Running time 91 minutes Country France West Germany Language French Box office $7,690,000 1,329,000 admissions (France) The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (: Les Parapluies de Cherbourg) is a 1964 French-West German - directed by, starring and.
'Les Parapluies de Cherbourg' is a wonderful, sincere and uplifting film that everyone should go and see at least once, and preferably on a big screen. It reminded me a bit of 'Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris', a film which I saw in television a long time ago and would do absolutely anything to get hold of a copy. The opening credit sequence sets the mood perfectly: a birds eye view of the inhabitants of Cherbourg in the rain beneath their umbrellas as they walk across the frame is reduced to a colourful abstraction.Ĭatherine Deneuve is predictably gorgeous and the first act of the young couples courtship is one of the most beautifully pure pieces of cinema I can think of. Visually it's stunning, with a bold and vibrant colour palette of almost hallucinogenic intensity and sumptuous costume and set design (that wallpaper!). Because of this I found the French a lot easier to understand than with more naturalistic films, which was fairly handy for me as the print I was watching was with Dutch subtitles! I must confess, I did find that the music (written by Michel Legrand) began to grate towards the end of the 87 minute running time but even so there is still much to admire here. This gives the most banal of lines a rhythm and cadence of their own. The verse/chorus format of popular music and the musical genre is eschewed for an approach more resembling a modern opera, as the characters croon their lines to each other over a continuous score.
There is nothing particularly new about the plot, which is a straightforward and uncomplicated love story divided into three acts, but the beauty of this film is in the telling of it.Īll the dialogue in this film is sung, which at first is a little unsettling, but it actually takes very little time to adjust to. This must be amongst the most distinctive, idiosyncratic and exquisite films I have seen in a long while. Find a Michel Legrand - Les Parapluies De Cherbourg first pressing or reissue.