Fragile Carne, just before his great period. Although it is sometimes
hesitantly directed, and marred by longueurs, HOTEL DU NORD is full of the
faded charm and beauty typical of French films of the late 1930s, as well
as
a relative lightness of touch unusual with this director. All of his
great
virtues are here: the cramped interiors broken up by gliding, complex,
delicious camera movements; a melancholy deployment of light and shade;
remarkable, wistful sets by Alexander Trauner, which are so evocative that
they, as the title suggests, take on a shaping personality of their own;
the quietly mournful music of Maurice Jaubert; a seemingly casual plot
about
romance, tragedy and fatalism that casts a noose over its characters;
extraordinary performances by some of the greatest players of all time, in
this case Louis Jouvet and Arletty.
In fact, the film's biggest failing, and I find myself astonished (as
someone who usually, didactically, minimises its importance) to admit it,
is
its script. It has plenty of wit and poignancy, but without the poetry and
irony regular Carne collaborator Jacques Prevert brought to their best
films, it cannot avoid slipping into cliche (even if it is only cliche in
hindsight).
Ostensibly set in the boarding house, the film sets up its opening idea
of
community with two interconnecting tales of doomed love, and emotional,
metaphysical and actual isolation
The doomed love scenario is the one that works least well. Annabella is
very beautiful, but not very good at doing tragic, while Aumont's
callowness, brilliantly appropriate though it may be, by its nature
obtrudes
any real, felt, romance. Maybe it's just me, but I find it hard to
sympathise with a couple, so young, so attractive, who, after only a few
months, are so racked with despair that they have to shoot each other.
Their high-flown lines are rather embarrassing too. Of course, this
affair
is not meant to be plausible - they are symbolic of youth, hope and
possibility being crushed in France, or maybe France itself, despairing,
resigned, waiting for death. For symbols to be truly powerful, they must
convince on a narrative level, which, I feel, they don't quite
here.
What saves this plot is its connection with the story of M. Edmond, a
character linked to the great tradition of French gangsters. Although we
only learn it gradually, he is a killer in hiding, living off the
prostitute
played by Arletty, having dobbed in his accomplices. In his previous
'role'
- and the theatricality of his position is crucial - he had one set of
traits; in hiding he has assumed their complete opposite. Living a rather
aimless life, he is profoundly shaken by the lovers' pact, and becomes
fatalistic, realising the folly of trying to cheat death.
In this way - the admission that one is less a person than a collection of
signs, and that death is an unavoidable reality the most powerful
masculinity must succumb to - Edmond is like a romantic prototype of
Melville's clinical killers. With one exception - he gives briefly into
hope, a delusion which only strenghtens - if that's not too much of an
unbearable irony - his fatal resolve.
All this could have been trite if it wasn't for the truly amazing
performance of Louis Jouvet. I had studied his theatrical work at
college,
but this was my first taste of his screen talents, and he reveals himself
to
be worthy of the greats - Grant, Mastroianni, Clift, Mason, Mitchum,
Cotten
- giving a quiet nobility to a role which is more of a conception (he,
needless to say, is allegorical too) than an actual person. Edmond begins
the film a minor supporting character, but emerges as a tragic hero of
some
force. Like all those major actors, Jouvet's brilliance lies in what he
conceals.
On a formal level, what amazes is Carne's grasping, ten years before its
flourishing, of the techniques of the great Hollywood melodramas of Sirk,
Ophuls, Ray and Minnelli. Although his theatricality lacks the fluidity
and
clear-eyed beauty of Sierck's contemporary German melodramas (check out
the
masterpieces ZU NEUEN UFERN and LA HABENERA), Carne's style truly fits his
theme - that of entrapment, paralysis, resignation.
The film's principle motif is that of water - the credits float and
dissolve, the hotel stands by a waterway - but instead of Renoir's open
river of possibility, we have a canal, stagnant and manmade, going
nowhere.
The film begins as it ends, and the setting never changes, except for one
brief interlude from which both escapees are doomed to return. Characters
can only escape through death - their entrapment is emphasised by the
narrow
rooms they occupy, the walls and frames that hold them captive, the
windows
that look out on an escape they can never achieve. Any hope at the end,
therefore, is profoundly, if romantically, compromised.
