Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Madame Bovary is a 1934 French historical drama film directed by Jean Renoir, starring Max Dearly, Valentine Tessier and Pierre Renoir, and adapted from Gustave Flaubert 's 1857 novel Madame Bovary. [1] Plot summary. Cast. Max Dearly as Homais. Valentine Tessier as Emma Bovary. Pierre Renoir as Charles Bovary. Robert Le Vigan as Lheureux.

    • Nouvelle Société des Films
    • Darius Milhaud
  2. Film. Madame Bovary has had the following film and television adaptations: Unholy Love (1932), directed by Albert Ray; Madame Bovary (1934), directed by Jean Renoir and starring Max Dearly and Valentine Tessier; Madame Bovary (1937), directed by Gerhard Lamprecht and starring Pola Negri, Aribert Wäscher and Ferdinand Marian

    • 1856 (in serial) & April 1857 (in book form)
    • Realist novel
  3. Director, Screenplay. Gustave Flaubert. Novel. Soon after the death of his first wife (whose dowry was inadequate), Charles Bovary, a country doctor in Normandy, marries Emma Rouault. In her new home, Emma finds conflict with her mother-in-law, a husband uninterested in the social whirl, and general discontentment; thereby proving an easy ...

  4. Synopsis. Soon after the death of his first wife (whose dowry was inadequate), Charles Bovary, a country doctor in Normandy, marries Emma Rouault. In her new home, Emma finds conflict with her mother-in-law, a husband uninterested in the social whirl, and general discontentment; thereby proving an easy conquest for philanderer Rodolphe.

    • (392)
    • Société Nouvelle Des Films
    • Jean Renoir
  5. Synopsis. Soon after the death of his first wife (whose dowry was inadequate), Charles Bovary, a country doctor in Normandy, marries Emma Rouault, who is well-endowed in every sense. In her new home, Emma finds conflict with her mother-in-law, a husband uninterested in the social whirl, and general discontentment; thereby proving an easy ...

    • Jean Renoir
    • Max Dearly
  6. Synopsis by Hal Erickson. When French-filmmaker Jean Renoir offered his 1934 version of Flaubert's Madame Bovary to the distributors, he was compelled to cut it severely. This was not due to the subject matter, but because Renoir's "director's cut" ran nearly 3 and a half hours!

  7. Sep 10, 2012 · Madame Bovary 1934, directed by Jean Renoir | Film review. Film. Time Out says. Butchered by its original distributor (who cut it by an hour), surviving in a merely adequate print, this...

  1. People also search for