Menu
The Immortal Story Poster

The Immortal Story

1968 | 58m | English

(3829 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 0.6 (history)

Details

An aged, wealthy trader plots with his servant to recreate a maritime tall tale, using a local woman and an unknown sailor as actors.
Release Date: Sep 18, 1968
Director: Orson Welles
Writer: Orson Welles, Louise de Vilmorin, Karen Blixen
Genres: Drama, Romance, TV Movie
Keywords prostitute, legend, sexual fantasy, sailor, reenactment, merchant, macau, indecent proposal, unconventional arrangement, maritime history
Production Companies ORTF, Albina Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 07, 2026
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Starring

Trailers

Extras

Backdrops

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Jeanne Moreau Virginie Ducrot
Orson Welles Charles Clay
Roger Coggio Elishama Levinsky
Norman Eshley Paul, the sailor
Fernando Rey Merchant
Name Job
Orson Welles Screenplay, Director
Pierre Cardin Costume Design
Louise de Vilmorin Writer
Marc Maurette Production Manager
Françoise Garnault Editor
Claude Farny Editor
Marcelle Pluet Editor
Yolande Maurette Editor
André Piltant Set Decoration
Gilbert Pereira Sound Recordist
Jean Nény Sound
Karen Blixen Novel
Willy Kurant Director of Photography
Name Title
Micheline Rozan Producer
Jacques-Bernard Dupont Producer
Albina du Boisrouvray Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 8 17 6
2024 5 8 13 4
2024 6 6 10 4
2024 7 8 15 4
2024 8 7 11 4
2024 9 6 8 4
2024 10 6 9 4
2024 11 6 12 4
2024 12 5 7 4
2025 1 5 8 3
2025 2 4 6 2
2025 3 3 5 2
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 0 1 0
2025 9 3 10 0
2025 10 5 31 0
2025 11 8 56 0
2025 12 0 0 0
2026 1 0 0 0
2026 2 0 1 0

Trending Position


No trending metrics available.

Return to Top

Reviews

rooprect
10.0

The greatest story about storytelling from the greatest storyteller, "The Immortal Story" makes a challenging and profound statement while presenting itself as the simplest tale. It begins with an old sailor's yarn about a raggedy sailor who encounters a rich man and is paid a large sum of money to ... come to the rich man's house and perform a task. This story-within-the-story becomes the obsession of rich old Mr. Clay (Orson Welles) who, irritated at learning that it's only a legend, decides to make it really happen. What follows doesn't stray far from this simplest of plots, and yet as it takes us deeper into the drama, peeling back each character's motivations (there are only 4 characters in the entire film), we realize that this tale exposes the very fabric of society and why "people run north, south, east, west." Even deeper, it exposes the machine driving all these people: in this case a withered old man intent on proving his omnipotence. For, having conquered the world in terms of money and material success, what left is there? Clocking in at under 60 minutes (this was made, to much fanfare, as the first color program to air on French TV), "The Immortal Story" proves that a film doesn't need to be a 3 hour epic to be a masterpiece. It's all neatly encapsulated here in under an hour, the perfect length for watching over & over. You can hang on every word, you can soak in every detail of the magnificent sets or the revolutionary way Welles used color (notice how distant backgrounds are lit in a dreamy soft yellow, giving us a tremendous sense of depth), and of course you can lose yourself in the incredible acting. Ultimately all of these things feed into the main point Welles is making about storytelling through the ages. "The Immortal Story" is indeed the immortal story.

Jun 20, 2025