An embittered French nobleman, taken prisoner along with his effeminate son during the Hundred Years War against the British, returns home years later thanks to a ransom paid by Béatrice, his devout, adoring daughter who has sold off property and land. But her hopes for a happy reunion are quickly dispelled by her father’s malevolent actions, including his incestuous rape of Béatrice and and intentions to marry her in defiance of the church. –Inbaseline
One of France’s premiere directors, screenwriters, and producers, Bertrand Tavernier is renowned for making dramas encompassing themes as diverse as familial relationships, World War I, and contemporary social ills. Regardless of the subjects they explore, Tavernier lends his films great introspection and humanity, something that has established him as one of the French cinema’s more progressive and compassionate figures.
Born in Lyon on April 25, 1941, Tavernier grew up with a love of film and wanted to be a director from the age of 13. He was particularly influenced by such American directors as Joseph Losey, John Ford, Samuel Fuller, and William Wellman, and – during a spell at the Sorbonne, where he studied law – he became involved in the film industry as an assistant director for Jean-Pierre Melville. Tavernier became then a film critic and worked for prestigious publications as Positif and Cahiers du Cinema. His first feature film, L’Horloger de St. Paul (1974), received international… read more