La Terre


1h 38m 1921

Brief Synopsis

In this silent film, the harsh life of the French countryside leads a farmer to consider adultery.

Film Details

Genre
Silent
Drama
Foreign
Release Date
1921

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 38m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White

Synopsis

In this silent film, the harsh life of the French countryside leads a farmer to consider adultery.

Film Details

Genre
Silent
Drama
Foreign
Release Date
1921

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 38m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White

Articles

La Terre


Land ("la terre") is the battleground, the thing that divides families and changes lives in the epic French silent, La Terre (1921). Based on Emile Zola's novel, La Terre recounts the tale of two families living in the French countryside whose lives are dramatically altered by the land they stand to inherit. Old Fouan (Armand Bour) and his wife decide to divvy their one possession -- their land -- up between their sons in exchange for the sons' promise to look after them in their retirement. But slowly, Fouan's corrupt sons rob him of his pension and he is soon shuttling between their homes in search of a safe refuge as his health declines.

In another part of the countryside, two sisters, Françoise (Germaine Rouer) and her sister Lise (Jeanne Briey) find their own lives devastated by greed for land. When Lise marries one of Fouan's sons Buteau (Jean Hervé), the pair conspire to keep Françoise from marrying and inheriting her share of the sisters' land. In an even more brutal turn of events, Buteau begins to threaten sexual violence against Françoise, a threat that finally culminates in a vicious, heartless crime.

Greed proves the undoing of the good members of these families, leaving the most opportunistic and mercenary members in control, a profound indictment of the very staff of French life of the time, which was founded on the status quo - sustaining importance of law, the father, the family and home. By the end of La Terre all of those institutions have been ravaged.

Director André Antoine's naturalistic style is one of the principal appeals of this engaging drama. Though the theater director turned filmmaker effectively conveys the devastation and turmoil of families battling over land and money, equally effective in the film is how it depicts daily life in rural France. Essential realism is conveyed in the chores, habits and activities that define the farmers who work in the plain of Beauce near Chartres, the Cloyes region where Zola set his novel.

Antoine brought naturalism to the French theater where he began in 1887 and later became the founder of the Théâtre Libre (1887-1896). Antoine would go on to direct nine films, most of them adaptations of novels by some of France's literary giants including Zola and Victor Hugo.

One of Antoine's crucial innovations was a concept still in operation today -- the idea of "the fourth wall," a term for the metaphorical "wall" separating the actors from the audience which gives the audience the impression of watching events as they naturally unfold. Actors under Antoine's direction would not "break" the fourth wall in any way by acknowledging or addressing the audience. Along with other naturalist French directors such as Louis Feuillade and Jacques de Baroncelli, Antoine, according to Richard Abel in French Cinema "challenged the prominence of class-conscious, studio-bound evasions of the bourgeois melodrama." In the French press at the time, notes Abel, these films were referred to as "atmosphere films," "simple dramas" and "plein air films." Speaking of a series of short films he had made translated as Life as It Is (1911), Feuillade said of these slice-of life-dramas "they eschew any fantasy and represent men and things as they are, not as they should be."

Feuillade's comment proves to be an equally apt description of La Terre with its harrowing and often disturbing portrait of the vicious quibbling, greed, sexual violence, jealousy and inhumanity of the French families portrayed in the film.

Antoine's translation of the naturalism of novels to the stage and then to film was extraordinary and took many forms. He shot his films on location in the countryside, just as the Impressionist painters had. That decision was partly a response to wartime limitations and a dearth of modern studios and equipment.

Antoine also recognized that film required a different kind of acting than theater, and so developed a troupe of actors just to appear in his films, though the lead actors in La Terre were primarily drawn from the Comédie Française. He often used nonprofessionals in small parts to further intensify the realism.

He also had multiple cameras which moved based on the actions of his actors instead of having actors play to the camera, liberating performances in a significant way. Most crucial to Antoine, however, was choosing stories which were inherently realistic since no amount of realistic acting and locations could transform a stilted and artificial script. He was especially drawn to stories of the working class much as a director like King Vidor would be in his own day and relied heavily on the equally progressive and naturalistic fiction of Hugo and Zola. A man of enormous range, Antoine would eventually go on to work as a theatre and film critic for publications including Le Journal and Comoedia.

