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The Long Absence

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1961 film by Henri Colpi
The Long Absence
(Une Aussi Longue Absence)
Film poster
Directed byHenri Colpi
Written byMarguerite Duras
Gérard Jarlot
Produced byAlberto Barsanti
Claude Jaeger
Jacques Nahum (executive producer)
StarringAlida Valli
Georges Wilson
Charles Blavette
CinematographyMarcel Weiss
Edited byJasmine Chasney
Jacqueline Meppiel
Music byGeorges Delerue
Distributed byCommercial Pictures
Release dates
  • 17 May 1961 (1961-05-17) (France)
  • 15 November 1962 (1962-11-15) (U.S.)
Running time
85 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

The Long Absence (French:Une aussi longue absence, "Such a long absence") is a 1961 Frenchdrama film directed byHenri Colpi. It tells the story of Therese (Alida Valli), aPuteaux café owner mourning the mysterious disappearance of her husband sixteen years earlier. A tramp arrives in the town and she believes him to be her husband. But he is suffering fromamnesia and she tries to bring back his memory of earlier times.

The Long Absence shared thePalme d'Or prize with theLuis Buñuel filmViridiana at the1961 Cannes Film Festival.

Plot

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Sixteen years after the end ofWorld War II, Thérèse Langlois owns a pub inPuteaux, Paris. Wrapping up the season, she plans her annual vacation inChaulieu with her lover but is growing emotionally distant towards him. At the pub, atramp walks by daily, singingThe Barber of Seville aria and other opera songs. Intrigued, Thérèse has her bartender, Martine, call the tramp in for a drink. The tramp, who says he lives by the river, reveals he is suffering fromamnesia but carries identification indicating his name is Robert Landais. After the tramp leaves, Thérèse follows him to the river and studies his face and movements; she becomes convinced he is, in fact, her long-lost husband, Albert Langlois.

Determined to make the tramp remember his past identity, Thérèse brings Albert's aunt Alice to the pub, along with Albert's nephew. While the tramp is sitting at another table, the three Langlois loudly recount Albert's story: During the war, Albert had been arrested by the French police in Chaulieu in June 1944 and turned over to theGestapo inAngers, spending time in a camp with his friend Aldo Ganbini. Thérèse herself (née Ganbini) was originally from Chaulieu but stayed in Puteaux, they recount. The tramp leaves the pub without acknowledging himself as Albert. Alice discloses to Thérèse that she did not recognize the tramp and believes he is not a physical match for Albert, also pointing out that Albert had no knowledge of the opera. Thérèse disagrees, arguing that Albert could have learned the songs while imprisoned with Aldo.

Thérèse ends her relationship with her lover and meets with the tramp for dinner, after which they dance. The tramp still does not indicate he remembers anything about a past life as Albert. As the tramp leaves, Thérèse loudly calls out the name "Albert Langlois," and other friends join in. Overwhelmed, the tramp stops, raises his hands in a pose of surrender, and flees. As he runs, he narrowly avoids a traffic accident. Thérèse's friends tell her the tramp is unharmed but that he is gone and try to persuade her to give up on bringing his memories back. Thérèse is unconvinced by them, deciding that it will be easier to try to restore the tramp's memories in the upcoming winter season.

Cast

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Reception

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In 2016,The Hollywood Reporter ranked the film 68th among 69 counted winners of thePalme d'Or to date, judging it forgettable.[1]

Accolades

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The Long Absence shared thePalme d'Or prize with theLuis Buñuel filmViridiana at the1961 Cannes Film Festival.[2]

AwardDate of ceremonyCategoryRecipient(s)ResultRef(s)
British Academy Film Awards1963Best FilmNominated[3]
Best Foreign ActorGeorges WilsonNominated
Cannes Film FestivalMay 1961Palme d'OrWon[2]

References

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  1. ^THR Staff (10 May 2016)."Cannes: All the Palme d'Or Winners, Ranked".The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved9 June 2019.
  2. ^ab"Festival de Cannes: The Long Absence".festival-cannes.com. Retrieved9 June 2019.
  3. ^"Film in 1963".British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Retrieved9 June 2019.

External links

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1939–1975
1976–2000
2001–present
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