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Seven Days Seven Nights

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Director
  
Peter Brook

Story by
  
Marguerite Duras

Country
  
France

7/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Duration
  

Language
  
French

Seven Days Seven Nights movie poster

Release date
  
25 May 1960 (1960-05-25)

Based on
  
Moderato cantabile  by Marguerite Duras

Writer
  
Marguerite Duras (novel), Marguerite Duras (adaptation), Gerard Jarlot (adaptation)

Screenplay
  
Marguerite Duras, Gerard Jarlot

Cast
  
Jeanne Moreau
(Anne Desbarèdes),
Jean-Paul Belmondo
(Chauvin),
Jean Deschamps
(M. Desbarèdes),
Colette Régis
(Miss Giraud)

Similar movies
  
Jeanne Moreau movies, Dramas, Other similar movies

Seven Days... Seven Nights (French: Moderato cantabile) is a 1960 French drama film directed by Peter Brook. It was entered into the 1960 Cannes Film Festival, where Jeanne Moreau won the award for Best Actress. It is based on the 1958 novel Moderato cantabile by Marguerite Duras.

Contents

Seven Days Seven Nights movie scenes

Plot

Seven Days Seven Nights movie scenes

Anne Desbarèdes is a young woman who is married to a wealthy businessman and is living a monotonous existence in the town of Blaye, a small commune. After being an indirect witness to a murder which happened in a café, she goes back to it the next day, where she meets Chauvin, who informs her in more detail about the crime scene events. Anna due to her unstable mental balance starts to think that he intends to kill her.

Cast

Seven Days Seven Nights movie scenes

  • Jeanne Moreau as Anne Desbarèdes
  • Jean-Paul Belmondo as Chauvin
  • Pascale de Boysson as Bar's owner
  • Jean Deschamps as M. Desbarèdes
  • Didier Haudepin as Pierre
  • Colette Régis as Miss Giraud
  • Valeric Dobuzinsky as Assassin (as Valéric)
  • Production

    Duras' novella was published in 1958. It was read by Peter Brook, who wanted to turn it into a film. He secured the rights from Duras and wanted to give the lead role to Jeanne Moreau, whom he had directed in a Paris production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.

    However Brook's only other film, The Beggar's Opera, had been a box office flop and raising money was difficult. According to a newspaper report "after almost a year of financial, artistic and emotional blackmail and diplomacy, Raoul Levy undertook to produce the film for love."

    Levy described the film as "a romantic suspense story that only uses two principals. I guess that you could say that, through the basis of a passive love story, we learn how a crime of passion was committed."

    Levy said he wanted Simone Signoret to play the female lead. However Brook wanted Moreau and under the contract Brook had with Levy, Brook, Moreau and Duras had complete artistic control. The director admits this was "very unusual" but the film needed "assured and delicate" handling to succeed.

    Brook says Levy did not understand the script but "was convinced that if Brook, Moreau and Duras saw something in it, something must be there." Levy decided not to show the script to potential financiers. Instead he went to them and said, "Look here, you turned down The 400 Blows because you couldn't understand the script, you turned down Hiroshima Mon Amor; well, I can't make head nor tail of this script and what's more I'm not even going to show it to you - but I want 30 million francs." The money was raised.

    The male lead was given to Richard Burton, who was going to play the part in French. "This one is for art, not money," said Burton. "For a classical actor, the key thing is variation - unusual kinds of things in different media. It's all a matter of expanding one's acting range."

    However Burton's casting fell through shortly before filming was to begin. The actor later claimed this was because "French unions obejcted at the last minute to a British actor appearing in an all-French production, even though England's Peter Brook was the director." Jean Paul Belmondo replaced him, deciding to appear in the movie instead of taking a theatre role. He would not appear on stage for over twenty five years

    During filming, Belmondo was in a car accident while driving in which Moreau's son was injured.

    Reception

    The film performed well at the box office in Paris but struggled outside.

    Duras later said she felt that Brook had "made the film beautifully." However Belmondo, who preferred making adventure movies, disliked the film. In a 1964 interview he said:

    It was very boring. Like Antonioni's films, Marguerite Duras' script was full of sous-entendres (hidden meanings). Everyone was looking something significant in every expression. You didn't just drink a glass of wine. You asked yourself, 'Why does she want me to drink it?'

    The film was released in the US in 1964. The Los Angeles Times called it "perfection".

    Awards

    The film was nominated for the Palme d'Or at the 1960 Cannes Film Festival. Jeanne Moreau won the award for Best Actress.

    The critic from the New York Times who attended the festival called the movie "dull and empty".

    References

    Seven Days... Seven Nights Wikipedia
    Seven Days... Seven Nights IMDb Seven Days... Seven Nights themoviedb.org