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Madame Bovary

Whatever it is that French women have ... Madame Bovary had more of it!
1949 | 106m | English

(3200 votes)

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Popularity: 4 (history)

Details

A frivolous country girl married to a naïve small-town doctor goes down the path of destruction when she grows tired of her limited social status.
Release Date: Aug 25, 1949
Director: Vincente Minnelli
Writer: Gustave Flaubert, Robert Ardrey
Genres: Drama, Romance
Keywords lover, trial, adulteress
Production Companies Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Box Office Revenue: $2,016,000
Budget: $2,076,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Jennifer Jones Emma Bovary
James Mason Gustave Flaubert
Van Heflin Charles Bovary
Louis Jourdan Rodolphe Boulanger
Alf Kjellin Leon Dupuis
Gene Lockhart J. Homais
Frank Allenby Lheureux
Gladys Cooper Madame Dupuis
John Abbott Mayor Tuvache
Harry Morgan Hyppolite
George Zucco Dubocage
Ellen Corby Félicité
Eduard Franz Rouault
Henri Letondal Guillaumin
Esther Somers Madame Lefrançois
Paul Cavanagh Marquis D'Andervilliers
Frederic Tozere Pinard
Larry Sims Justin
Dawn Kinney Berthe
Vernon Steele Priest
Edith Evanson Mother Superior (uncredited)
Paul Bryar Bailiff (uncredited)
Edward Keane Presiding Judge (uncredited)
George Davis Innkeeper (uncredited)
Florence Auer Mme. Petree (uncredited)
Karl Johnson Drunken Guest (uncredited)
Sailor Vincent Guest (uncredited)
Name Job
Vincente Minnelli Director
Gustave Flaubert Novel
Cedric Gibbons Art Direction
Miklós Rózsa Original Music Composer
Jack Donohue Choreographer
Douglas Shearer Recording Supervision
Edwin B. Willis Set Decoration
Jack Dawn Makeup Artist
Walter Plunkett Costume Designer
Sydney Guilaroff Hair Designer
Robert H. Planck Director of Photography
Ferris Webster Editor
Jack Martin Smith Art Direction
Robert Ardrey Screenplay
Warren Newcombe Special Effects
Fred Valles Costume Designer
Larry Germain Hairstylist
Name Title
Pandro S. Berman Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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Reviews

John Chard
9.0

Do you know, Charles, why that clock strikes? To announce the death of another hour. Madame Bovary is directed by Vincente Minnelli and adapted to screenplay by Robert Ardrey from the Gustave Flaubert novel. It stars Jennifer Jones, Van Heflin, Louis Jourdan, Alf Kjellin, Gene Lockhart and James ... Mason. Music is by Miklós Rózsa and cinematography by Robert H. Planck. It's most interesting now watching Minnelli's picture and being able to place it in the time it was made. Also of major interest is reading up on what the critics of the time had to say about it. This version is an undoubted lesson in the technical crafts of film making, the visuals, the sound, art design, costuming and a literary pumped screenplay that allows the cast to play it classical. It's also black hearted, perfectly in keeping with the gathering storm of the era that was film noir. Here is the monster. Some of the complaints about the film, to me anyway, just don't add up. Why do we need to care about anyone in this story? It's a dark tale of illicit passions, greed, betrayals, bad parenting and etc. Is this frowned upon in some circles because of love for the classic novel? Or because there's some esteem held for other versions? The criticism of Jones is also very suspect given it's a classic femme fatale performance, Emma is cold and driven and shallow to others feelings, Jones works it perfectly. As Rózsa's beautiful lush and poignant musical arrangements drift and hover over the various story instalments, Minnelli brings the film making guile. His camera work is sublime, like a ghost moving about the characters for the more vibrant scenes, tracking and roving, dizzyingly beautiful. At others it's close and personal, imbuing Emma's claustrophobia, with the black and white contrasts superbly photographed by Planck. So it doesn't capture the essence of Flaubert's intent, then? Emma Bovary a figure of hate instead of sympathy, the lack of a caustic aside on a society of double standards? So what! Outstanding film making is just that, especially when it can tune into a style of film making prevalent at its birth. Madame Bovary - maybe the most film noir movie not actually considered a film noir. Brilliant. 9/10

May 16, 2024