Police
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Maurice Pialat
Gerard Depardieu
Sophie Marceau
Richard Anconina
Pascale Rocard
Sandrine Bonnaire
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
A Paris cop, investigating a large drug smuggling ring, starts to fall in love with a young woman who's the central witness in the case.
Director
Maurice Pialat
Cast
Gerard Depardieu
Sophie Marceau
Richard Anconina
Pascale Rocard
Sandrine Bonnaire
Franck Karoui
Jonathan Leina
Jacques Mathou
Bernard Fuzellier
Meachou Bentahar
Mohamed Ayari
Abdel Kader Touati
Jamil Bouarada
Bechir Idani
Sylvain Maupu
Alain Artur
Remi Carpentier
Taya Ouzrout
Mocelyne Persillet
Lofti Chouaiekh
Kadija Smaali
Maaike Jansen
Catherine Lenevez
Didier Creste
Yann Dedet
Gil Noir
Miguelle Monthieux
Antonio Cauchoix
Germaine Lievre
Dimitri Melsan
Marie-josephe Dunand
Henri Plesse
Driss Kadiri
Maurice Coussonneaux
Gerard Dauzat
Frederic Fabre
Philippe Loffredo
Francois Pancrazi
Alain Payen
Artus Depenguern
Frank Saillour
Maurice Coussoneau
Remy Carpentier
Crew
Michel Acerbo
Alain Artur
Bernard Aubouy
Jean-claude Bourlat
Malika Brahim
Catherine Breillat
Catherine Breillat
Didier Creste
Pierre D'hoffelize
Sylvie Danton
Yann Dedet
Jacques Fieschi
Henryk Gorecki
Bernard Leroux
Nathalie Letrosne
Jacques Loiseleux
Constantin Mejinsky
Frantois Musy
Jean-luc Olivier
Maurice Pialat
Maurice Pialat
Sylvie Pialat
Laurent Poirier
Odile Reviron
Emmanuel Schlumberger
Luciano Tovoli
Helene Viard
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Maurice Pialat (1926-2003)
Born in the mountain village of Cunhat, Puy de Dome, France on August 31, 1925, Pialat grew up in Paris from age three and studied art at its Ecole des Arts Decoratifs and Ecole des Beaux Arts. After World War II, he painted and had several exhibitions of his work. By the late '50s, Pialat became fascinated with cinema, and he got his start making short films, notably L'Amour Existe/Love Exists (1960), which won a prize at the Venice Festival. Pialat spent the next decade directing for French television and making documentaries in Turkey and Saudi Arabia before embarking on his feature film career in Enfance nue, L' aka Naked Childhood (1969). This bleak, semi-autobiographical drama about a troubled childhood immediately set the tone for Pialat's cinema verite style: tough realism, the use of non-professional actors (with some exceptions), long takes and moments of punctuating improvisation. Pialat continued to incorporate personal issues in his next two films: Nous ne vieillrons pas ensemble/We Will Not Grow Old Together (1972), about his agonizing marital breakdown; and Gueule ouverte, La aka The Mouth Agape (1974), about the impact of his elderly mother's death from cancer.
International fame arrived with his first film featuring the celebrated French star Gerard Depardieu, Loulou (1980). This trenchant study of middle-class boredom and the cathartic benefits of hedonism and thuggery drew praise from all quarters and proved Pialat to be one of the toughest critics on modern French society. His next film A nos amours aka To Our Loves (1983), focused on the emotionally unstable life of a promiscuous teenager (Sandrine Bonnaire) with Pialat acting impressively as her perplexed father; and Police (1985), was his first venture into the crime genre that reunited him with Depardieu.
He won the Cannes Film Festival's coveted Palme d'Or/Golden Palm for Sous le soleil de Satan aka Under Satan's Sun (1987) a harsh, provocative tale about a clergyman's (Gerard Depardieu) disturbing relationship with a young woman (Sandrine Bonnaire) and his encounter with satanic elements. Pialat's last two films were met with lukewarm reception: Van Gogh (1991), was his overlong look at the last year of the painter's life; and his final film, Le Garcu (1995) was a refreshingly simple story about a young boy (Pialat's son Antoine) and his aimless, womanizing father (Depardieu).
Although he only made ten feature length films in his career, Pialat made his mark in French cinema with his tough cinematic techniques and probing subject matters. He is survived by his only son, Antoine.
by Michael T. Toole
Maurice Pialat (1926-2003)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Winner of the Silver Lion for Best Actor (Depardieu) at the 1985 Venice Film Festival.
Released in United States Fall October 10, 1986
Released in United States November 5, 1986
Released in United States on Video December 10, 1996
Released in United States September 1985
Released in United States September 1986
Shown at Venice Film Festival September 1985.
Shown at New York Film Festival September 20 & 21, 1986.
Released in United States Fall October 10, 1986
Released in United States November 5, 1986 (Los Angeles)
Released in United States on Video December 10, 1996
Released in United States September 1985 (Shown at Venice Film Festival September 1985.)
Released in United States September 1986 (Shown at New York Film Festival September 20 & 21, 1986.)