Préparez vos mouchoirs
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''Get Out Your Handkerchiefs'' (french: Préparez vos mouchoirs) is a 1978 French romantic comedy film directed by Bertrand Blier and starring Carole Laure, Gérard Depardieu, Patrick Dewaere and Riton Liebman. The film won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 51st Academy Awards. The film tells the story of a ménage à trois in which two men share a woman to cure her of an unexplained depression, with many symptoms. Eventually, she begins an affair with an Ages of consent in Europe, underage boy. The film employs heavy references to historical musician Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, combined with the music of the film's composer Georges Delerue, who won the César Award for Best Original Music. ''Get Out Your Handkerchiefs'' was a critical success.


Plot

Raoul and his wife Solange are eating in a restaurant when Raoul expresses concern with Solange's apparent depression, as she eats little, suffers migraines and insomnia, and also sometimes faints. He finds another man in the room, Stéphane, to be her lover and hopefully enliven her. Stéphane is puzzled by Raoul's plan, but gives in to his desperate appeals for help. The two men take turns sleeping with Solange, and both try to impregnate her without success, believing a lack of a child to be the source of her depression. Stéphane also shares his love for the music of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Mozart and Pocket Books with the two and their neighbourhood grocer. The music inspires the men, but not Solange. Raoul, Solange, and Stéphane work at a boys' camp in the summer, where they meet a 13-year-old math prodigy named Christian Belœil, who is bullied by the other boys. Solange becomes protective of Christian and one night lets him sleep in her bed. She awakes to find Christian exploring her body and scolds him. They make up and have sex, despite the drastic age difference. Afterwards, Solange becomes dependent on the boy, to the point where Raoul, Stéphane, and she kidnap him from his boarding school. Christian eventually impregnates her, and the film ends with Raoul and Stéphane walking away after serving six months in prison.


Cast


Production

Director Bertrand Blier wrote the screenplay "from the middle", starting by writing the scene where Raoul and Stéphane fantasize about meeting Mozart. Blier considered using an actor to portray Mozart in a historically-appropriate costume for the scene. Collaborating with the film's composer Georges Delerue, Blier employed Mozart's string chamber music in scenes such as where Stéphane and Solange are first seen in bed, followed by using Mozart's String Quintet No. 4 (Mozart), G minor string quintet when Raoul is in the bar with Bernadette. Mention of a conductor named Gervase de Brumer is a reference to Gervase de Peyer. While writing the script, Blier planned to use actors Gérard Depardieu and Patrick Dewaere as the leads, having previously worked with them on ''Going Places (1974 film), Going Places'' (1974). The familiarity meant the men were comfortable together. Blier discovered Riton Liebman, who was 13 years old at the time, and cast him as Christian in the film, where he is credited simply as Riton. While Liebman said he had strained relations with Depardieu and Dewaere, Blier defended him during filming. In reference to the scene where Carole Laure undresses in front of the kid, Bertrand Blier said: "We were shooting take after take without ever being satisfied. We had the impression that the scene was obscene, vulgar. Everyone was unhappy, from the actors to the stagehands. And then suddenly, on the ninth take, the miracle: a collective relief, the certainty that this time 'it would work'. It was this take that was obviously chosen and it is true that it has a certain grace..."


Release

The film had a total of 1,321,087 admissions in France. It played at the New York Film Festival, where the audience clapped and hissed at the film. It was a success in the United States, considered a surprise given the taboo subject matter of a woman in a relationship with a minor. ''Texas Monthly'' writer George Morris reported it was the most discussed film of the New York festival, because of the perceived sexist portrayal of Carole Laure as a "Sexual objectification, sex object," expressing surprise the controversy was not in relation to sex with a minor.


Reception


Critical reception

''Get Out Your Handkerchiefs'' received generally positive reviews in the United States, with some concerns about sexism. David Denby, writing for ''New York (magazine), New York'' magazine, praised ''Get Out Your Handkerchiefs'' as "courageous and enjoyable" and made in the spirit of the French New Wave. Richard Fuller, writing for ''Cincinnati (magazine), Cincinnati'', gave it three and a half stars and said it was "a joy to spend time with," though he objected to Mozart's music being overly loud. ''Variety (magazine), Variety'' wrote that "a rather bizarre mixture of gritty comedy, satire and delving into female status makes this a literary film. There is a lot of talk, sometimes good, but often edgy and too often pointless in lieu of a more robust visual dynamism and life." ''People (magazine), People'' wrote the humour could be "downright incomprehensible" and "so airy it floats right off the screen." ''Time Out (magazine), Time Out'' called it "an erratic, often hilarious movie." In his ''2002 Movie & Video Guide'', Leonard Maltin gives the film three and a half stars and calls it "disarming" and "highly unconventional." Arion Berger writes that "to experience ''Get Out Your Handkerchiefs'' is to watch a master at the peak of his powers." According to ''Take One's Essential Guide to Canadian Film'', French Canadian actress Carole Laure was "permanently eroticized" by ''Get Out Your Handkerchiefs'' and her music career, as having "reinvented the screen goddess." An ''Epinions'' critic wrote "''Get Out Your Handkerchiefs'' is good for some laughs while flaunting somewhat outrageous disregard for standard sexual mores." The Rotten Tomatoes website counts 12 favourable reviews out of 14.


Accolades

The film won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. After four ballots, the National Society of Film Critics named it the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Film, Best Film of 1978, with it also picking up 25 points for National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Screenplay, Best Screenplay. The Best Film honour was considered a surprise, with ''People (magazine), People'' objecting the award was "downright incomprehensible." ''The New York Times'' placed the film on its ''Best 1000 Movies Ever'' list.The Best 1,000 Movies Ever Made.
''The New York Times'' via Internet Archive. Published April 29, 2003. Retrieved June 12, 2008.


See also

* List of submissions to the 51st Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film * List of French submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film


References


Bibliography

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External links

* {{Navboxes , title = Awards for ''Get Out Your Handkerchiefs'' , list1 = {{AcademyAwardBestForeignLanguageFilm 1961–1980 {{National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Film {{French submission for Academy Awards 1978 romantic comedy films 1978 films Best Foreign Language Film Academy Award winners Cultural depictions of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Films directed by Bertrand Blier Films scored by Georges Delerue 1970s French-language films French sex comedy films 1970s sex comedy films National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Film winners 1970s French films