Pastoral Symphony (1946) Poster

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8/10
Dreyeresque Delannoy
dbdumonteil17 January 2007
My title will enrage the highbrows,but ,after reading the notorious "Cahiers du Cinema" who on earth (and particularly in France) will

watch a Jean Delannoy film ,cause it's " inevitably bad" cause Godard and co have decided it is so?

"La Symphonie Pastorale" is a marvelous black and white movie.A simple story of a minister who takes on a little savage girl,Gertrude (a Dreyeresque name!) .For a short while ,it's got something of Helen Keller ,cause the heroine is blind when the story begins.But Delannoy focuses on the relationship between the man who's got four children and his protégée.Pierre Blanchar (it's probably his best part) and Michèle Morgan are at the top of their game and they give subtle performances.When the elder son (Jean Desailly)comes back,and falls in love with Gertrude ,the tragedy is in the air.The priest realizes he loves the girl in a way a father should not.

Delannoy takes advantage of the snowy landscapes and the frozen rivers,of the tiny church where the organ becomes a mediator between Gertrude and the young man ,of an excellent cast.

He has even got a sense of humor !There's a private joke .When they show Desailly the organ ,one of the men says "Amour,Delices et Orgues!" which was the title of a (very mediocre) previous film in which the actor was featured the same year.
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8/10
The Priest With The Least
writers_reign3 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
For someone like myself - English born and bred - it would be sufficient to seek out and watch this film merely because it was directed by Jean Delannoy, a man despised by Truffaut and his raggle- taggle band of new waveleteers, a group of petulant schoolboys despised with equal vehemence by myself for their attempts (luckily without enduring success) to do to French Cinema, which I love passionately, what Stanley Kowalski did to Blanche DuBois. In truth, of course, I needed no such excuse to watch a film which, as winner of Best Film and Best Actress at the first Cannes Film Festival in 1946 (it WOULD have been 1939 but something happened to cause its postponement) had a lot to live up to; Michele Morgan was a given of course; she had been lighting up the screen from Gribouille through Quai des Brumes, Remorques, and a couple of lesser-known (especially outside France) titles like L'Entraineuse and Les Musiciens du ciel, and Pierre Blanchar was one of the men who signed Marie Bell's dance- card in Duvivier's sublime Un Carnet de bal. The story of a middle- aged man falling in lust one orgasmic sigh short of incestuously with a girl half his age with whom he lives for one reason or another both in close proximity and denial is hardly new - Arthur Miller, for instance got a fine play, A View From The Bridge, out of it - and inevitably, as here, it is a situation that ends in tears and all the viewer can do is enjoy the journey. In this case it is a journey that Truffaut and his fellow iconoclasts couldn't even aspire to let alone complete.
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7/10
A tale of emotional incest
evening19 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Sad story of a narcissistic man's emotional abuse of a naive woman.

A country pastor (Pierre Blanchard) has a wife, four children, and a congregation, but it's not enough for him -- he seizes upon an obsession in adopting a blind orphan girl, who, as she grows into a beautiful woman, becomes the focus of his existence.

When his son, Jacques (Jean Desailly), who has been away at school, and become a virtuosic organist, falls in love with Gertrude (Michele Morgan), the pastor forbids the marriage, in effect estranging himself from everyone. Even a horribly guilt-ridden Gertrude can't stay.

The movie ends on a terrifying note of psychological alienation.

One can only pray for the world's protection from blindly self-centered men.
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10/10
Who says that love is blind ? Jean Delannoy makes a classic film based on a famous novel by André Gide.
FilmCriticLalitRao30 January 2009
La Symphonie Pastorale is a neglected classic of French cinema.It is high time tall tales about its importance are told to all cinema lovers whether in France or outside of France.It is one of those few lucky films in the history of French cinema with which some of the most important personalities of French culture have been associated. One can cite the names of Michèle Morgan,André Gide and Jean Delannoy. This film is an honest adaptation of André Gide's best book "La Symphonie Pastorale".Jean Delannoy has worked wonders with this film by making a star as well as talented actress out of charming Michèle Morgan.It is true that love and its implications is the major theme of this film but we also get a chance to see other sentiments such as jealousy and innocence.After viewing this film there would hardly be anyone who would not have been influenced by the heroic figure of the leading lady Gertrude.The best human experience which one can derive from this film concerns how the vision of a person changes in the course of time ? It is a wonder that this film and the book have remained free of controversies despite the presence of religion.
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Powerful if sometimes overwrought melodrama about power, temptation and corruption
trpdean24 April 2002
I had read this in high school French class and am a warm fan of Michelle Morgan, so I rented this recently. For those looking or a comedy, this is the wrong choice.

This is the story of a stuffy, humorless and unimaginative married Protestant pastor with several children near a small village in the Swiss Alps,who one day, takes in a little blind girl who has just lost her mother. He raises and teaches the girl everything - and in the process gradually falls in love with her as she becomes an adult, to the great alarm of his family. His denials that he has fallen in love with her - and that he has done all he can to deny her a life independent of the family in order to keep her there, dependent on him and grateful to him, are the source of the drama.

The movie is very grim. The pastor is someone any viewer will grow to hate within 5 minutes of the movie! Narrow, self-satisfied, pompous, haughty toward wife, family and congregation, he is truly unlikeable. At times, the dialogue is over the top. At times, the viewer is frustrated because if the pastor's son, or the blind girl, only articulated clearly what they wanted without this terrible deference to the lying pastor, the situation would be averted.

All that said, the movie has its power. Michelle Morgan is lovely and sweet. The viewer will remember this one.
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