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The Story of Adele H.
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Directed by François Truffaut
Based on the real-life diaries of Adèle Hugo, The Story of Adele H. is a psychological drama opening in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in the 1860s. The daughter of famous French writer Victor Hugo, Adèle (Isabelle Adjani) has left her father's home to seek out her fiancé, the English soldier Lt. Albert Pinson (Bruce Robinson). She conceals her identity and rents a room in a boarding house from Mrs. Saunders (Sylvia Marriott). Pinson wants nothing to do with her, but she still obsessively follows him and spies on his affairs. Spending her time writing madly in journals and letters, she eventually meets the bookseller (Joseph Blatchley), who develops an interest in her. Her madness grows when Mrs. Saunders discovers her true identity, and even more so when the bookseller gives her a copy of her father's latest work, Les Miserables. When Pinson is transferred to Barbados, Adèle follows him again and sinks into insanity, living on the street. With the help of a local woman, Madame Baa (Madame Louise), Adèle returns home to her father and spends the rest of her days writing in her diary in Paris. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
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"This is my favorite movie starring Isabelle Adjani. The movie by itself is a nice mid-career Truffaut, but what Adjani does on screen is something quite transcendant. The role could have easily come off flat if it were a lesser actress. It's a strange circumstance. Adele H. is the da " [More]
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Isabelle Adjani attained stardom in her first major role as the eponymous daughter of Victor Hugo in Truffaut's somber study of romantic obsession, a subject he explored obsessively in films such as Les Deux Anglaises de la Continent (1971), La Chambre Vert (1978), La Sirene du Mississippi (1969), and others. Based on a coded diary discovered in 1960, the film follows the young woman's pursuit of a British lieutenant Bruce Robinson, with whom she's become infatuated with on the island of Nova Scotia. Despite his unambiguous lack of interest, she at one point writes to her father to announce their forthcoming wedding, her mind gently parting from its moorings. As she becomes increasingly desperate to win the indifferent soldier, Adele offers money and sex, along with a promise to obey him slavishly, even buying him a prostitute, while continuing to degrade herself even further. After he's driven her away, she becomes a voyeur of his assignations with other women, descending slowly into madness. Like La Chambre Verte and Les Deux Anglaises, the film links the creation of art with powerfully repressed emotion, as the young woman fills reams of paper with her occasionally lucid, more often deranged stream-of-consciousness. Like Vertigo (1958), it evokes the overwhelmingly impersonal force of erotic attraction, as it transforms the object of desire into a fetish. Shooting in the style of a sober documentary with a desaturated palette, Truffaut modulates the growth of his heroine's obsession so carefully and with such sympathy, that, up to a point, her experience is easily recognizable, and even in the depths of madness, completely engrossing. Adjani is sublime as the tormented young woman, possibly the most unforgettable embodiment of tragic beauty on film. ~ Michael Costello, All Movie Guide
 

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