Bed and Board (film)
Bed and Board | |
---|---|
Directed by | François Truffaut |
Screenplay by | François Truffaut Claude de Givray Bernard Revon |
Based on | Characters by François Truffaut Marcel Moussy |
Produced by | François Truffaut Marcel Berbert |
Starring | Jean-Pierre Léaud Claude Jade Hiroko Berghauer Daniel Ceccaldi Claire Duhamel |
Cinematography | Nestor Almendros |
Edited by | Agnés Guillemot |
Music by | Antoine Duhamel |
Production companies | Les Films du Carrosse Valoria Films Fida Cinematografica |
Distributed by | Valoria Films (France) Fida Cinematografica (Italy) |
Release date |
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Running time | 100 minutes |
Countries | France Italy |
Language | French |
Box office | 1,010,797 admissions (France)[1] |
Bed and Board (French: Domicile conjugal) is a 1970 French comedy-drama film directed by François Truffaut, and starring Jean-Pierre Léaud and Claude Jade. It is the fourth in Truffaut's series of five films about Antoine Doinel, and directly follows Stolen Kisses, depicting the married life of Antoine (Léaud) and Christine (Jade). Love on the Run finished the story in 1979.
Plot
[edit]Antoine and Christine have gotten married and are living in a pleasant apartment that her parents have found for them. In it, she gives violin lessons, while he works in the courtyard dyeing carnations for flower shops. When his experiments with colouring agents go horribly wrong, he has to find other work. He learns that an American company is hiring and, despite speaking very little English, Antoine applies for the job. His opponent is a much more qualified candidate with a letter of recommendation that proves it. However, the company's owner ends up believing the letter refers to Antoine, and hires him. The secretary tries to fix this mistake but is ignored.
Antoine's new job is to demonstrate model boats to potential customers in a mock-up harbour. Christine has a baby boy, which she calls Ghislain but Antoine registers him as Alphonse, preferring that name. Despite initially hating that name (believing it sounds too "provincial") and swearing to change it back, Christine eventually ends up calling the baby Alphonse.
At work, Antoine meets a Japanese woman named Kyoko and is smitten with her. One day, she sees her playing alone with the boats and accidentally dropping her bracelet in the supposedly fragile mock-up harbour. Fearing repercussions and unable to save the bracelet, she mentions nothing of the incident to anyone and leaves. Antoine later recovers the bracelet and goes to her apartment. Kyoko is moved by this gesture, and the two start having an affair. Not knowing he is married, she falls madly in love with Antoine and sends him a bouquet of flowers with love notes hidden in their petals. Antoine tries to get rid of the flowers, but they get eventually found by Christine. He passes them off as a gift to Christine, who gladly puts them in a vase. However, she finds out about the affair when the flowers bloom and Kyoko's notes fall off the petals.
Antoine is banished from the bedroom by a furious Christine and eventually moves out to a hotel, while his wife makes a life for herself and the baby. However, Antoine keeps communicating with Christine, who is still worried about his well-being. Antoine starts to fall out of love with Kyoko, who does not seem to notice how miserable he feels. Unable to be with Christine either, Antoine decides to have sex with a prostitute. After this, he sees Christine's dad in the brothel. The latter remains unashamed, seeing this as a normal part of a married man's life. Kyoko eventually leaves Antoine, seeing that she cannot maintain his attention anymore.
One year later, Antoine and Christine are back together, raising Alphonse in their apartment. Their neighbors, an older married couple, think that Antoine and Christine are now finally, truly in love with each other.
Cast
[edit]- Jean-Pierre Léaud as Antoine Doinel
- Claude Jade as Christine Doinel
- Daniel Ceccaldi as Lucien Darbon
- Claire Duhamel as Madame Darbon
- Hiroko Berghauer as Kyoko
- Daniel Boulanger as Tenor
- Silvana Blasi as Tenor's wife
- Pierre Fabri as the office Romeo
- Barbara Laage as Monique, secretary
- Billy Kearns as M. Max
- Claude Véga as the Strangler
- Jacques Jouanneau as Césarin
- Danièle Girard as Ginette, a waitress
- Jacques Robiolles as Sponger
- Yvon Lec as the Traffic Warden
- Marie Irakane as Mrs Martin, a concierge
- Ernest Menzer as the little man
- Jacques Rispal as Old Solitary
- Philippe Léotard as a Drunkard
- Pierre Maguelon as Cérasin's friend
- Guy Pierrault as an SOS employee
- Marcel Mercier as a person in the courtyard
- Joseph Merieau as a person in the courtyard
- Christian de Tiliere as a Senator
- Nobuko Mati as Kyoko's friend
- Iska Khan as Kyoko's father
- Marie Dedieu as Marie, a prostitute
- Jacques Cottin as Monsieur Hulot (uncredited)[2]
Release
[edit]Critical reception
[edit]John Simon wrote that Bed and Board "gives no offense, and no enlightenment".[3]
Awards and nominations
[edit]Year | Award ceremony | Category | Nominee | Result |
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1971 | NBR Awards | Top Foreign Language Films | Bed and Board | Won |
References
[edit]- ^ Box Office information for Francois Truffaut films at Box Office Story
- ^ Allen, Don. Finally Truffaut. New York: Beaufort Books. 1985. ISBN 978-0-8253-0335-7. pp. 231-232.
- ^ Simon, John (1983). John Simon: Something to Declare Twelve Years Of Films From Abroad. Clarkson N. Potter Inc. p. 34.
External links
[edit]- Bed and Board at IMDb
- Bed and Board at AllMovie
- Bed and Board at the TCM Movie Database
- Bed and Board at Rotten Tomatoes
- Bed and Board an essay by Noah Baumbach at the Criterion Collection