8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Atmosphere,atmosphere..., 13 août 2001
Author:
dbdumonteil
"Hotel du Nord " is the only Carné movie from the 1936-1946 era which
has dialogs not written by Jacques Prévert,but by Henri Jeanson.Janson
was much more interested in the Jouvet/Arletty couple than in the pair
of lovers,Annabella/Aumont.The latter is rather bland ,and their story
recalls oddly the Edith Piaf's song "les amants d'un jour",except that
the chanteuse's tale is a tragic one.What's fascinating today is this
popular little world ,the canal Saint-Martin settings.
This movie is dear to the French movies buffs for another very special
reason.The pimp Jouvet tells his protégée Raymonde he wants a change of
air(atmosphère) Because she does not understand the meaning of the
world atmosphère,the whore Raymonde (wonderful Arletty)thinks it's an
insult and she delivers this line,that is ,undeniably,the most famous
of the whole French cinéma:
In French :"Atmosphère?Atmosphère?Est-ce que j'ai une gueule
d'atmosphère?" Translation attempt:"Atmosphere?atmosphere?Have I got an
atmosphere face? This is our French "Nobody's perfect".
7 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- Brilliant, 22 juillet 1999
Author:
Jonno-B de Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
This is an excellent film, and is the sort of treasure that one can only
catch through sporadic cinema showings, as it is unavailable on video/DVD.
The way that the film begins with the two lovers arriving, and ends with
them leaving (although quite a lot happens in between, and they don't stay
in one place during this time), gives you a sense of closure, and a feeling
that all is right with the world.
If you get a chance to see this film, then do. I can't wait to see it
again,
and wish that it could be put on general release.
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Canal Plus, 6 décembre 2003
Author:
writers_reign de London, England
I've just checked out the previous comments for this movie; it is
interesting to note that 1) they are all favorable, 2) they all date
from 1999 onwards and 3) they range from a simple recording of a joyous
experience to the quasi-academic/analytical. This tells us clearly that
even a film made 65 years ago can still speak to us today and bring
pleasure on the one hand whilst inspiring in-depth analysis on the
other. I am only saddened that not one commenter deigned to give a nod
to Jean Aurenche, the great screenwriter (though one correspondent, did
acknowledge Aurenche's co-writer Henri Jeanson who helped adapt the
Eugene Dabit novel). In his 80-odd years Aurenche wrote more than 70
movies, just under half with Pierre Bost, and arguably his best known
script outside France was 'Jeux Interdits' in 1952, though he also
wrote 'Paris brute-t-il?' (Is Paris Burning?) an international
production, and toward the end of his career, wrote for Tavernier -
'L'horlager de St. Paul', 'Coup de Torchon' - and his stories about
working during the occupation inspired Tavernier to immortalize him in
'Laissez-Passer'. But I digress: French actors have always had a
penchant for single names - Raimu, Bourvil, Coluche, Fernandel, etc -
and in Hotel du Nord we have no less than three of them, Andrex,
Annabel and Arletty. The first two fell by the wayside - unless you
want to count the toilet tissue made famous in England by TV
commercials featuring puppies - but Arletty remains one of the all-time
greats and even rumors of collaboration have failed to dim her memory.
Here she is at her best which was just as well as she was up against
Louis Jouvet, another giant of the French stage and screen. The film is
drenched in atmosphere which is echoed, whether intentionally or not,
in Arletty's great line, which our French commenter rightly says is the
most famous in French cinema and which he/she translates well as
'atmosphere, does this face look like atmosphere (is it that this
face). Though he was no Jacques Prevert (but then, who is?) Aurenche
had undoubtedly absorbed the poetic realism invented by Prevert and
brought it to bear on this, only his sixth screenplay. Though at a
basic level it is just another melodrama that ends in tears there are
metaphors and symbols a plenty if, as our Dublin commenter, you care to
look for them. The small, enclosed and private world just behind Gare
de l'est, the 'trouble in paradise' motif that is introduced as soon as
the idyllic opening sequence of 'one big happy family' has been
established, the threat from outside - at a basic level the hoods who
have come to find Mr Edmond, at another the Nazi thugs waiting in the
wings - etc. Read it how you will it remains a great film. Apart from
Aurenche none of the other commenters mentioned Bernard Blier, also at
the beginning of a long and distinguished career, to say nothing of
siring director Bertrand Blier - the commenter who was so struck with
Louis Jouvet may care to know that Blier played opposite Jouvet some
nine years later in Clouzot's 'Quai des Orfevres'. The Hotel du Nord is
still standing but is now (or was when I last visited), owned by Greeks
who haven't a clue about its place in history despite the smattering of
lobby cards, affiches, etc in the bar and it is now a venue for English
comics. The canal St. Martin is itself undergoing major changes,
presumably not for the better but as for Carne's movie and Sandy
Traunaur's sets, both were Canal Plus long before there was a TV
channel (now technically defunct) and will remain so long after Canal +
is just a co-producer credit on sub-Carne movies.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Athmosperic, 5 mars 2006
Author:
Atavisten de Tellus
In a hotel in Paris two lovers agree to take their own lives, the woman
is romanticizing the suicide in a degree she must represent the
escapism of many not so well-off in prewar Paris. The hotel is in
itself a meeting place for the people of the district. Pierre shoots
Renee, but is disturbed by Edmond so he flees the scene.