Zola was also considered a writer of the naturalist school, whose fiction was imbued with a profound and earnest desire for social justice. Raised in Aix-en-Provence, Zola -- who grew up along with the postimpressionist painter Paul Cezanne --- moved to Paris where he first worked in a publishing house and then as a journalist, a career that undoubtedly influenced his thirst for realism and social justice.

Considered a lost film, the unknown La Terre was eventually donated by the Gosfilmofond of Moscow to the Royal Belgian Film Archive. Antoine had originally staged La Terre at his Théatre Antoine in 1901.

Director: André Antoine
Producer: S.C.A.G.L. (Société cinématographique des auteurs et gens de lettres)
Screenplay: Emile Zola
Cinematography: René Guychard, René Gaveau
Music: Adrian Johnston
Cast: Armand Bour (Old Fouan), René Alexandre (Jean), Germaine Rouer (Françoise), Jeanne Briey (Lise), Jean Hervé (Buteau), Milo (Hyacinthe), Berthe Bovy (Olympe).
BW-97m.

by Felicia Feaster
La Terre

La Terre

Land ("la terre") is the battleground, the thing that divides families and changes lives in the epic French silent, La Terre (1921). Based on Emile Zola's novel, La Terre recounts the tale of two families living in the French countryside whose lives are dramatically altered by the land they stand to inherit. Old Fouan (Armand Bour) and his wife decide to divvy their one possession -- their land -- up between their sons in exchange for the sons' promise to look after them in their retirement. But slowly, Fouan's corrupt sons rob him of his pension and he is soon shuttling between their homes in search of a safe refuge as his health declines. In another part of the countryside, two sisters, Françoise (Germaine Rouer) and her sister Lise (Jeanne Briey) find their own lives devastated by greed for land. When Lise marries one of Fouan's sons Buteau (Jean Hervé), the pair conspire to keep Françoise from marrying and inheriting her share of the sisters' land. In an even more brutal turn of events, Buteau begins to threaten sexual violence against Françoise, a threat that finally culminates in a vicious, heartless crime. Greed proves the undoing of the good members of these families, leaving the most opportunistic and mercenary members in control, a profound indictment of the very staff of French life of the time, which was founded on the status quo - sustaining importance of law, the father, the family and home. By the end of La Terre all of those institutions have been ravaged. Director André Antoine's naturalistic style is one of the principal appeals of this engaging drama. Though the theater director turned filmmaker effectively conveys the devastation and turmoil of families battling over land and money, equally effective in the film is how it depicts daily life in rural France. Essential realism is conveyed in the chores, habits and activities that define the farmers who work in the plain of Beauce near Chartres, the Cloyes region where Zola set his novel. Antoine brought naturalism to the French theater where he began in 1887 and later became the founder of the Théâtre Libre (1887-1896). Antoine would go on to direct nine films, most of them adaptations of novels by some of France's literary giants including Zola and Victor Hugo. One of Antoine's crucial innovations was a concept still in operation today -- the idea of "the fourth wall," a term for the metaphorical "wall" separating the actors from the audience which gives the audience the impression of watching events as they naturally unfold. Actors under Antoine's direction would not "break" the fourth wall in any way by acknowledging or addressing the audience. Along with other naturalist French directors such as Louis Feuillade and Jacques de Baroncelli, Antoine, according to Richard Abel in French Cinema "challenged the prominence of class-conscious, studio-bound evasions of the bourgeois melodrama." In the French press at the time, notes Abel, these films were referred to as "atmosphere films," "simple dramas" and "plein air films." Speaking of a series of short films he had made translated as Life as It Is (1911), Feuillade said of these slice-of life-dramas "they eschew any fantasy and represent men and things as they are, not as they should be." Feuillade's comment proves to be an equally apt description of La Terre with its harrowing and often disturbing portrait of the vicious quibbling, greed, sexual violence, jealousy and inhumanity of the French families portrayed in the film. Antoine's translation of the naturalism of novels to the stage and then to film was extraordinary and took many forms. He shot his films on location in the countryside, just as the Impressionist painters had. That decision was partly a response to wartime limitations and a dearth of modern studios and equipment. Antoine also recognized that film required a different kind of acting than theater, and so developed a troupe of actors just to appear in his films, though the lead actors in La Terre were primarily drawn from the Comédie Française. He often used nonprofessionals in small parts to further intensify the realism. He also had multiple cameras which moved based on the actions of his actors instead of having actors play to the camera, liberating performances in a significant way. Most crucial to Antoine, however, was choosing stories which were inherently realistic since no amount of realistic acting and locations could transform a stilted and artificial script. He was especially drawn to stories of the working class much as a director like King Vidor would be in his own day and relied heavily on the equally progressive and naturalistic fiction of Hugo and Zola. A man of enormous range, Antoine would eventually go on to work as a theatre and film critic for publications including Le Journal and Comoedia. Zola was also considered a writer of the naturalist school, whose fiction was imbued with a profound and earnest desire for social justice. Raised in Aix-en-Provence, Zola -- who grew up along with the postimpressionist painter Paul Cezanne --- moved to Paris where he first worked in a publishing house and then as a journalist, a career that undoubtedly influenced his thirst for realism and social justice. Considered a lost film, the unknown La Terre was eventually donated by the Gosfilmofond of Moscow to the Royal Belgian Film Archive. Antoine had originally staged La Terre at his Théatre Antoine in 1901. Director: André Antoine Producer: S.C.A.G.L. (Société cinématographique des auteurs et gens de lettres) Screenplay: Emile Zola Cinematography: René Guychard, René Gaveau Music: Adrian Johnston Cast: Armand Bour (Old Fouan), René Alexandre (Jean), Germaine Rouer (Françoise), Jeanne Briey (Lise), Jean Hervé (Buteau), Milo (Hyacinthe), Berthe Bovy (Olympe). BW-97m. by Felicia Feaster

