The Horse of Pride

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The Horse of Pride
Horse of Pride.jpg
VHS cover
Directed by Claude Chabrol
Produced by Georges de Beauregard
Screenplay by Daniel Boulanger
Based on Le cheval d'orgueil by Pêr-Jakez Helias
Starring Jacques Dufilho
Bernadette Le Saché
Narrated by Georges Wilson
Music by Pierre Jansen
Cinematography Jean Rabier
Edited by Monique Fardoulis
Production
company
Bela Productions
TF1
Planfilm
Distributed by Union Générale Cinématographique (UGC)
Release dates
24 September 1980
Running time
120 minutes
Country France
Language French

The Horse of Pride is a 1980 film directed by Claude Chabrol. Its title in French is Le cheval d'orgueil. It is based on Le cheval d'orgueil, an autobiography by Pêr-Jakez Helias. The film takes place in the Bigouden area south of Quimper.[1]

Plot

Set in Brittany from 1908-1918, two peasants marry, have a son, and live in traditional Breton ways which is three generations under one roof, a division of labor between the sexes, elders' stories at night, politics and religion during their little free time. These are difficult times for them - la Chienne du Monde drives some to commit suicide; Ankou (death) is always a possibility. Pierre is born into this provincial family, his lyric childhood interrupted by the outbreak of war and his father's conscription. He learns his catechism and, as a child of a Reds, also reveres school. His grandfather and father often put him on their shoulders, giving him a ride on the horse of pride.

Principal cast

Actor Role
Jacques Dufilho Alain, le grand-père
Bernadette Le Saché Anne-Marie, la mère
François Cluzet Pierre-Alain, le père
Paul Le Person Gourgon, le facteur
Pierre Le Rumeur Le conteur
Michel Robin Le marquis
Ronan Hubert Pierre-Jacques à 7 ans
Armel Hubert Pierre-Jacques à 11 ans
Michel Blanc Corentin Calvez
Dominique Lavanant Marie-Jeanne, la sage-femme

Critical reception

Vincent Canby of The New York Times:

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Mr. Chabrol makes no attempt to impose an artificial narrative on the film. Instead he simply presents the births and deaths as they happen, the good times and the bad, taking time out to explain the Bretons' customs, their superstitions, their fierce nationalism and their love for their own Celtic language... The movie, handsomely photographed by Jean Rabier, is packed with lore, a lot of it awfully poetic... The Horse of Pride is an oddball if totally sincere footnote to the Chabrol career.[2]

Jackson Adler of Time Out London:

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Stressing the poverty, it caresses the eye with picturesque interiors worthy of any model village, while the peasants decked out in their national costumes look like delegates to a folk-lore congress. Hardly another Tree of Wooden Clogs, but it does have charm, sparks of Chabrol clownery, and plenty of intriguing information about superstitions and customs. One problem is that the autobiographical book by Pierre Jakez Hélias on which it is based has obviously been too severely truncated.[3]

References

  1. Diarmuid Johnson, 'Helias, Pêr-Jakez (1914-95)', in John T. Koch (ed.), Celtic culture: a historical encyclopedia, Volumes 1-5 (2006), pp. 900–901 online
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External links