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Quartet

Quartet

  • Status: Released
  • 25-10-1981
  • Runtime: 101 min
  • Score: 5.8
  • Vote count: 32

When her husband's arrest leaves her penniless, a woman accepts an invitation to move in with a strange couple.

Isabelle Adjani

Marya 'Mado' Zelli

Maggie Smith

Lois Heidler

Alan Bates

H.J. Heidler

Anthony Higgins

Stephan Zelli

Suzanne Flon

Mme. Hautchamp

Sheila Gish

Anna

Daniel Chatto

Guy

Pierre Clémenti

Theo

Daniel Mesguich

Pierre Schlamovitz

Armelia McQueen

Nightclub singer

Wiley Wood

Cairn

Virginie Thévenet

Madmoiselle Chardin

Muriel Montossé

Marjorie

Hélène Shirley

Adriana

Caroline Loeb

Nun

Arlette Spetebroot

Drowned Girl

Josine Comellas

Café Patronne

Monique Mauclair

Hotel Concierge

Sébastien Floche

Edouard

Paulita Sedgwick

Esther

Bernice Stegers

Miss Nicholson

Isabelle Canto da Maya

Cri-Cri

François Viaur

Lefranc

Dino Zanghi

Prison Guard

Michel Such

Prison Guard

Jean-Pierre Dravel

Prison Guard

Annie Noël

Maid

Maurice Ribot

Pianist

Pierre Julien

Impresario

Humbert Balsan

Impresario's Friend

Serge Marquand

Night Club Owner

Armelia McQueen

Night Club Singer

Pierre Clémenti

Pornographer

Jeffrey Kime

James

Hélène Shirley

Adriana

Anne-Marie Brissonière

Les Oiseaux

Marie-France De Bourges

Les Oiseaux

Brigitte Hermetz

Les Oiseaux

Romain Brémond

Youth

Daniel Mesguich

Schlamovitz

Bonnafet Tarbouriech

Prison Guard (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

"Marya" (Isabelle Adjani) finds herself out on a limb when her husband "Stephane" (Anthony Higgins) is incarcerated for a year for some art fraud. Luckily (or not) she is taken pity on by "H.J." (Alan Bates) and his doting wife "Lois" (Maggie Smith). They invite her into their lives but quickly, she realises that he has a bit of a wandering eye and that though his wife is fully aware, she is too afraid of losing him to intervene. "Marya" doesn't welcome his attentions, indeed she makes it clear that she's not the slightest interest at all, but a combination of circumstances and her foreign birth (she is originally from the Caribbean) make it tough for her to find acceptance or a job. Despite repeated attempts to flee, she finds herself drawn more and more into his toxic manipulations - even once her husband is released from prison. "Stephane" is under no illusions as to the scenario and so now it's choice time for everyone who has got used to the situation and the lifestyle. Thing is, here, it's all so gorgeously filmed, costumed and designed but the delivery of the story is entirely sterile. Bates, especially when he tries to get emotional, is frankly pretty terrible and Smith's character is just so weak and feeble that she has little to get her teeth into the role beyond playing (well) a porcelain shadow of a woman. It's probably Adjani who disappoints most, though. She's as flat as a pancake with her performance, coupled with the rest of the lacklustre direction, presenting us with something that is very much a victory for style over substance.