetic that the director had helped to define in the early 1930s, through such films as Au nom de la loi (1932) and Justin de Marseille (1935), and would use so effectively in his final film, Impasse des deux anges (1948).
© James Travers 2006
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Maurice Tourneur film:
Impasse des deux anges (1948)

Film Synopsis

At a reception in honour of her husband winning the Noble Prize for literature, Nicole Mézaule meets a former lover who has some news for her.  She is invited to visit a house outside Paris where she makes a shocking discovery.  For the past eight years her husband, François, has been leading a double life - spending his afternoons with another woman who has borne him a son.   François explains that all this began when Nicole left him for another man, eight years before.  In the short time that elapsed before Nicole returned to him, having been thrown over by her lover, he had met and fallen in love with another woman, a young student named Germaine…
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Maurice Tourneur
  • Script: Jean Bernard-Luc, Henri Duvernois (play), Pierre Wolff (play)
  • Cinematographer: Armand Thirard
  • Music: Marc Lanjean
  • Cast: Pierre Blanchar (François Mesaule), Simone Renant (Nicole Mesaule), Giselle Pascal (Germaine), Gabrielle Fontan (Catou), Germaine Ledoyen (La soeur de Germaine), Nicole Chollet (La bonne), Claire Gérard (L'invitée), Marcel Melrac (Le propriètaire), René Hell (Le marchand de violettes), Paul Denneville (Le vieux journaliste), Jean-Jacques Duverger (Henri), Fernand Fabre (Fournier), Léon Arvel (Le médecin), Palmyre Levasseur (La voisine), Serge Canda, Cecil Baur, Alain Clairfond, Lucien Dorval, Lucien Jeunesse, Lisette Lebon
  • Country: France
  • Language: French
  • Support: Black and White
  • Runtime: 95 min

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