The story in itself is not so extraordinary today, but nothing takes
away from its impact still. It has no problem of holding your attention
to the very end. Its my first meet with any involved in 'Hotel du
Nord'. Louis Jouvet is very good in his joy and meaningless role that
finds meaning for just a little while. So is Arletty.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- Just a pointer: the whole film was shot on set, 8 septembre 2004
Author:
Sxilderik de Paris, France
I love this movie, Jouvet, Arletty, Blier, Carné... almost everything
has already been said about the movie, but there is one detail I'd like
to shed some light onto: no footage of the real, still standing, Hôtel
du Nord (is it still? I heard it was to be demolished...) has been used
for the movie - the whole scene has been rebuilt on set, the main
reason being that they could not stop the traffic on the St Martin
canal for several weeks.
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- ****, 2 mai 2005
Author:
Gary170459 de Derby, UK
I suppose I always felt that Hotel du Nord was studio-bound, the
movement of people cars and camera were just too effortlessly smooth
and stagey to have been filmed on location. But no problem - it's still
a much underrated lovely composition from Marcel Carne. The plot seems
a bit choppy at times, as if they were making it up as they went along,
but because it is unpredictable holds the attention to the bitter end.
The money shots when the 2 lovers are alone in their room are saddled
with some rather stilted dialogue, but it's all so lovely to fall into
any inanity can be accepted. Are these 2 young people symbols of a
cancerous hopelessness in pre-War France or simply idiots? Suicide
pacts are fairly common; if the suicidees are young and healthy with
their lives before them untrammelled would you think anything other
than that they were just misguided fools?
Arletty played the part of prostitute well - she kept that zipper on
her dress busy throughout anyway! I've only seen a few films with
Jouvet - he is the most impressive invention as pimp in HDN - my
trouble is shallow: every time I see his face I think of Sonnie Hale in
Evergreen!
A remarkably atmospheric, well acted and photographed film with so much
happening it needs a few viewings to get it all in place. Annabella and
Aumont made an exceptionally beautiful couple; Francois (Heurtebise)
Perier in his 2nd film had a small amusing part as a gay man. All in
all: wonderful.
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Story of working class people in pre-World War II Paris., 4 janvier 1999
Author:
Charles Jenkins de Chapel Hill, B N.C., U.S.A.
A true classic. Beautifully filmed and acted. Reveals an area of Paris
which is alive and filled with comedy and tragedy. Although the area of
'Hotel du Nord' and the Hotel itself still exists, it is not as gay (in the
original sense of the word) and joyful as it once must have been. The film
makes one yearn for the past, which has been lost, with a sigh and
bittersweetness.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Marcel Carné and the celebration of the greatness of French cinema., 9 août 2007
Author:
Lalit Rao (cpowerccc@yahoo.com) de Paris, France
Hotel Du Nord is a gripping drama of guilt in which Marcel Carne
portrayed an entertaining tale of ill-fated love which also functions
as a revolt against the cruel world.The film is based entirely on a
pair of hapless lovers.Pierre and Renee were mistaken when they
believed that suicide would put an end to their misery.Hotel Du Nord
has its own inimitable charm as its inhabitants have become an
essential part of the establishment.There is an element of togetherness
as everyone flocks to Hotel Du Nord to eat,chat etc.Marcel Carne has
remained true to the spirit of the films produced in 30s and 40s as
Hotel Du Nord has a certain kind of nostalgic feel.Carne,while
recreating the life of Parisian roads was able to create a sort of
nostalgia for black and white giving a unique genre of poetic realism
to his oeuvre.Hotel Du Nord can be termed as a quintessence of
cinematographic populism.The 14th July ball scene on the banks of Saint
Martin canal remains a magnificent sequence.The film's immense
popularity can be judged from the fact that Hotel Du Nord has been
declared as a national monument.
