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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot  





2 Cast  





3 Release  





4 Reception  





5 References  





6 External links  














Thomas the Impostor






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Thomas the Impostor
Directed byGeorges Franju
Screenplay by
  • Michel Worms
  • Georges Franju[2]
  • Based onA novel
    byJean Cocteau[2]
    Produced byEugene Lepicier[2]
    Starring
  • Fabrice Rouleau
  • Jean Servais
  • CinematographyMarcel Fradetal[2]
    Edited byGilbert Natot[2]
    Music byGeorges Auric[2]

    Production
    company

    Filmel[2]

    Release date

    • 5 May 1965 (1965-05-05) (France)

    Running time

    93 minutes[2]
    CountryFrance[1][2]

    Thomas the Impostor (French: Thomas l'imposteur) is a 1965 French drama film directed by Georges Franju and starring Emmanuelle Riva, Fabrice Rouleau, Sophie Dares, Jean Marais and Charles Aznavour. It is based on a novel of the same name by Jean Cocteau.

    Plot[edit]

    The film is set during World War I, as Paris is expected to fall to the Germans. The Princesse de Bormes, a widow, helps wounded soldiers by evacuating them from the front and bringing them to her villa in Paris for medical care. However, the authorities will not give the Princess and the soldiers passes to return to Paris. The situation changes when an innocent 16-year-old boy, Guillaume Thomas de Fontenoy, joins the authorities and is mistaken as the nephew of the popular General de Fontenoy. Thomas is able to use his position of posing as the general's nephew to cut through the red tape, in order to help the Princess. She is entranced by Thomas, and her daughter, Henriette, falls in love with him. However, Thomas feels impelled to see more war action. Later, he is caught behind enemy lines when he is moved with a military unit into the heat of battle.

    Cast[edit]

    Release[edit]

    Thomas the Impostor was released in France on 5 May 1965.[1]

    Reception[edit]

    In a contemporary review from the Monthly Film Bulletin, noted that film treated war as "fantasy" with Franju's film as being an "almost fairy-tale fantasy of figures moving in a mystical land where everything seems predetermined" and noted that "Emmanuele Riva gives a hauntingly beautiful performance as the Princess, and Fabrice Rouleau looks exactly right as Thomas; and the commentary, finely spoken by Jean Marais, is for once in accord with the images and mood of the film."[2] The review concluded that "Franju has captured the spirit of Cocteau's novel, the point at which the surface glamour of war becomes the awful reality of its suffering."[2]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ a b "Thomas l'imposteur (1964) Georges Franju" (in French). films.bifi.fr. Retrieved 10 November 2019.
  • ^ a b c d e f g h i j k D.W. (April 1966). "Thomas L'Imposteur (Thomas the Imposter) France, 1964". Monthly Film Bulletin. Vol. 33, no. 387. British Film Institute. p. 57.
  • External links[edit]


  • t
  • e

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Thomas_the_Impostor&oldid=1110732428"

    Categories: 
    1965 films
    Films based on works by Jean Cocteau
    French black-and-white films
    1965 drama films
    Films directed by Georges Franju
    Films set on the French home front during World War I
    Western Front (World War I) films
    Films set in Paris
    Films with screenplays by Jean Cocteau
    1960s French films
    1960s French film stubs
    Hidden categories: 
    CS1 French-language sources (fr)
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Template film date with 1 release date
    Articles containing French-language text
    All stub articles
     



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