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L'Âge ingrat
1964 Comedy
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Credits
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Director: Gilles Grangier
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Script: Gilles Grangier, Pascal Jardin, Claude Sautet
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Photo: Robert Lefebvre
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Music: Georges Delerue
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Cast: Jean Gabin (Émile Malhouin),
Fernandel (Adolphe Lartigue),
Marie Dubois (Marie Malhouin),
Franck Fernandel (Antoine Lartigue),
Paulette Dubost (Françoise Malhouin),
Noël Roquevert (L'estivant),
Claude Mann,
Joël Monteilhet (Jules Lartigue),
Madeleine Sylvain (Éliane Lartigue),
Rellys (Monsieur Corbidas),
Christine Simon (Florence Malhouin),
Nicole Courget (Sophie Malhouin),
Frank David (Henri Lartigue),
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Country: France
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Language: French
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Runtime: 95 min; B&W
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Aka: That Tender Age
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Summary
Two students, Antoine and Marie, decide that their families should get to know one another
before they get married. Antoine invites Marie’s family, who live in Normandy, to
come and stay with his family for a while at their home in the South of France.
Things start badly when the two fathers, Emile and Adolphe, fail to hit it off, and only
get worse when Antoine and Marie have a lover’s row...
Review
This film boasts not one but two icons of French cinema - Jean Gabin and Fernandel.
They had previously appeared together in three films in the 1930s before each went on
to forge his own path to stardom. In 1963, they came together to found their own
film production company, Gafer - the name deriving from the first letters of their stage
names - whose first film was L'Âge ingrat . Gabin and Fernandel would
make a further 8 films for Gafer, but never appearing on screen together.
L’Âge ingrat was directed by Gilles
Grangier, who was renowned at the time in France for his popular film comedies which featured
big name actors. Whilst the French New Wave was making its mark, traditional directors
such as Grangier continued to churn out uninspired fare such as this, feeding the popular
demand for unchallenging cinema without offering much in the way of artistic flair or
imagination. Whilst L’Âge ingrat
has a certain charm, with one or two amusing comic interludes, it’s overall pretty dull
and anaemic, with neither Gabin nor Fernandel at anything like his best.
© James Travers 2002
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