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Hôtel du Nord (1938)
12 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-

Faded, but gorgeous., 22 septembre 1999
Author: Darragh O' Donoghue (hitch1899_@hotmail.com) de Dublin, Ireland
Fragile Carne, just before his great period. Although it is sometimes hesitantly directed, and marred by longueurs, HOTEL DU NORD is full of the faded charm and beauty typical of French films of the late 1930s, as well as a relative lightness of touch unusual with this director. All of his great virtues are here: the cramped interiors broken up by gliding, complex, delicious camera movements; a melancholy deployment of light and shade; remarkable, wistful sets by Alexander Trauner, which are so evocative that they, as the title suggests, take on a shaping personality of their own; the quietly mournful music of Maurice Jaubert; a seemingly casual plot about romance, tragedy and fatalism that casts a noose over its characters; extraordinary performances by some of the greatest players of all time, in this case Louis Jouvet and Arletty.
In fact, the film's biggest failing, and I find myself astonished (as someone who usually, didactically, minimises its importance) to admit it, is its script. It has plenty of wit and poignancy, but without the poetry and irony regular Carne collaborator Jacques Prevert brought to their best films, it cannot avoid slipping into cliche (even if it is only cliche in hindsight).
Ostensibly set in the boarding house, the film sets up its opening idea of community with two interconnecting tales of doomed love, and emotional, metaphysical and actual isolation The doomed love scenario is the one that works least well. Annabella is very beautiful, but not very good at doing tragic, while Aumont's callowness, brilliantly appropriate though it may be, by its nature obtrudes any real, felt, romance. Maybe it's just me, but I find it hard to sympathise with a couple, so young, so attractive, who, after only a few months, are so racked with despair that they have to shoot each other. Their high-flown lines are rather embarrassing too. Of course, this affair is not meant to be plausible - they are symbolic of youth, hope and possibility being crushed in France, or maybe France itself, despairing, resigned, waiting for death. For symbols to be truly powerful, they must convince on a narrative level, which, I feel, they don't quite here.
What saves this plot is its connection with the story of M. Edmond, a character linked to the great tradition of French gangsters. Although we only learn it gradually, he is a killer in hiding, living off the prostitute played by Arletty, having dobbed in his accomplices. In his previous 'role' - and the theatricality of his position is crucial - he had one set of traits; in hiding he has assumed their complete opposite. Living a rather aimless life, he is profoundly shaken by the lovers' pact, and becomes fatalistic, realising the folly of trying to cheat death.
In this way - the admission that one is less a person than a collection of signs, and that death is an unavoidable reality the most powerful masculinity must succumb to - Edmond is like a romantic prototype of Melville's clinical killers. With one exception - he gives briefly into hope, a delusion which only strenghtens - if that's not too much of an unbearable irony - his fatal resolve.
All this could have been trite if it wasn't for the truly amazing performance of Louis Jouvet. I had studied his theatrical work at college, but this was my first taste of his screen talents, and he reveals himself to be worthy of the greats - Grant, Mastroianni, Clift, Mason, Mitchum, Cotten - giving a quiet nobility to a role which is more of a conception (he, needless to say, is allegorical too) than an actual person. Edmond begins the film a minor supporting character, but emerges as a tragic hero of some force. Like all those major actors, Jouvet's brilliance lies in what he conceals.
On a formal level, what amazes is Carne's grasping, ten years before its flourishing, of the techniques of the great Hollywood melodramas of Sirk, Ophuls, Ray and Minnelli. Although his theatricality lacks the fluidity and clear-eyed beauty of Sierck's contemporary German melodramas (check out the masterpieces ZU NEUEN UFERN and LA HABENERA), Carne's style truly fits his theme - that of entrapment, paralysis, resignation.
The film's principle motif is that of water - the credits float and dissolve, the hotel stands by a waterway - but instead of Renoir's open river of possibility, we have a canal, stagnant and manmade, going nowhere. The film begins as it ends, and the setting never changes, except for one brief interlude from which both escapees are doomed to return. Characters can only escape through death - their entrapment is emphasised by the narrow rooms they occupy, the walls and frames that hold them captive, the windows that look out on an escape they can never achieve. Any hope at the end, therefore, is profoundly, if romantically, compromised.
