Fr : version française / En: english version

All roads lead to Rome

All roads lead to Rome

Sheltered by the ramparts

Sheltered by the ramparts

Belleforest's map of Paris

Belleforest's map of Paris

Pont Neuf

Pont Neuf

Paris, an open-plan city

Paris, an open-plan city

Haussmann: Minister of Paris

Haussmann: Minister of Paris

Everything's connected!

Everything's connected!

Rue Passagère

Rue Passagère

In a roundabout fashion...

In a roundabout fashion...

Lining the streets

Lining the streets

Processions

Processions

From the League to the Fronde

From the League to the Fronde

Taking to the streets

Taking to the streets

Forward march!

Forward march!

The resilient Republic!

The resilient Republic!

Let the party begin!

Let the party begin!

The Boulevard of Crime

The Boulevard of Crime

The carnival

The carnival

Industrious street life

Industrious street life

Colporteurs

Colporteurs

The central market

The central market

Paving the way...

Paving the way...

It's a dirty job...

It's a dirty job...

Standing firm

Standing firm

Let there be light!

Let there be light!

Sleep soundly, good people!

Sleep soundly, good people!

The beat goes on...

The beat goes on...

The Boulevard of Crime

The opening sequence in Les Enfants du Paradis (The Children of Paradise) gives a wonderful illustration of changes in social entertainment. Until the 18th century, the street was also the stage for the gamut of cultural events, including dramas, music, juggling, bearkeeping and funfairs.

In the early 19th century, the development of the "Grands Boulevards" also introduced a number of theatres (whose fondness for portraying crimes on stage gave rise to the nickname, "Boulevard of Crime"), which coexisted alongside street theatre.

Entertainment was gradually becoming an institution.

Clip from Les Enfants du Paradis (The Children of Paradise)

Les Enfants du paradis is a 1945 film divided into two periods (Boulevard du Crime and The Man in White). It is designed as a show mixing real and imaginary historical characters. The action, which takes place in Paris in 1828, centers on the relationship between the mime Debureau (Jean-Louis Barrault), the actor Frédérick Lemaître (Pierre Brasseur) and Garance (Arletty).

The choice of period and plot demonstrates the director Marcel Carné's and screenwriter Jacques Prévert's love of the 19th century, when art began to be aimed at the people rather than the elite. Shot during the war but only released at the time of the Liberation, the film was hugely successful with both the critics and the public. The critics voted it the best film of all time in 1995.

Les Enfants du Paradis through the eyes of Marcel Carné (in French)

Marcel Carné

Born in Paris in 1906, Marcel Carné made his cinema debut as an assistant director in 1933. Very soon, he made his first film, Jenny, with two men who were to remain loyal to him for many years: Jacques Prévert and Joseph Kosma. Up until the end of the war, with or without Prévert and Kosma, he made a number of films that defined French cinema: Drôle de drame (Bizarre, Bizarre), Quai des brumes (Port of Shadows), Hôtel du Nord, Le jour se lève (Daybreak), Les visiteurs du soir (The Night Visitors), Les enfants du Paradis (The Children of Paradise) and Les portes de la nuit (Gates of the Night). He was one of the key directors of the poetic realism genre.

After the war, Carné made a dozen more films that were less favorably received by cinemagoers and elicited a lukewarm reaction from the critics, despite successes such as Thérèse Raquin and Les tricheurs. He died in Clamart in 1996.

The poet, screenwriter and playwright Jacques Prévert was born in Neuilly-sur-Seine in 1900. He was bored by school and left after receiving his Certificat d'études. Prévert made a living from casual jobs, notably at Le Bon Marché department store in Paris, before doing his military service when he met Marcel Duhamel and the painter Yves Tanguy.

When he was demobbed, he returned to Paris and became a member of the Rue du Château surrealist group with whom he engaged in the Surrealist game of consequences called cadavre exquis (exquisite corpse) and explored the medium of collage. In the 1930s, an atheist and antimilitarist, he wrote plays for the politically committed, avant-garde theatre company, the October Group. At the same time, with the invention of talking pictures, he wrote adaptations, screenplays and dialogues for directors such as Claude Autant-Lara, Jean Renoir, Marcel Carné and Christian-Jacque, sometimes with his brother Pierre.

1946 saw the publication of his first poetry collection, Paroles, a compilation of pre-war writings that met with huge success. Some of the poems were later set to music. Other collections followed, as well as works produced in association with painters and sculptors, including Picasso, Braque, Chagall, Max Ernst, Calder and Miro. He died in 1977 in Omonville-la-Petite in Normandy where he had retired.

© Fatras / PATHE PRODUCTION