The Green Room (1978) Poster

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7/10
Never Letting Go...
Xstal24 January 2023
Julien Davenne has suffered trauma, it still haunts him, he's perpetually a mourner, after losing his wife Julie, he still loves her oh so truly, leaves him trapped inside a tomb, can't turn the corner. Cecilia attempts to make a bond, there's connection, and slowly he does respond, after fire burns his tribute, to his perpetual love salute, she becomes someone, of which he is quite fond - but not for long.

It's not the most riveting period drama you've ever come across although, like The Story of Adele H, it shows how people with serious mental illness behaved when there was little or no support, or indeed appreciation for, in this case, PTSD. Nathalie Baye is gorgeous and elegant, and as such, shows just how much Julien Davenne has lost his marbles, but at least she gets to light his candle.
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6/10
Morbid, Melancholic and Dark
claudio_carvalho21 September 2008
Eleven years after the end of World War I, in a small village in the East of France, the journalist Julien Davenne (François Truffaut) still grieves the death of his beloved wife Julie ten years ago. He worships Julie in a green room in his house decorated with her pictures and belongings. When he meets auctioneer's assistant Cecilia Mandel (Nathalie Baye) in an auction house, they see that they have in common the obsession for death and become close to each other. When a fire destroys his green room, Julien convinces the bishop to restore the local chapel and prepare it as a sanctuary for Julie and his dead friends to preserve their memories, while Cecilia falls in love for him, but Julien is dead inside.

"La Chambre Verte" is the darkest of the Truffault's movies that I have seen. The melancholic romance has a beautiful cinematography; has great performances with Truffault in the role of Julien Davenne, a man that writes obituaries in the dying newspaper Le Globe and most of his friends have already died, and the gorgeous Nathalie Baye as an old acquaintance that falls in love for him. But the story is extremely unpleasant and somber and I did not like it. My vote is six.

Title (Brazil): "O Quarto Verde" ("The Green Room")
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6/10
Dum Vivimus, Vivamus
boblipton3 June 2019
Francois Truffaut's wife died years ago, and he has since kept a shrine to her, a green room where he keeps her belongings, where he speaks to her. When he encounters Nathalie Baye, who seems to have a similar feeling about the dead, he can choose to be a man among the living, or build a chapel to the dead, to be completed with his own death.

Truffaut's adaptation of Henry James' "The Altar of the Dead" is a sere, underplayed movie about people who have given up on life in the aftermath of the First World War, and seek am excuse in the idealization of the dead. It's madness, but an attractively passive form of madness. Unfortunately, Truffaut, as great a director as he was, was not the actor to bring off this role.

I, too, have reached a stage in life when I know more dead people than living ones. I don't talk to them; they never shut up long enough to let me get in a word edgewise. But even these ghosts know that life is for the living.
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Somber, great
ouija-331 August 2000
I totally disagree with Maltin. Truffaut's The Green Room was destined not to be a crowd pleaser: unlike his most famous films celebrating life (Jules and Jim being the most obvious example) the film is serious in tone and deals with death, Truffaut himself playing the death-obsessed newspaperman.

The Green Room is nonetheless a very impressive film; the questions of the forms of love, life versus death, possession and the remembrance of those who have passed away are treated both intellectually (but not in an 'artsy' or artificial way) and emotionally (but not in a melodramatic way despite an interwoven love story).

The film is surprisingly short and the ending comes even a bit abruptly, so contrary to possible expectations it is not long and dull. The Green Room reminded me of The Magnificent Ambersons and (John Huston's) The Dead, which are also films to be recommended.
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7/10
Who will light a candle for me?
brogmiller22 March 2022
Francois Truffaut certainly spread his net widely when sourcing filmic material and has here drawn inspiration from two short stories and a novella by Henry James. There is something of the biographical in most of Truffaut's oeuvre but this is indisputably his most intensely personal and heartfelt.

The death of his contemporaries, notably his mentor André Bazin and film archivist Henri Langlois, made him all too aware of his own mortality and he has cast himself as Julien Davanne, a writer of obituaries, whose obsession is to create a chapel of remembrance for his late, beloved wife and others who have touched his life. This brings him into contact with Cecilia who is mourning a man who was once a friend of Julien's but who had since betrayed him........

