Désirée (film)
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Désirée | |
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original movie poster |
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Directed by | Henry Koster |
Produced by | Julian Blaustein |
Written by | Daniel Taradash(screenplay) Annemarie Selinko (novel) |
Starring | Marlon Brando Jean Simmons Merle Oberon Michael Rennie Cameron Mitchell |
Music by | Alex North |
Cinematography | Milton R. Krasner |
Editing by | William H. Reynolds |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date(s) | 17 November 1954 |
Running time | 110 min |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
Désirée is a 1954 historical film biography made by 20th Century Fox. It was directed by Henry Koster and produced by Julian Blaustein from a screenplay by Daniel Taradash, based on the best-selling novel Désirée by Annemarie Selinko. The music score was by Alex North and the cinematography by Milton R. Krasner. The film was made in CinemaScope.
It starred Marlon Brando, Jean Simmons, Merle Oberon and Michael Rennie with Cameron Mitchell, Elizabeth Sellars, Charlotte Austin, Cathleen Nesbitt, Carolyn Jones and Evelyn Varden.
The film was nominated for two Academy Awards, for Best Art Direction and Costume Design.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
The film tells the fictionalised story of Désirée Clary and her relationship with Napoleon.
In 1794, in Marseille, Désirée Clary (Jean Simmons) makes the acquaintance of a Corsican named Joseph Bonaparte (Cameron Mitchell) and invites him and his brother, Gen. Napoleon Bonaparte (Marlon Brando), to call upon the family the following day. The next day, Julie (Elizabeth Sellars), Désirée's sister and Joseph are immediately attracted to each other, and Napoleon is taken with Désirée. He admits to her that the poor Bonaparte brothers need the rich dowries of the Clary sisters. Later, Désirée learns that Napoleon has been arrested and taken to Paris.
Napoleon eventually returns to Marseille, tells Désirée that he has been cleared of all charges, but has been ordered to track down royalists in Paris. Désirée begs Napoleon to leave the Army and join her brother in business, but he scoffs at the idea and instead proposes marriage. Désirée accepts and lends Napoleon the money to return to Paris.
Napoleon tells her that he will always love her and will return soon for their wedding but, as the months pass, Désirée begins to doubt him and goes to the city where she meets General Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte (Michael Rennie). She learns that Napoleon is engaged to the wealthy, Joséphine de Beauharnais (Merle Oberon). Désirée contemplates suicide, but she is stopped by Bernadotte who falls in love with her.
Later, in 1797, Napoleon, now France’s leading general, has succeeded in conquering Italy, and Désirée lives in Rome with Julie and Joseph. She soon tires of Rome, however, and decides to return to Paris, where she meets Napoleon, now married to Josephine, who announces that he will be leaving for Egypt. Bernadotte is thrilled to see Désirée again and proposes marriage to her.
By July 4, 1799, Désirée and Bernadotte have happily settled into married life and have a son, Oskar. On November 9, 1799, Napoleon is proclaimed First Consul of the French Republic and asks Bernadotte to join his council of state. Bernadotte agrees.
Several years later, Napoleon is proclaimed emperor, and at his coronation he takes the crown from the hands of Pope Pius VII and crowns himself.
Five years later, desperate for an heir, Napoleon divorces Josephine, and Désirée comforts her former rival, before Napoleon’s upcoming marriage to the eighteen-year-old Marie Louise of Austria (Violet Rensing). Napoleon involves France in more wars, and Bernadotte is approached by representatives of the king of Sweden, who wishes to adopt him and make him the heir to the throne. Désirée, stunned by the news that she will one day be a queen, nevertheless supports her husband, and eventually Napoleon allows both of them to leave Paris.
In Stockholm, Désirée does not fit in with the royal family and asks to go home. Eight months later, she attends a ball in Paris at which Napoleon shows off his new son. Napoleon makes veiled threats about Bernadotte’s alliance with Russia and announces to the crowd that she will be held hostage to ensure Sweden’s support while his army marches through Russia to Moscow.
Napoleon’s army is defeated and he visits Désirée and asks her to write a letter to Bernadotte, requesting his help. Désirée realizes that Napoleon still loves her and came more for her than to seek her husband’s help. Soon after, Bernadotte leads one of the armies that overwhelms Napoleon, and the triumphant general reunites with Désirée before returning to Sweden.
Napoleon’s exile to Elba is short-lived, however, and after the battle of Waterloo, Napoleon retreats with his personal army to Malmaison. Representatives of the allied armies ask Désirée to speak with Napoleon, hoping that she can persuade him to surrender. Napoleon agrees to speak with Désirée alone, and muses on what his destiny would have been if he had married her. Napoleon proclaims that he has given his life to protect France, but Désirée gently tells him that he must do as France asks and go into exile on St. Helena. Commenting on how strange it is that the two most outstanding men of their time had fallen in love with her, Napoleon gives Désirée his sword in surrender, and assures her that her dowry was not the only reason he proposed to her many years ago in Marseille.
[edit] Cast
Marlon Brando - Napoleon Bonaparte
Merle Oberon - Empress Josephine
Michael Rennie - Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte
Cameron Mitchell - Joseph Bonaparte
Elizabeth Sellars - Julie, Desiree's Sister
Charlotte Austin - Paulette
Cathleen Nesbitt - Mme. Bonaparte
Evelyn Varden - Marie
Isobel Elsom - Madame Clary
Alan Napier - Despereaux
Nicholas Koster - Oscar, Desiree's Son
Richard Deacon - Etienne
Edith Evanson - Queen Hedwig
Sam Gilman - Fouché
Larry Craine - Louis Bonaparte
Judy Lester - Caroline Bonaparte
Louis Borell - Baron Morner
Peter Bourne - Count Brahe
Dorothy Neumann - Queen Sofia
[edit] Notes
The story of Désirée was the subject of an earlier film, Le Destin fabuleux de Désirée Clary made in 1942 by Sacha Guitry.
[edit] External links
- Désirée Clary
- The story of Desiree (ger.)
- Désirée at the Internet Movie Database