8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Atmosphere,atmosphere..., 13 août 2001
Author: dbdumonteil
"Hotel du Nord " is the only Carné movie from the 1936-1946 era which has dialogs not written by Jacques Prévert,but by Henri Jeanson.Janson was much more interested in the Jouvet/Arletty couple than in the pair of lovers,Annabella/Aumont.The latter is rather bland ,and their story recalls oddly the Edith Piaf's song "les amants d'un jour",except that the chanteuse's tale is a tragic one.What's fascinating today is this popular little world ,the canal Saint-Martin settings.
This movie is dear to the French movies buffs for another very special reason.The pimp Jouvet tells his protégée Raymonde he wants a change of air(atmosphère) Because she does not understand the meaning of the world atmosphère,the whore Raymonde (wonderful Arletty)thinks it's an insult and she delivers this line,that is ,undeniably,the most famous of the whole French cinéma:
In French :"Atmosphère?Atmosphère?Est-ce que j'ai une gueule d'atmosphère?" Translation attempt:"Atmosphere?atmosphere?Have I got an atmosphere face? This is our French "Nobody's perfect".
7 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

Brilliant, 22 juillet 1999
Author: Jonno-B de Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
This is an excellent film, and is the sort of treasure that one can only catch through sporadic cinema showings, as it is unavailable on video/DVD. The way that the film begins with the two lovers arriving, and ends with them leaving (although quite a lot happens in between, and they don't stay in one place during this time), gives you a sense of closure, and a feeling that all is right with the world. If you get a chance to see this film, then do. I can't wait to see it again, and wish that it could be put on general release.
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
Canal Plus, 6 décembre 2003
Author: writers_reign de London, England
I've just checked out the previous comments for this movie; it is interesting to note that 1) they are all favorable, 2) they all date from 1999 onwards and 3) they range from a simple recording of a joyous experience to the quasi-academic/analytical. This tells us clearly that even a film made 65 years ago can still speak to us today and bring pleasure on the one hand whilst inspiring in-depth analysis on the other. I am only saddened that not one commenter deigned to give a nod to Jean Aurenche, the great screenwriter (though one correspondent, did acknowledge Aurenche's co-writer Henri Jeanson who helped adapt the Eugene Dabit novel). In his 80-odd years Aurenche wrote more than 70 movies, just under half with Pierre Bost, and arguably his best known script outside France was 'Jeux Interdits' in 1952, though he also wrote 'Paris brute-t-il?' (Is Paris Burning?) an international production, and toward the end of his career, wrote for Tavernier - 'L'horlager de St. Paul', 'Coup de Torchon' - and his stories about working during the occupation inspired Tavernier to immortalize him in 'Laissez-Passer'. But I digress: French actors have always had a penchant for single names - Raimu, Bourvil, Coluche, Fernandel, etc - and in Hotel du Nord we have no less than three of them, Andrex, Annabel and Arletty. The first two fell by the wayside - unless you want to count the toilet tissue made famous in England by TV commercials featuring puppies - but Arletty remains one of the all-time greats and even rumors of collaboration have failed to dim her memory. Here she is at her best which was just as well as she was up against Louis Jouvet, another giant of the French stage and screen. The film is drenched in atmosphere which is echoed, whether intentionally or not, in Arletty's great line, which our French commenter rightly says is the most famous in French cinema and which he/she translates well as 'atmosphere, does this face look like atmosphere (is it that this face). Though he was no Jacques Prevert (but then, who is?) Aurenche had undoubtedly absorbed the poetic realism invented by Prevert and brought it to bear on this, only his sixth screenplay. Though at a basic level it is just another melodrama that ends in tears there are metaphors and symbols a plenty if, as our Dublin commenter, you care to look for them. The small, enclosed and private world just behind Gare de l'est, the 'trouble in paradise' motif that is introduced as soon as the idyllic opening sequence of 'one big happy family' has been established, the threat from outside - at a basic level the hoods who have come to find Mr Edmond, at another the Nazi thugs waiting in the wings - etc. Read it how you will it remains a great film. Apart from Aurenche none of the other commenters mentioned Bernard Blier, also at the beginning of a long and distinguished career, to say nothing of siring director Bertrand Blier - the commenter who was so struck with Louis Jouvet may care to know that Blier played opposite Jouvet some nine years later in Clouzot's 'Quai des Orfevres'. The Hotel du Nord is still standing but is now (or was when I last visited), owned by Greeks who haven't a clue about its place in history despite the smattering of lobby cards, affiches, etc in the bar and it is now a venue for English comics. The canal St. Martin is itself undergoing major changes, presumably not for the better but as for Carne's movie and Sandy Traunaur's sets, both were Canal Plus long before there was a TV channel (now technically defunct) and will remain so long after Canal + is just a co-producer credit on sub-Carne movies.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
Athmosperic, 5 mars 2006
Author: Atavisten de Tellus
In a hotel in Paris two lovers agree to take their own lives, the woman is romanticizing the suicide in a degree she must represent the escapism of many not so well-off in prewar Paris. The hotel is in itself a meeting place for the people of the district. Pierre shoots Renee, but is disturbed by Edmond so he flees the scene.