Despite its depressingly morbid subject matter this is a film that once seen, is not easily forgotten and the suitably gloomy atmosphere is courtesy of Néstor Almendros' muted cinematography. Truffaut had also felt the loss of one of France's greatest film composers, Maurice Jaubert, who perished in the early days of WWII and his use of Jaubert's music is inspired, especially in the chapel scenes. The eagle eyed will no doubt spot the photograph of Oskar Werner in the guise of a German soldier. He and Truffaut had worked together twice and ironically, were both fated to die the same year.

Julien's scenes with the mute boy Georges are reminiscent of those between Dr. Itard and Victor, the wild boy of Aveyron in 'L'Enfant Sauvage' and reveal that Julien is capable of showing compassion for the living as well as for the dead.

The question that arises in both films is whether Truffaut made the right decision in casting himself as the leading character. Personally I feel that although Truffaut got away with it in the earlier film he does not fare as well in this. He is suitably forbidding and distant but there is such a thing as dramatic license and the role ideally required an actor of greater range. Truffaut himself was later to acknowledge this. He certainly got it right however when casting Nathalie Baye whose performance as Cecilia is simply stupendous and touches the heart.

Although critically well received the film was commercially catastrophic which not only affected the director's health but caused him to lose financial backing from the French arm of United Artists.

Based upon the principle that 'everyone has their dead' Truffaut felt that the film would strike a chord with audiences but he had sorely underestimated the capacity of most humans to overcome their grief and failed to recognise that for the majority, 'Life belongs to the living'.
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6/10
Sadness
BandSAboutMovies30 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Based on three Henry James stories - "The Altar of the Dead," "The Beast in the Jungle" and "The Way It Came" - this was Francois Truffaut's seventeenth film and the third in which he'd also act. He plays Julien Davenne, a newspaper editor who specializes at obituaries and who keeps a special room in his house to pay tribute to his decade-gone wife Julie.

A thunderstorm destroys the room and Julien finds an abandoned chapel that he transforms into a celebration of all the people he has lost in his life - the room is actually filled with photos of people from Truffaut's life - yet refuses to include a photo for his friend Cécilia Mandel (Nathalie Baye), who wants to include her lover Paul Massigny's image. At one point, Paul and Julien were best friends, but something happened.

When the relationship between Julien and Cécilia ends, he locks himself in his home and refuses to eat. She writes him and urges him to forgive Paul. He does and they visit the chapel one more time, at which point he dies and she leaves behind a picture and candle for him.

Truffaut had watched his movie Shoot the Piano Player and suddenly saw that half the cast was dead and it was only seventeen years old. He wondered why we could not have the same affection for the dead as those that were alive when he made this. This ended up being one of his best reviewed films but one of his biggest financial failures.
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10/10
Truffaut's most personal film
gabrielsangel17 November 2004
I was very impressed, when I watched this movie for the first time. I only knew Truffaut's most popular films (like Jules et Jim or Fahrenheit 451) by then. This film is so completely different than the ones mentioned above. I think Truffaut shows us his inner-self by playing the role of Julien Davenne, a journalist obsessed with the idea of building an altar for his dead. The audience gets a direct access to his feelings and thoughts about life and death. This film is a chance to understand Truffaut and his work better. He knew that the film would not be a box-office hit, but that was not important to Truffaut. He liked the short-stories by Henry James and just did what he wanted to. In my opinion Truffaut did a beautiful job by making this film. I think this film demands very much from its viewers. "The Green Room" provokes a self-reflection in the viewer. The viewer has to deal with his own attitude towards life and death. So this is not an easy film to watch. But if you want a film that differs from all the high-tech, action-loaded movies of the present that simultaneously gives you a very personal access to the man who made it, "The Green Room" is a good choice.
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7/10
La chambre verte - The Lost Generation through the eyes of Truffaut
eightylicious27 March 2022
"La chambre verte" is one of the most strange, if not the strangest work of Truffaut. An adaptation of the novel "The beast and the jungle" by Henry James, it deals with one of the most uncomfortable topics for a film; death. Or, actually, what happens to those that are left alive, when a person from their intimate environment dies.

