Divine (1935) Poster

(1935)

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7/10
Raffish, beautifully filmed backstage drama
roslein-674-8745568 January 2023
The camerawork in this film is more graceful than some of the chorus girls in the third-rate revue where the heroine finds work. That includes the heroine, a big ox of a country maiden whose stage name (the title) seems more than a bit optimistic. But no to worry, the action gets off with a bang--the country girl is tilling the fields, whatever that is, when a cute blonde in an even cuter open-topped car drives up, and whom should it be but her friend, who left the country for Paris four years ago. "But how," she asks in bewilderment, "can you afford a car and such clothes from being a chambermaid?" In Paris, Divine wises up, but has no wish to do likewise. Yet, while she is protecting her virtue, the other chorus girls are running a cocaine racket and plotting to make her the goat. This racy theme, combined with girls going topless and swearing, as well as plenty of backstage feuds and catastrophes, more than make up for the negligible story, as does Ophuls's beautifully lit and choreographed movement.
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10/10
The milkman always calls twice
clanciai3 April 2016
Another neglected and underrated masterpiece by Max Ophuls - it's amazing how even the oldest films by him surprise you with their brilliant camera work, the breakneck direction, the amazing scenography always crowded with picturesque details, the totally convincing environment and the perfect realization of the most impossible plots with amassed complications! - of which this film is the perfect example. The chaos at the theatre is so real, that every detail of the intricacies of every single person - and they are many - is brought to full light and glory in a wonder of minute visualization. Forget Colette and her silly and banal story, this is a feast for the eyes all the way offering even some thriller elements and worrying excitement - the criminal intrigues back stage are no small matter and astoundingly modern - this is the 70s back in the 30s.

To this comes the delightful French charm of the idyllic set-ups both in the country and in the theatre, with those for Ophuls so typically hair-raising moving camera sequences catching up even what no ordinary eye would see in passing. The music is perfect as well, never dominating but always enhancing what is going on. The close-ups, the intimate moments of secrecy and revelations caught almost furtively, the lurid characters, everything combines to a masterpiece of intoxicating brilliance, - but it is the cinematic imagery above all that makes the film, yet another masterpiece by Ophuls definitely worth rediscovering and upgrading.
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Milk today
dbdumonteil1 October 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Although written by famous author Colette,"Divine" has to be ranked among Ophuls' weakest efforts ;although Colette depicted a milieu (music -hall) she knew very well,the best is the very beginning of the movie:the contrast between the plow and the brightly shining car ,the word 'business" which the heroine does not understand ;the country is the right place ,the town is evil and if the heroine,unlike so many women in the director's canon ,escapes unharmed,it's because a nice good-looking milkman shows her the way and saves her in the nick of time.

But the essential is the depiction of the life of "artists "in the variety theatre which includes rather daring numbers for the time (topless dancers);a shady wizard (Philippe Heriat,himself a writer too)tries to involve the naive heroine in drug trafficking,but all this is not really convincing.One should also note that the girl (Simone Berriau) is not really "divine" ,her friend being much more attractive .It's finally a disappointment after the brilliant "La Signora Di Tutti" and "Liebelei".
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