The story in itself is not so extraordinary today, but nothing takes away from its impact still. It has no problem of holding your attention to the very end. Its my first meet with any involved in 'Hotel du Nord'. Louis Jouvet is very good in his joy and meaningless role that finds meaning for just a little while. So is Arletty.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

Just a pointer: the whole film was shot on set, 8 septembre 2004
Author: Sxilderik de Paris, France
I love this movie, Jouvet, Arletty, Blier, Carné... almost everything has already been said about the movie, but there is one detail I'd like to shed some light onto: no footage of the real, still standing, Hôtel du Nord (is it still? I heard it was to be demolished...) has been used for the movie - the whole scene has been rebuilt on set, the main reason being that they could not stop the traffic on the St Martin canal for several weeks.
5 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

****, 2 mai 2005
Author: Gary170459 de Derby, UK
I suppose I always felt that Hotel du Nord was studio-bound, the movement of people cars and camera were just too effortlessly smooth and stagey to have been filmed on location. But no problem - it's still a much underrated lovely composition from Marcel Carne. The plot seems a bit choppy at times, as if they were making it up as they went along, but because it is unpredictable holds the attention to the bitter end. The money shots when the 2 lovers are alone in their room are saddled with some rather stilted dialogue, but it's all so lovely to fall into any inanity can be accepted. Are these 2 young people symbols of a cancerous hopelessness in pre-War France or simply idiots? Suicide pacts are fairly common; if the suicidees are young and healthy with their lives before them untrammelled would you think anything other than that they were just misguided fools?
Arletty played the part of prostitute well - she kept that zipper on her dress busy throughout anyway! I've only seen a few films with Jouvet - he is the most impressive invention as pimp in HDN - my trouble is shallow: every time I see his face I think of Sonnie Hale in Evergreen!
A remarkably atmospheric, well acted and photographed film with so much happening it needs a few viewings to get it all in place. Annabella and Aumont made an exceptionally beautiful couple; Francois (Heurtebise) Perier in his 2nd film had a small amusing part as a gay man. All in all: wonderful.
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Story of working class people in pre-World War II Paris., 4 janvier 1999
Author: Charles Jenkins de Chapel Hill, B N.C., U.S.A.
A true classic. Beautifully filmed and acted. Reveals an area of Paris which is alive and filled with comedy and tragedy. Although the area of 'Hotel du Nord' and the Hotel itself still exists, it is not as gay (in the original sense of the word) and joyful as it once must have been. The film makes one yearn for the past, which has been lost, with a sigh and bittersweetness.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Marcel Carné and the celebration of the greatness of French cinema., 9 août 2007
Author: Lalit Rao (cpowerccc@yahoo.com) de Paris, France
Hotel Du Nord is a gripping drama of guilt in which Marcel Carne portrayed an entertaining tale of ill-fated love which also functions as a revolt against the cruel world.The film is based entirely on a pair of hapless lovers.Pierre and Renee were mistaken when they believed that suicide would put an end to their misery.Hotel Du Nord has its own inimitable charm as its inhabitants have become an essential part of the establishment.There is an element of togetherness as everyone flocks to Hotel Du Nord to eat,chat etc.Marcel Carne has remained true to the spirit of the films produced in 30s and 40s as Hotel Du Nord has a certain kind of nostalgic feel.Carne,while recreating the life of Parisian roads was able to create a sort of nostalgia for black and white giving a unique genre of poetic realism to his oeuvre.Hotel Du Nord can be termed as a quintessence of cinematographic populism.The 14th July ball scene on the banks of Saint Martin canal remains a magnificent sequence.The film's immense popularity can be judged from the fact that Hotel Du Nord has been declared as a national monument.
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