Julien Davenne, the hero (played by Truffaut himself), is obsessed with death, since the loss of his dear wife, Julie. While everyone tells him to forget her, and move on, he finds it disrespectful to her memory to do so. Instead, he decides to build a chapel, where he will honour his "dead". People he had once known, family, friends that perished in the war. There is even a photo of an unknown German soldier, whom Davenne had killed during the fightings of World War One. To Davenne, death makes no discriminations, he takes everyone, and it's the duty of the living to remember the dead, otherwise, they'll be forgotten.

Having no one as family, except for a child, unable to speak, communicating with him only with signs, and his caretaker, an old lady, Davenne shares his opinions and worries with a young woman (Nathalie Baye). She is shocked by what she hears, at first, but later comes to understand the motives behind Davenne's way of thinking.

Which are those motives? In my opinion, Truffaut tried to present with this film a portrait of the French Lost Generation. Those, who would have been young enough to go fight in World War One. Few of them returned, since France had some of the highest casualties in that war. The war to end all wars. It didn't end them, but it ended relationships, friendships, families. In the film, Davenne laments that his now deceased wife waited for his return from the front for four years. Unfortunately, she didn't get to enjoy their being together for long. Death got her first.

After the First World War, the world was shocked by the disaster, and the death the conflict had brought. And, so, art became obsessed with death. The artists of this Lost Generation rejected the conservatism of their predecessors, it being an element of a pre-war era of carelessness. In their works, they portrayed the death of those seen in the front, or other topics, in an abstract manner. In that way, they wanted to show the madness of war.

What does all this have to do with the film? Davenne is also a member of this generation. One of the lucky ones, that didn't die. But, for him, Julie's loss is kind of a spiritual death. He is as fixated with the concept of death as those artists. Through his chapel,first located in the titular green room in his house, he makes his own attempt at dealing with this stream of deaths the war brought. For him, everyone death deserves to be remembered. But, for a society wanting to move on, this behaviour is abnormal. Why would one want to remain in the past, in a past so traumatic? Truffaut gave his answer through the film.

History, as saddening as this is, would justify Davenne. Because, for all the fun and prosperity that France and the world experienced in the Roaring twenties - in France, tellingly known as "Les années folles" , the crazy years- the next decade's end would bring with it the most catastrophic war human history has ever witnessed. And, then, no one could escape thinking about death. It would simply be everywhere.
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9/10
What about the kid ?
wobelix7 May 2014
Most reviews here are positive, and luckily so: this is a tremendous film. Thought provoking, even disturbing a bit. And wonderfully photographed by Maestro Nestor Almendros. The film simply looks stupendous !

What seems odd is that not one review here, against or for this film, mentions the mute child.

Is there significance to his part, other than to show that Julien Davenne cannot communicate with the world except in obituaries and in sign language ? It is hard to tell, but the role played by the blonde kid is quite poetic, and maybe for that reason alone an asset for this 'La Chambre Verte', which is as wonderful as it is unsettling.
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9/10
François Truffaut,Maurice Jaubert,Nathalie Baye,Jean Dasté,Antoine Vitez
Cristi_Ciopron22 March 2008
Warning: Spoilers
The Green Room is one of the most fascinating films; immensely deep. Sharp, (relatively) short,compact, mournful,doleful and intensely poetical, acutely moving ,and grim.François Truffaut put this film in the most inner core of his creative work; he keenly understood the extravagant and bizarre, uncanny side and nature of his subject--like the breath of the tomb.

Several supporting roles are striking (e.g.,the white friar that receives Davenne;the gazette's chief; i.e., Antoine Vitez and Jean Dasté),but the movie has, on the performances' plan, two poles:the fresh ,delicious Nathalie Baye, and François Truffaut, whose physiognomy is worth a treatise.

Where,and when,the exterior adventure stops,the inner,interior one begins--ever-so shocking.So,The Green Room is really like a "giallo" without the exterior/ extrinsic /phony excitement. On the other hand, Davenne's drama means nothing, because he is insane, mad; but Cecilia Mandel's way and suffering and light are meaningful, the true core of the movie.

Like Two English Girls and the Continent,The Green Room is a period movie, very calligraphic, and it delights in a certain taste for the colors and their relations; and then, the indelible freedom. The music is wonderful (it is Maurice Jaubert's).

