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Moliere

PUBLISHER Sony Pictures Home Ent (08/26/2008)
PRODUCT TYPE Video (DVD-Video)

Description
1644, Paris. 22-year-old Jean-Baptiste Poquelin, also known as Moli're, is not yet the writer that history recognizes as the father & true master of comic satire, author of 'the Misanthrope and Tartuffe, and a dramatist to rank alongside Shakespeare & Sophocles. Far from it. He is in fact, a failed actor. His Illustrious Theatre Troupe, founded the previous year, is bankrupt. Hounded by creditors, Moli're is thrown into jail, released, then swiftly imprisoned again. When the jailors finally let him go, he disappears. The combined efforts of historians have unearthed no trace of him before his reappearance, several months later, when his troupe begins touring the provinces - a tour that will last for thirteen years, and culminate in Moli're's triumphant return to Paris in 1658. But what happened to Moli're during these mysterious lost months? Moli're, we discover, has been released from prison by a wealthy bourgeois, Monsieur Jourdain, who settled the young actor's debts on the understanding that he will teach him the craft of the stage. Hungry for recognition, Jourdain is infatuated with the lovely but poisonous C'limene, whose salon gathers together suitors & great wits. But the affair must remain secret, kept at all costs from Jourdain's wife, Elmire, a wonderful woman with whom Moli're himself will fall headlong in love. Unfortunately for him, Jourdain has presented Moli're as Monsieur Tartuffe, an austere private tutor, to justify his presence. Elmire has nothing but the harshest words for this holier-than-thou figure who has invaded her home. Trapped in this untenable situation, Moli're will experience all manner of events that will open his eyes and his mind, both to life itself and to his work as an artist. It is from the heart of this tale, and from his passion for Elmire, that Moli're the great dramatist is born."
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Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13: 9781424872787
ISBN-10: 1424872782
Content Language: French
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Carton Quantity: 0
Product Dimensions: 7.50 x 0.70 x 5.40 inches
Weight: 0.17 pound(s)
Country of Origin: US
Subject Information
Grade Level: 8th Grade - Not Applicable
Dewey Decimal: 791.437
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
publisher marketing
1644, Paris. 22-year-old Jean-Baptiste Poquelin, also known as Moli're, is not yet the writer that history recognizes as the father & true master of comic satire, author of 'the Misanthrope and Tartuffe, and a dramatist to rank alongside Shakespeare & Sophocles. Far from it. He is in fact, a failed actor. His Illustrious Theatre Troupe, founded the previous year, is bankrupt. Hounded by creditors, Moli're is thrown into jail, released, then swiftly imprisoned again. When the jailors finally let him go, he disappears. The combined efforts of historians have unearthed no trace of him before his reappearance, several months later, when his troupe begins touring the provinces - a tour that will last for thirteen years, and culminate in Moli're's triumphant return to Paris in 1658. But what happened to Moli're during these mysterious lost months? Moli're, we discover, has been released from prison by a wealthy bourgeois, Monsieur Jourdain, who settled the young actor's debts on the understanding that he will teach him the craft of the stage. Hungry for recognition, Jourdain is infatuated with the lovely but poisonous C'limene, whose salon gathers together suitors & great wits. But the affair must remain secret, kept at all costs from Jourdain's wife, Elmire, a wonderful woman with whom Moli're himself will fall headlong in love. Unfortunately for him, Jourdain has presented Moli're as Monsieur Tartuffe, an austere private tutor, to justify his presence. Elmire has nothing but the harshest words for this holier-than-thou figure who has invaded her home. Trapped in this untenable situation, Moli're will experience all manner of events that will open his eyes and his mind, both to life itself and to his work as an artist. It is from the heart of this tale, and from his passion for Elmire, that Moli're the great dramatist is born."
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Actor: Luchini, Fabrice
Fabrice Luchini est ne a Paris en 1951 et mene une prestigieuse carriere de comedien, tant au cinema qu au theatre. Il est, dans les annees 1980, un des interpretes preferes de Rohmer et devient, dans les annees 1990, un acteur plebiscite par les realisateurs et le public. Mais sa grande passion demeure le theatre. Son amour de la litterature le conduit a dire, sur scene, des textes de Baudelaire, Valery ou Celine, et la finesse de ses interpretations valent a ces prestations pourtant exigeantes un tres grand succes.Photo de Fabrice Luchini (c) Sylvie Lancrenon
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Director: Tirard, Laurent
Laurent Tirard was born in 1967. He studied filmmaking at New York University, from which he graduated with honors in 1989. After a year as a script reader for the Warner Bros. studio in Los Angeles, he became a journalist for the French film magazine "Studio". There, over the course of seven years, he screened and reviewed more than a hundred films per year. He also had the opportunity to interview all the great directors of the day, including Martin Scorsese, Jean-Luc Godard, John Woo, Steven Spielberg, Woody Allen, and many others, engaging them in lengthy discussions on the most practical aspects of filmmaking for a series called "Lecons de Cinema". For the last four years, he has put all his lessons into practice, first as a screenwriter on French features and TV movies, then as the director of two short films, "Reliable Sources" and "Tomorrow is Another Day". The first received the 1999 Panavision Award at the Avignon/New York Film Festival; the second was selected for the 2000 Telluride Film Festival. Laurent Tirard is currently working on his first feature film as a director. He lives in Paris with his wife and son.
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