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Children of Paradise (1945,
Fr.) (aka Les Enfants du Paradis)
In Marcel Carne's dazzling and beautiful theatrical
masterpiece set in early 19th century Paris and shot during the period
of France's occupation by the Nazis, a tale of doomed love:
- in the elaborate opening,
the words of the carnival barker: ("Step right in! The Truth
is here! Step right in and see! She will fill your thoughts, invade
your dreams! See Naked Truth with your own eyes!"), and the
rising of an actual theatre curtain to reveal the first view of
the 'children of paradise' - the poor and rowdy playgoers in the
audience who must watch from the top balcony galleries at a distance
in the cheap seats
- the scene of the pickpocketing of a crowd onlooker's
gold watch, who falsely charged the female standing next to him -
raven-haired, fickle and enigmatic, seraphim-like (or Garbo-like)
beauty/courtesan Garance (Arletty) of committing the petty crime:
("She did it - it had to be you. Thief!"), although the
real culprit was Pierre-Francois Lacenaire (Marcel Herrand)
- the remarkable pantomime on
an outdoor stage of introverted, delicate, moon-faced theater mime
Baptiste Deburau (Jean-Louis Barrault), as the character of Pierrot,
who had witnessed the theft ("I saw the whole thing"),
and proved through a re-enactment that Garance was not the pickpocket;
the scene ended with the victim's apology: "I'm sorry. Error
is human," to Garance's relief: "May I go now?...Fine,
because I prize my freedom" - and her gift of a thrown flower
to Baptiste for his performance
- and later, Baptiste's confessions of love to Garance:
"Your heart beating against my hand...You were right, Garance.
Love is so simple"; and also his declaration: "I'm shaking
because I'm happy. Happy because you're here, near me. I love you.
Garance, do you love me?" She responded: "You talk like a
child. People love that way in books, in dreams. Not in real life." He
thought otherwise:
"Dreams, life - they're the same. Else life's not worth living";
and Baptiste's wish: "If only lovers lived together, the world
would glow in splendor"
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"Children of Paradise":
The Theater Audience
Garance Next to Theft Accuser
Baptiste Deburau/Pierrot
(Jean-Louis Barrault)
Baptiste's Confessed Love for Garance
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