Fan-Fan the Tulip

    Fan-Fan the Tulip
    1952

    Synopsis

    Fanfan is a young handsome peasant. He joins the army to escape marriage because a gypsy girl predicted he will get glory and the king's daughter as a wife. But the gypsy girl was in fact Adeline, the daughter of the recruiting officer. Once he has discovered the stratagem, Fanfan refuses to forget this dream and decides to fulfill the destiny of the fake prediction.

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      Cast

      • Gérard PhilipeFanfan la Tulipe
      • Gina LollobrigidaAdeline
      • Marcel HerrandLouis XV
      • Olivier HussenotTranche-Montagne
      • Noël RoquevertFier-à-Bras
      • Geneviève PageLa marquise de Pompadour
      • Sylvie PelayoHenriette de France
      • Henri RollanMaréchal d'Estrées
      • Nerio BernardiLa Franchise
      • Jean-Marc TennbergLebel

      Recommendations

      • 83

        Seattle Post-Intelligencer

        Jacque's satiric comic take on swashbucklers extends to war in general and particularly to the men who lead their armies.
      • 80

        Variety

        A rousing, good humored costumer on ribald 18th-century France. (Review of Original Release)
      • 80

        Village Voice

        Cahiers-savvy cinephiles will recognize Fanfan as the type of handsome prestige production that the French New Wave overthrew in the early '60s, but this example of the "cinéma de qualité" is hardly a musty artifact, with its compact editing, its breezy and mischievous tone, and, in a country not yet a decade removed from the Nazi occupation, its acrid anti-militarism, clear from the ash-dry narration of the opening battle sequences onward.
      • 80

        Washington Post

        That the actor performs so effortlessly, so casually, is the real magic here. You forget about technique, and, best of all, you forget you're watching a black-and-white subtitled French movie from the dusty past.
      • 75

        TV Guide Magazine

        Although the film contains a subtle antiwar message, it's not necessary to look for any rhyme or reason in the script; just enjoy all the derring-do.
      • 70

        The New York Times

        The production is handsome, solid and bursting with Gallic atmosphere. Christian-Jaque gets a bouquet for his effort, even though it's just this side of being complete. (Review of Original Release)
      • 70

        L.A. Weekly

        There's nothing profound going on here, and this pristine example of cinéma de qualité must later have driven ardent French New Wavers round the bend. But as a breezy populist comedy, more farce than satire, it remains infectious, and the case made for love and sex over tyranny and death takes us back to an age when romantic leads were less self-serious and more willing to double up as buffoons.
      • 70

        Los Angeles Times

        With Philipe apparently doing a lot of his own stunts, Fanfan is replete with heroic leaps, speedy horse rides, occasional explosions and clashing sabers. If this all sounds like a 1950s version of "Pirates of the Caribbean," that may not be such a bad comparison.