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IMDb > Les bas-fonds (1936)

Les bas-fonds (1936) More at IMDbPro »

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Overview

User Rating:
7.7/10   887 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Down 1% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writers:
Maxim Gorky (play)
Yevgeni Zamyatin (writer) ...
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Contact:
View company contact information for Les bas-fonds on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
10 September 1937 (USA) more
Genre:
Plot:
The winner of the Louis Delluc Prize as the most outstanding French photo-play of 1936, as selected... more | add synopsis
Awards:
1 win more
User Comments:
Renoir Does Gorky more (10 total)

Cast

  (Cast overview, first billed only)
Jean Gabin ... Wasska Pepel
Suzy Prim ... Vassilissa Kostyleva
Louis Jouvet ... Le baron / The Baron
Jany Holt ... Nastia
Vladimir Sokoloff ... Kostylev
Robert Le Vigan ... The Alcoholic Actor
Camille Bert ... The Count
René Génin ... Louka, the wise old man (as René Genin)
Paul Temps ... Satine
Robert Ozanne ... Jabot de Travers
Henri Saint-Isle ... Kletsch, the cobbler (as Saint-Iles)
Alex Allin
André Gabriello ... The Inspector
Léon Larive ... Felix, le majordomo
Nathalie Alexeeff ... Anna, the dying woman
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
The Lower Depths (USA) (literal English title)
Underground
Underworld (UK)
Nachtasyl (Austria) (Germany) [de]
Los bajos fondos (Spain) [es]
O Mundo do Vício (Portugal) [pt]
O ypokosmos (Greece) [el]
Sto vytho (Greece) (TV title) [el]
Verso la vita (Italy) [it]
Yömaja (Finland) [fi]
more
Runtime:
USA:90 min | France:95 min
Country:
Language:
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Mono (Tobis-Klangfilm)
Certification:
Company:

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Cameo: [Jacques Becker]a silhouette. more
Movie Connections:
Featured in Il mio viaggio in Italia (1999) more

FAQ

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11 out of 12 people found the following comment useful.
Renoir Does Gorky, 15 July 2005
Author: aliasanythingyouwant from United States

Jean Renoir's The Lower Depths is centered around a contrast in personalities. Jean Gabin, the great proletarian star, plays Pepel, a petty thief who remains jovial despite his restless desire to escape his deprived circumstances. While on a robbery job, Pepel meets The Baron, a disgraced nobleman, and the two strike up a friendship. These two men could not be more diametrically opposed, both in their social circumstances and their bearing. Pepel carries himself with the casual ease of a man who knows who he is, who's possessed of a basic trust in himself. The Baron, on the other hand, moves like he's perpetually running to the bathroom, his bowels - and his entire soul - afflicted with a painful case of tightness. The contrast between these two personalities, one open to life and the other closed off, is made all the more explicit by the differing acting styles of the two performers. No one was ever more natural than Gabin, with his understated charm and leonine presence. On the other side of the acting spectrum lies the extreme stylization of Louis Jouvet, who plays The Baron as a shambling collection of strained mannerisms. There's something elementally interesting about watching this clash of styles, this meeting of the naturalistic and the bizarrely theatrical. By some weird act of alchemy the two personalities, rendered in wildly different ways, mingle so pleasingly that we could scarcely ask for more.

Jean Renoir has made a highly-detailed, richly-textured humanist film out of Gorky's play. The story follows the various denizens of a lower-class boarding house lorded over by the slimy Kostylev, who's married to the jealous Vassilissa, who loves the restless Pepel, who's in love with Vassilissa's abused sister Natacha. The Baron, after losing his luxurious apartments over a money scandal, moves into the boarding-house, and alone among its inhabitants discovers bliss amidst the squalor. This might seem like a rather too glaringly pro-Socialist turn-of-events, the nobleman who becomes happy when he's brought low, but it works because Louis Jouvet is so subtly funny in the way he portrays The Baron's transformation. He makes The Baron seem a little bit teched, which helps to smooth out the character's ascent from suicidal desperation to grass-dozing, snail-fondling contentment. The acting overall is marvelous: Vladimir Sokoloff plays the old landlord Kostylev as a Dickensian creep; Suzy Prim brings a bitchy edge to the ambitious Vassilissa; and Junie Astor plays Natacha with a Cinderella-like down-trodden radiance. These characters find themselves embroiled in a scenario that's a bit more straight-forwardly melodramatic than in some of Renoir's other '30s films, but the plot barely matters what with all the physical detail and accomplished emoting - all orchestrated with a master's touch by Renoir, who tinges everything with a slightly sour irony. The staging is strikingly assured from start to finish, the camera-work possessed of an under-stated expressiveness that is purely Renoir. If the film falters anywhere compared to Renoir's other work it's in the slight sense of conventional melodramatic emphasis that creeps into some of the later scenes. The storytelling is sometimes casual and organic as in Renoir's masterpieces Grand Illusion and Rules of the Game, but there are other times when the plot-mechanics show through. Renoir normally smooths over these rough-spots, but in The Lower Depths he seems to have left them in, perhaps intentionally - perhaps meaning to give the film a certain conventional sense of climax. At any rate this hardly matters - the film is so richly textured and rhythmically satisfying that we can forgive Renoir for indulging in a few theatrical flourishes. This is one of the unquestioned classics of French poetic-realism.

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