Truffaut himself practiced such a cult as is seen in his film;in his many movies, some of the men he admired are honored.

The morbid, weird atmosphere is maintained with science,tact and instinct.

I consider him (François Truffaut) one of the ten most important directors (with Alfred Hitchcock,Renoir, Welles, Federico Fellini ,Michelangelo Antonioni ,Visconti,Andrei Tarkovsky ,Nikita Mikhalkov and Luis Buñuel ).One cannot cheat himself;Truffaut's work is as compact as theirs.

François Truffaut's movies are amazingly realistic--in a subtler, metaphysical sense--as being truly united closely to an inner realm that he made visible in his best films--hence, their visionary look.

In The Green Room one can admire again François Truffaut's tact and precision, intelligence and depth.As a man,as a reader,as a director, he was like no other;he managed to transfer/ transform his culture and his highly cultivated creativity into autonomous, coherent and labyrinthine films.The Green Room is one of those.he was a craftsman as well--an often inspired one;his effort was strikingly fruitful and original, independent and exciting and wholly humane.

Néstor Almendros's cinematography is enchanting.

It is a film elliptic, mysterious, without transitions, chilly, deliberately disturbing.
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Not the Best from the Director
Michael_Elliott4 September 2009
Green Room, The (1978)

** (out of 4)

Truffaut plays a journalist still grieving the death of his wife nearly ten years after her passing. Her passing helped his obsession of death, which ends up making him a friend in an equally strange woman (Nathalie Baye) who also has her own interesting thoughts on the subject. As his obsession grows deeper, the man decides to buy a chapel and turn it into a sanctuary for his wife and other dead friends. This is an extremely bizarre film from Truffaut and while I'm still new to his work, this here is certainly the least entertaining of his films that I've seen. I think the entire film is just one real big mess that never really makes sense of what it's trying to do. I couldn't help but feel a tad bit lost as the movie never really seems clear as to what it's trying to say about death as both characters are pulling in opposite directions. I found their relationship to be extremely forced and completely make belief as not for a single second did I feel either one could care for the other. Another minor issue was the performance by Baye, which I thought was rather weak. The problem with this is that Truffaut was pretty good and the two just don't work very well together and in the end it hurts the film because not only does their relationship feel weak but it doesn't help that the actor is so many better than the partner. I'd be lying if I said I hated this movie because I really didn't. There just wasn't anything here that kept me overly entertained and in the end I was just too bored by the characters and screenplay.
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10/10
I watched this in middle school and was very touched by it
MovieHeartGirl28 January 2023
I was not looking forward to this film when my father told me we were going to go to the University film club and watch it. Despite being in middle school though, I was very touched by it. That was 40 years ago. I'd ike to see it again and see what my impression is now. I recommend it based on my impression then, and will come back after I've seen it again and update this review now that both my parents have recently passed. I kind of dread it because of what it may dredge up, but that's okay. It's so rare to have a film dealing with grief and those that have passed, it seems. I saw Tokyo Story a few years ago, and the two films seem similar in that they deal with those we love who have passed or who may be passing very soon.
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8/10
Unusual subject, harsh treatment, but still exciting
If there is a strange film, it is this one. François Truffaut directs himself. He is a husband who idolizes his dead wife and ends up building her a mausoleum in an abandoned chapel in a cemetery. He is a columnist in charge of the obituary column of a provincial newspaper. He will meet a woman who understands him, she also has a death in her life.

The film is both fascinating for its subject, and totally original, because this subject is not often the subject of a "mainstream" fiction; which is quite relative considering this very subject. And it was probably not easy to finance a film on such a subject. The basic materials are the writings of Henry James. The screenplay was written by François Truffaut himself and Jean Guault, a regular collaborator of François Truffaut.

The interpretation by François Truffaut himself of this character, accentuates its strangeness and originality: the jerky elocution of Truffaut, his inexpressive face permanently, gives depth to the character, and makes it all the more moving and unfathomable.

The work of the sets, interior and exterior, with a small provincial town at night, but also an impressive cemetery, which is overgrown with vegetation, almost abandoned, but which produces an astonishing climate.

The film manages to talk about the subject of the dead, while remaining in realism, or rather without tipping over into the fantastic, which could quickly appear, but it is not the case.
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