La Terre


Milestone Film & Video has provided another rare treasure with their DVD presentation of La Terre (The Earth) (1921), a film version of the novel by Emile Zola restored by Kevin Brownlow and David Gill. Long considered lost, La Terre opens a window to show a France and a way of life that long ago disappeared.

Zola's novel was part of his gigantic Rougon-Macquart series, a group of novels that dissected every level of French society as it existed during the mid-nineteenth century. In each work a member of the Rougon or Maquart families takes part in another cross-section of French life; slum dwellers in L'Assommoir (1877), coal miners in Germinal (1885) or prostitutes in Nana (1880). In La Terre (1887), Jean Macquart gets work on a farm in rural France and becomes involved in the changing fortunes of a family of farmers. Pere Fouan, who has apparently never read King Lea, decides to divide his farmland between his three children, his home-obsessed daughter Fanny, his beastly, greedy son Buteau, and his drunken son Hyacinthe, whose long hair and beard is the source of his nickname, Jesus-Christ. Jean falls in love with Buteau's wife's sister Francoise, whom Buteau wants for himself. Soon these peasants are all scheming and conniving to get all the land for themselves while separating Pere Fouan from what little money he has left. The novel was considered scandalous when it came out for its nasty view of the idolized French peasantry and it was still a daring choice when theater director Andre Antoine decided to make a film of it right at the end of World War I.

Antoine was 61 when he began production in 1919 with a short history in movie making but a long one in French theater as head of the Theatre Libre and the Theatre Antoine. At the end of his long and honored theatrical career, Antoine became, in his own words, "a sixty-year-old beginner" in the world of film. Perhaps it was his age that led him to adapt Zola's work with its tragic portrait of an old man gradually shut out of the life around him.

The director's first requirement was that the entire film be shot on location in the countryside of Cloyes where the novel was set. At this time most French films were shot on studio sets. Antoine, however, demanded a greater degree of realism, sparking a movement known as "plein air." Perhaps the horrors of the war led the members of this movement to demand an unfiltered look at their country after years of propaganda or perhaps it was the shortages following the war that made several of the studios unavailable. In any case, the plein air movies were forerunners and influences on many later styles from Jean Renoir's classics of the 1930's to the Italian Neo-Realist movies to the French New Wave.

