5 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Sophia Loren is no match for Arletty., 2 January 2006
Author:
dbdumonteil
Catherine Lefebvre,Duchesse de Danzig ,was a pure Parisian:so casting
Sophia Loren and her Italian accent is beyond me.Particularly if you
have seen Roger Richebé's version (1941) starring Arletty.Arletty shone
in this part which was tailor made for her:she was hilariously
funny,which Loren is not.When compared to the actresses who played the
part on stage (Jacqueline Maillan,Sophie Desmarets) Loren's performance
is lackluster.The same goes for Robert Hossein,an excellent thespian
,but who is ill-at-ease in a comedy .
Only the second part is an adaptation of the Sardou/Moreau play.The
first one is filmed on location and deals with Napoleon's wars ,but as
historian Jean Tulard writes,everything rings bad.This second
part,which takes place in the court of the Emperor ,is supposed to be
funny:I dare you to laugh once.The subplot (which involved
Napoleon,Marie-Louise and Neipperg) was ruled out to make room for the
ridiculous scenes with the Prussians.
It's a long way from "Fanfan la Tulipe" ,Christian-Jaque's and Henri
Jeanson's fans! The story was actually watered-down in the play:the
historic Marechale was a crude vulgar woman whose manners beggared
belief.
1 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- lots of sass and even a scene from "Bunker Hill Bunny", 20 October 2008
Author:
Lee Eisenberg (eisenberg.lee@gmail.com) from Portland, Oregon, USA
As I understand it, Madame Sans-Gene (nee Catherine Hubscher) was a
crude-mannered Parisian laundress around the time of the French
Revolution. She hooked up with Sgt. Francois Joseph Lefebvre, whom
Napoleon eventually appointed King of Westphalia. But it didn't end
there.
Since I don't know anything specific about Madame Sans-Gene (except
that her nickname means "Mrs. No Embarrassment", referring to her
behavior), I have to take what this movie says. I don't know whether
Christian-Jaque's "Madame Sans-Gene" is supposed to be a comedy, but it
sure comes across as such. To be certain, the gunpowder trick during
the sabotage scene reminded me of the Bugs Bunny cartoon "Bunker Hill
Bunny".
Anyway, worth seeing, although the scenes early on where the guy
fondles Sophia Loren make the movie hard to take seriously. I've never
seen any of the other movie versions, so I can't compare it with those.
Also starring Robert Hossein and Renaud Mary.
2 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Dull costumer, 20 July 2000
Author:
ouija-3 from Finland
Sophia Loren is the sole star of this expensive-looking but empty costume
picture, in which she plays a washer-woman with ready opinions who, after
adventurous goings-on, gains status in the napoleonic times.
It is such a shame to see this film that came out in the same year that
Loren won an Oscar for her great performance in Two Women. In Madame, she
is
only used to bring in the charm (which she does, as always) and to display
her undeniably shapely bosom through a constantly wet dress, as in some
cheap wet T-shirt competition.
Unfortunately, this seems to be the only thought that the producer or the
director had in mind; the plot is very undramatically presented, the
latter
part of this relatively short film seems slow and the rest of the cast is
wasted. The film is obviously expensive and good-looking, but the opulent
sets and costumes only underline the unimaginativeness of the
presentation.
For those only whose interest in Loren's breasts is enough to keep them
satisfied. Others avoid.
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5 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-
Sophia Loren is no match for Arletty., 2 January 2006
Author: dbdumonteil
Catherine Lefebvre,Duchesse de Danzig ,was a pure Parisian:so casting Sophia Loren and her Italian accent is beyond me.Particularly if you have seen Roger Richebé's version (1941) starring Arletty.Arletty shone in this part which was tailor made for her:she was hilariously funny,which Loren is not.When compared to the actresses who played the part on stage (Jacqueline Maillan,Sophie Desmarets) Loren's performance is lackluster.The same goes for Robert Hossein,an excellent thespian ,but who is ill-at-ease in a comedy .
Only the second part is an adaptation of the Sardou/Moreau play.The first one is filmed on location and deals with Napoleon's wars ,but as historian Jean Tulard writes,everything rings bad.This second part,which takes place in the court of the Emperor ,is supposed to be funny:I dare you to laugh once.The subplot (which involved Napoleon,Marie-Louise and Neipperg) was ruled out to make room for the ridiculous scenes with the Prussians.
It's a long way from "Fanfan la Tulipe" ,Christian-Jaque's and Henri Jeanson's fans! The story was actually watered-down in the play:the historic Marechale was a crude vulgar woman whose manners beggared belief.
1 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

lots of sass and even a scene from "Bunker Hill Bunny", 20 October 2008
Author: Lee Eisenberg (eisenberg.lee@gmail.com) from Portland, Oregon, USA
As I understand it, Madame Sans-Gene (nee Catherine Hubscher) was a crude-mannered Parisian laundress around the time of the French Revolution. She hooked up with Sgt. Francois Joseph Lefebvre, whom Napoleon eventually appointed King of Westphalia. But it didn't end there.
Since I don't know anything specific about Madame Sans-Gene (except that her nickname means "Mrs. No Embarrassment", referring to her behavior), I have to take what this movie says. I don't know whether Christian-Jaque's "Madame Sans-Gene" is supposed to be a comedy, but it sure comes across as such. To be certain, the gunpowder trick during the sabotage scene reminded me of the Bugs Bunny cartoon "Bunker Hill Bunny".
Anyway, worth seeing, although the scenes early on where the guy fondles Sophia Loren make the movie hard to take seriously. I've never seen any of the other movie versions, so I can't compare it with those. Also starring Robert Hossein and Renaud Mary.
2 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
Dull costumer, 20 July 2000
Author: ouija-3 from Finland
Sophia Loren is the sole star of this expensive-looking but empty costume picture, in which she plays a washer-woman with ready opinions who, after adventurous goings-on, gains status in the napoleonic times.
It is such a shame to see this film that came out in the same year that Loren won an Oscar for her great performance in Two Women. In Madame, she is only used to bring in the charm (which she does, as always) and to display her undeniably shapely bosom through a constantly wet dress, as in some cheap wet T-shirt competition.
Unfortunately, this seems to be the only thought that the producer or the director had in mind; the plot is very undramatically presented, the latter part of this relatively short film seems slow and the rest of the cast is wasted. The film is obviously expensive and good-looking, but the opulent sets and costumes only underline the unimaginativeness of the presentation.
For those only whose interest in Loren's breasts is enough to keep them satisfied. Others avoid.
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