Le Miroir à deux faces

Le Miroir à deux faces is a 1958 French drama film directed by André Cayatte who co-wrote screenplay with Gérard Oury, Jean Meckert and Denis Perret. The film stars Michèle Morgan, Bourvil and Ivan Desny. It was called The Mirror Has Two Faces in English, but this is not the literal translation; the word is à ("with") not a ("has"), and so would be better translated as The Two-Sided Mirror.[1]

Le Miroir a deux faces
Directed byAndré Cayatte
Produced byHenry Deutschmeister
Alain Poiré
Robert Sussfeld (executive producer)
Written byAndré Cayatte
Gérard Oury
dialogue:
Jean Meckert
Denis Perret
StarringMichèle Morgan
Bourvil
Ivan Desny
Music byLouiguy
CinematographyChristian Matras
Edited byPaul Cayatte
Production
company
CEI Incom
Franco London Films
Paris Union Films
Société Nouvelle des Établissements Gaumont (SNEG)
Distributed bySociété des Etablissements L. Gaumont
Release date
  • 15 October 1958 (1958-10-15)
Running time
96 minutes
CountryFrance
Italy
LanguageFrench

The film was loosely remade in the U.S. as The Mirror Has Two Faces (1996) adapted by Richard LaGravenese, and starring Barbra Streisand and Jeff Bridges.

Synopsis

Pierre Tardivet, a professor, marries Marie-José Vauzange, a sensitive and intelligent girl who is physically unattractive. Tardivet soon begins to treat Marie-José cruelly, making her life very unpleasant and joyless. Two children are born out the marriage. Then, Tardivet suffers a car accident and is tended by Dr. Bosc, a famous plastic surgeon. Bosc operates on Marie-José and transforms her into a beautiful woman. Tardivet then begins to treat her even more cruelly. He becomes embittered and hateful towards Marie-José because her changed appearance makes him think she is no longer his. Marie-José and her sister's husband, Gérard Durieu, want to elope and restart their lives, but they are stopped when Pierre Tardivet kills Dr. Bosc. This dramatic act recalls Marie-José to her duties as a wife and mother, and she renounces her happiness to tend to her husband and children.

Cast

Critical reception

Time Out wrote: "Interesting to re-view this in the light of the Streisand 'remake', though any resemblance are so superficial as to appear coincidental," and added that "Cayatte shows his customary relish for the unpleasant: the nightmare honeymoon in Venice is richly detailed and Sylvie sketches in the quietly venomous mother-in-law with her usual economy. If Streisand's film was quintessential '90s Hollywood feel good, this is equally characteristic '50s French astringency."[2] TV Guide commented: "The filmmakers do a fine job of delving into the problems people face when a fairy tale-like transformation takes place, though the film suffers from an over-analysis of the situation. Also, Morgan is too glamorous to pull off the type of physical transformation that occurs."[3]

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gollark: People keep using it for stuff which requires more safety. I think it's unsuitable for those.
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gollark: No, but any DB interface library which doesn't make it easy is bad.

References

  1. Mordden, Ethan (11 April 2019). "On Streisand: An Opinionated Guide". Oxford University Press via Google Books.
  2. "Le Miroir a deux faces". Time Out London. Retrieved 2019-10-12.
  3. "The Mirror Has Two Faces | TV Guide". TVGuide.com. Retrieved 2019-10-12.
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