The print of La Terre on this DVD was discovered in the archives of Gosfilmofond in Moscow and, although lovingly restored, is somewhat incomplete. The absent material does not hurt the plot although the relationships of the various characters can be a bit vague, a problem probably due more to the compression of Zola's massive novel into a screenplay rather than lost material. Print quality is very good showing strong contract and little wear. The print features accompanying music by Adrian Johnston who wrote the soundtrack scores for Jude (1996) and The House Of Mirth (2000). There are also production stills and an Adobe Acrobat document on the disc containing credits and a text interview with one of the actors.

With an often brutal vision of peasant life in 19th Century France and lovingly photographed images of the pre-mechanical toil of farming, La Terre is a last look at the way most of our ancestors lived in the last days before the 20th Century would change it forever.

For more information about La Terre, visit Milestone Films. To order La Terre, go to TCM Shopping.

by Brian Cady

La Terre

Milestone Film & Video has provided another rare treasure with their DVD presentation of La Terre (The Earth) (1921), a film version of the novel by Emile Zola restored by Kevin Brownlow and David Gill. Long considered lost, La Terre opens a window to show a France and a way of life that long ago disappeared. Zola's novel was part of his gigantic Rougon-Macquart series, a group of novels that dissected every level of French society as it existed during the mid-nineteenth century. In each work a member of the Rougon or Maquart families takes part in another cross-section of French life; slum dwellers in L'Assommoir (1877), coal miners in Germinal (1885) or prostitutes in Nana (1880). In La Terre (1887), Jean Macquart gets work on a farm in rural France and becomes involved in the changing fortunes of a family of farmers. Pere Fouan, who has apparently never read King Lea, decides to divide his farmland between his three children, his home-obsessed daughter Fanny, his beastly, greedy son Buteau, and his drunken son Hyacinthe, whose long hair and beard is the source of his nickname, Jesus-Christ. Jean falls in love with Buteau's wife's sister Francoise, whom Buteau wants for himself. Soon these peasants are all scheming and conniving to get all the land for themselves while separating Pere Fouan from what little money he has left. The novel was considered scandalous when it came out for its nasty view of the idolized French peasantry and it was still a daring choice when theater director Andre Antoine decided to make a film of it right at the end of World War I. Antoine was 61 when he began production in 1919 with a short history in movie making but a long one in French theater as head of the Theatre Libre and the Theatre Antoine. At the end of his long and honored theatrical career, Antoine became, in his own words, "a sixty-year-old beginner" in the world of film. Perhaps it was his age that led him to adapt Zola's work with its tragic portrait of an old man gradually shut out of the life around him. The director's first requirement was that the entire film be shot on location in the countryside of Cloyes where the novel was set. At this time most French films were shot on studio sets. Antoine, however, demanded a greater degree of realism, sparking a movement known as "plein air." Perhaps the horrors of the war led the members of this movement to demand an unfiltered look at their country after years of propaganda or perhaps it was the shortages following the war that made several of the studios unavailable. In any case, the plein air movies were forerunners and influences on many later styles from Jean Renoir's classics of the 1930's to the Italian Neo-Realist movies to the French New Wave. The print of La Terre on this DVD was discovered in the archives of Gosfilmofond in Moscow and, although lovingly restored, is somewhat incomplete. The absent material does not hurt the plot although the relationships of the various characters can be a bit vague, a problem probably due more to the compression of Zola's massive novel into a screenplay rather than lost material. Print quality is very good showing strong contract and little wear. The print features accompanying music by Adrian Johnston who wrote the soundtrack scores for Jude (1996) and The House Of Mirth (2000). There are also production stills and an Adobe Acrobat document on the disc containing credits and a text interview with one of the actors. With an often brutal vision of peasant life in 19th Century France and lovingly photographed images of the pre-mechanical toil of farming, La Terre is a last look at the way most of our ancestors lived in the last days before the 20th Century would change it forever. For more information about La Terre, visit Milestone Films. To order La Terre, go to TCM Shopping. by Brian Cady

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