Montparnasse 19 (1958)
Directed by Jacques Becker

Biography / Drama / Romance
aka: The Lovers of Montparnasse

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Montparnasse 19 (1958)
Cinematic biographies of famous artists are not a rare phenomenon, but few such films manage to evoke the acute sense of despair and injustice that Montparnasse 19 does.  In his last film but one, Jacques Becker paints a poignant and engaging tale of an artist struggling to achieve both perfection in his work and public recognition.

It is a deeply pessimistic but honest film.   You can think of so many artists who have suffered a similar fate to Modigliani.  His work was shunned and ridiculed during his lifetime, but within hours of his death, the art-dealers were out in force, crawling all over his works.   The final scene of this film makes the point very effectively - it is a painfully tragic ending, and one which makes you feel both sad and angry.

The film itself had something of an eventful journey in production.  It was originally to have been directed by the legendary director Max Ophüls, but he fell seriously ill and could not continue the project.  He suggested that Jacques Becker, another great director, should direct the film in his place. Ophüls himself died just a few days before the film was released.

This is easily one of Becker's better films.  As in his earlier film, Casque d'or , he manages to recreate the Paris in the early years of the 20th century - a curious melange of the gaiety and bustle of street cafés and the sinister shadowed back streets.   This schizophrenic atmosphere works to great effect, reflecting the changing mood of the film's central character.  When Modigliani's fate is finally sealed, the atmosphere becomes almost stifling - cold, dark, overwhelming.  And, in the shadows, lurks evil, in the shape of a wicked art-dealer (brilliantly played by Lino Ventura).

And who better to play Modigliani than Gérard Philipe?  An acting legend in his own lifetime, Philipe was the archetypal modern romantic hero - not the dashing, suave hero in the mould of Jean Marais, but a more human, slightly cynical kind of romantic hero.  Watching his performance in this film you might think he was made for the role of Modigliani - it is certainly one of his best screen performances.  Christian Matras' masterful photography captures a real feeling of torment and despair in Philipe's face - you can tell that the actor had a profound understanding of the artist's psychology.  But what makes his performance so memorable - and so moving - is the knowledge that Gérard Philipe died within two years of making this film - just a few days before his 37th birthday (the age at which Modigliani himself died).  This gives a tragic resonance to what is already a stirring film.
© James Travers 2001
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Becker film:
Le Trou (1960)

Film Synopsis

In the Montparnasse district of Paris in 1919, a young Italian painter, Amedeo Modigliani, struggles to make a living as an artist.  He falls in love with Jeanne, the daughter of wealthy parents.  Against her parents' wishes, Jeanne moves in with Modigliani, who is suffering from tuberculosis and has a drink problem.  An unscrupulous art dealer watches Modigliani's health decline with patient relish...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Jacques Becker
  • Script: Jacques Becker, Michel-Georges Michel (novel)
  • Cinematographer: Christian Matras
  • Music: Paul Misraki
  • Cast: Gérard Philipe (Amedeo Modigliani), Lilli Palmer (Beatrice Hastings), Lea Padovani (Rosalie), Gérard Séty (Léopold Zborowsky), Lino Ventura (Morel), Anouk Aimée (Jeanne Hébuterne), Lila Kedrova (Anna Zborowsky), Arlette Poirier (Lulu), Pâquerette (Madame Salomon), Marianne Oswald (Berthe Weil), Judith Magre (La prostituée devant le café), Denise Vernac (Madame Hébuterne), Robert Ripa (Marcel - le maquereau), Jean Lanier (Monsieur Hébuterne), Carole Sands (Madame Dickson), Jany Clair (La bonne), Antoine Tudal (Cendrars), Bruno Balp (Le boucher modèle), Monique Ardoin (Anna), Stéphane Audran (Une fille à la terrasse)
  • Country: France / Italy
  • Language: French
  • Support: Black and White
  • Runtime: 108 min
  • Aka: The Lovers of Montparnasse ; Les amants de Montparnasse ; Hero of Montmatre ; Heroes in White ; Modigliani of Montparnasse

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