Cyrano de Bergerac is a
1990 French-language film based on the 1897
play of the same name by
Edmond Rostand. It was directed by
Jean-Paul Rappeneau and adapted
by
Jean-Claude Carrière
and
Jean-Paul Rappeneau. The
English subtitles use
Anthony
Burgess's translation of the text, which preserves the rhyming
alexandrines of the original.
The film
was a co-production between companies
in France
and Hungary
.
The film is the first
theatrical
film version of Rostand's original play in color. It is also
considerably more lavish, and has more details than previous
versions of the film.
Plot
Cyrano de Bergerac is a Parisian
poet and swashbuckler with a large nose of which he is
self-conscious, but which he pretends to be proud of. He is madly
in love with his "friendly cousin" (they were not actually related
as cousins), the beautiful Roxane; however, he does not believe she
will requite his love because he considers himself physically
unattractive. Soon he finds that Roxane has become infatuated with
Christian de Neuvillette, a dashing new recruit to the
Cadets of Gascogne, the military unit of
which
Cyrano is the captain.
Christian however, despite his good looks, is tongue-tied when
speaking with women. Seeing an opportunity to vicariously declare
his love for Roxane, he decides to aid Christian, who does not know
how to court a woman and gain her love.
Cyrano aids Christian, writing love
letters and poems describing the very emotions that
Cyrano himself feels for Roxane. Roxane
begins to appreciates Christian not only for his good looks but now
his apparent eloquence. She eventually falls in love with him and
they contract a
secret marriage.
However,
right after the wedding ceremony, Christian has been called off to
fight in the war against the Spanish
. The
war is harsh and brutal: the
Cadets
of Gascogne are starving. Cyrano escapes over enemy lines each
morning to deliver a love letter written by Cyrano himself but
signed with Christian's name, sent to Roxane. Christian, at this
time, is completely unaware of Cyrano's doings on his behalf. The
love letters Cyrano writes eventually draw Roxane out from the city
of Paris to the war front. She had come to visit Christian, the
supposed romantic poet. However, during the battle that follows
Roxane's visit, Christian is wounded and dies in battle. Cyrano
fights off the attackers and the French win.Cyrano keeps his love
for Roxane a secret for fourteen years, during which time he
becomes unpopular because of his raucous behavior and she becomes a
nun.However, during this time, Cyrano faithfully
visits Roxane at her
convent until a fateful
attempt on his life leaves him mortally injured.(He was not wounded
by a sword, but suffered a serious head injury when struck by a
heavy wooden beam.)Only then does he reveal to Roxane his feelings
towards her.As Cyrano dies, Roxane realizes that it was he, and not
Christian, whom she had really loved all along.
Cast
- The Duenna — Josiane Stoléru
- The Child — Anatole Delalande
- The Father — Alain Rimoux
- Vicomte de Valvert — Philippe
Volter
- Lignière — Jean-Marie Winling
- The Bore — Louis Navarre
- Montfleury — Gabriel Monnet
- Bellerose — François Marié
Awards and nominations
Academy Awards
Gérard Depardieu's Best Actor
nomination is an extremely rare feat for a non-English-speaking
role.
Cannes
Gérard Depardieu won the
Best Actor
award at the
1990 Cannes Film
Festival.
Césars
The film was nominated for 13
César
Awards in 1991, and received 10, which is a record, including
awards for Best Film, Best Actor, Best Cinematography, and Best
Director.
- Won: Best Actor – Leading Role (Gérard
Depardieu)
- Won: Best Actor – Supporting Role (Jacques
Weber)
- Won: Best Cinematography (Pierre Lhomme)
- Won: Best Costume Design (Franca
Squarciapino)
- Won: Best Director (Jean-Paul Rappeneau)
- Won: Best Editing (Noëlle Boisson)
- Won: Best Film
- Won: Best Music (Jean-Claude Petit)
- Won: Best Production Design (Ezio
Frigerio)
- Won: Best Sound (Pierre Gamet and Dominique
Hennequin)
- Nominated: Best Actress – Leading Role (Anne Brochet)
- Nominated: Best Writing (Jean-Claude Carrière and Jean-Paul
Rappeneau)
- Nominated: Most Promising Actor (Vincent Perez)
European Film Awards
- Won: Best Production Designer (Ezio Frigerio
(sets) and Franca Squarciapino (costumes))
- Nominated: Best Actor (Gérard Depardieu)
- Nominated: Best Actress (Anne Brochet)
- Nominated: Best Cinematographer (Pierre Lhomme)
- Nominated: Best Composer (Jean-Claude Petit)
- Nominated: Best Film
Golden Globe
The film won the
Golden Globe
Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
BAFTA
- Won: Best Costume Design (Franca
Squarciapino)
- Won: Best Cinematography (Pierre L'Homme)
- Won: Best Makeup (Jean-Pierre Eychenne,
Michele Burke)
- Won: Best Original Score (Jean-Claude
Petit)
- Nominated: Best Actor (Gérard Depardieu)
- Nominated: Best Adapted Screenplay (Jean-Paul Rappeneau,
Jean-Claude Carrière)
- Nominated: Best Foreign Language Film
- Nominated: Best Production Design (Ezio Frigerio)
Trivia
This film marked the second time that an actor had been nominated
for an Oscar for his portrayal of Cyrano; the first time was in
1950, when
José
Ferrer was nominated for his performance in the
English-language film of
Cyrano de Bergerac. Ferrer,
however, won his Oscar; Depardieu did not.
References
External links