Jean de Florette
Jean de Florette is a 1986 French period drama film directed by Claude Berri. It is the first part of a diptych with Manon of the Spring (Manon des Sources), released the same year. Both are the adaptation of Marcel Pagnol’s 1962 two-part novel The Water of the Hills, with the second part also being adapted from Pagnol's original 1952 film Manon of The Spring. Berri's version was the first attempt at adapting the whole saga, including the first part, Jean de Florette, which was originally written as a prequel to the novelization of Manon of The Spring.
Plot
The story takes place outside a village in Provence, in the south of France, shortly after the First World War. Ugolin Soubeyran returns from his military service and throws himself into a project to grow carnations on his property in the mountains. His uncle César, referred to as Le Papet (meaning "the grandfather" in the local dialect), is at first skeptical; but is convinced when the flowers get a good price at the market. They decide the project is worthy of expansion, and together they go to see the neighbouring farmer, Pique-Bouffigue, to buy his land. The land in question is apparently dry, but Papet knows of a spring that could solve that problem.
More details
| author | Gérard Brach Marcel Pagnol |
|---|---|
| director | Claude Berri |
| editor | Arlette Langmann Hervé de Luze |
| genre | drama saga |
| keywords | belong breed cry dowse dowsing rod farm fly france french third republic inherit kill military service pack provence sirocco spring tax collector world war young daughter |
| musicBy | Giuseppe Verdi Jean-Claude Petit |
| producer | Alain Poiré |
| publisher | AMLF |
| theme | agriculture |