Quartet
- Director: James Ivory
- Writer: Jean Rhys; Ruth Prawer Jhabvala
- Producer: Humbert Balsan; Connie Kaiserman
CGiii Comment
Watch it only for Maggie - otherwise, you will be treated to some terribly stale dialogue, wooden acting and Ivory's direction is seemlessly banal - it looks good and that's all that's good about it.
Dull.
Trailer...
The(ir) Blurb...
It's 1927 Paris. Following the conviction of her art dealer husband, Stephan Zelli (Anthony Higgins), for theft for which he was handed a one-year prison sentence, Marya Zelli (Isabelle Adjani), originally from West India, moves in with her acquaintances, expatriate Brits H.J. (Sir Alan Bates) and Lois Heidler (Dame Maggie Smith). Marya knows that H.J. in particular has more in mind than just providing her lodging out of the goodness of his heart. From behind bars, Stephan encourages Marya to move in with them, not knowing H.J.'s intentions. Marya agrees in part because she, being a foreigner, cannot get work and would thus become destitute otherwise. She learns she is the latest in a long line of lodgers. She also learns that H.J. and Lois' marriage is not all that it appears on the surface. The Heidler's hold on Marya becomes stronger when they convince her that Stephan not only has no money, but has no future in France after his release. Their collective lives become more complicated when Stephan is released from jail and tries to figure out what he's going to do with his life to regain the high standard of living to which he became accustomed.
Cast & Characters
Alan Bates as H.J. Heidler;
Maggie Smith as Lois Heidler;
Isabelle Adjani as Marya 'Mado' Zelli;
Anthony Higgins as Stephan Zelli;
Pierre Cl?menti as Theo the Pornographer;
Suzanne Flon as Mme. Hautchamp;
Daniel Mesguich as Pierre Schlamovitz;
Sheila Gish as Anna;
Armelia McQueen as Night Club Singer;
Wiley Wood as Cairn;
Virginie Thévenet as Madmoiselle Chardin;
Daniel Chatto as Guy;
Bernice Stegers as Miss Nicholson;
Paulita Sedgwick as Esther;
Sebastien Floche as Edouard Hautchamp