The Women on the 6th Floor

The Women on the 6th Floor
Film poster
Directed by Philippe Le Guay
Produced by Étienne Comar
Philippe Rousselet
Written by Philippe Le Guay
Jérôme Tonnerre
Starring Fabrice Luchini
Sandrine Kiberlain
Natalia Verbeke
Carmen Maura
Music by Jorge Arriagada
Cinematography Jean-Claude Larrieu
Edited by Monica Coleman
Distributed by SND Films
Release date
  • 23 October 2010 (2010-10-23) (Première)
  • 16 February 2011 (2011-02-16) (France)
Running time
106 minutes
Country France
Language French
Spanish
Budget $6.2 million
Box office $39.9 million[1]

The Women on the 6th Floor (French: Les Femmes du 6e étage; also known as Service Entrance) is a 2010 French film directed and part-written by Philippe Le Guay.[2][3][4] Principal roles are taken by Fabrice Luchini, Sandrine Kiberlain, Natalia Verbeke and Carmen Maura.

Set in Paris in 1962, the story alternates between two different worlds. One is a traditional wealthy bourgeois family in a comfortable apartment, whose lives are devoted to making money and meaningless socialising. The other is the underpaid and overworked domestic servants living in cramped conditions above them. As few French people want such work, the jobs are taken by Spanish women, eager to escape the poverty and oppression of the Franco dictatorship, who bring with them their native solidarity and human warmth.[5]

Plot

Jean-Louis Joubert is a stockbroker living with his wife Suzanne, who does not work, in a large apartment. The family's French maid leaves after a dispute, so Suzanne goes to a church where the priest finds jobs for Spanish immigrants. There she hires María, young and pretty, who speaks French and is the niece of Concepción, the maid for another family in the same building.

The apartment is a mess after days without a maid and Concepción gets some of her Spanish friends to rally round and clean it up, to the surprise and delight of Suzanne. When Suzanne wants some furniture moved up to a little room on the 6th floor that they use for storage, Jean-Louis discovers that the other little rooms there, all unheated, are occupied by Spanish maids, including their María. There is only one cold water tap on the landing for them to wash themselves and one Turkish toilet that is forever getting blocked. He calls a plumber to fix the toilet and says that María can use their own bathroom. He also lets another maid come in to use their phone for an urgent call home.

Though he has been struck by María since first seeing her, he becomes a friend to the other women too and starts learning about Spanish language, life and culture. His wife Suzanne begins to worry, not about the maids who are mostly not young or beautiful and in any case are only servants, but about a rich client of his called Bettina de Brossolettes who is a notorious maneater. When they have a cocktail party in their flat, she is furious on finding that Bettina is invited. During the party Jean-Louis catches a hired waiter trying to kiss María and, furious, sacks him on the spot. María, furious now that Jean-Louis has openly revealed his feelings for her, accuses him of being a lecher and treats him with contempt.

Meanwhile Jean-Louis has found a new post for one of the Spanish women, who invites him and all the others to a paella party. When María turns up, she is furious to find Jean-Louis there and enjoying himself. Arriving home late to a furious Suzanne, he is accused of having been with Bettina. He says that he was and agrees to move out. Taking over the storeroom on the 6th floor, he is not only close to María but becomes more closely involved in the lives of the other women on the floor. He goes to their church on Sundays, a new experience for him, and takes some of them in his car for a pilgrimage to Lisieux.

Concepción is now worried that María will again fall for a man who will not marry her and, to stop any affair between the two, tells María where in Spain the son of her previous relationship now is. María immediately tells Suzanne she is leaving to return to Spain and, going upstairs in an emotional state, lets Jean-Louis take her into his room and kiss her. She spends the night with him and next day disappears to Spain. He is very hurt, not only because she did not tell him but also because all the other women he thought his friends were silent too.

Three years later, Jean-Louis drives to Spain looking for Concepción. When he tracks her down, she claims she does not know where María is. However her husband, who recognises what Jean-Louis is feeling, secretly tells him. When he drives there, he sees María hanging out her washing and the looks that the two exchange show their love for each other.

Cast

  • Fabrice Luchini as Jean-Louis Joubert
  • Sandrine Kiberlain as Suzanne Joubert
  • Natalia Verbeke as María Gonzalez
  • Carmen Maura as Concepción Ramirez
  • Lola Dueñas as Carmen
  • Berta Ojea as Dolores Carbalan
  • Nuria Solé as Teresa
  • Concha Galán as Pilar
  • Audrey Fleurot as Bettina de Brossolette
  • Marie-Armelle Deguy as Colette de Bergeret
  • Muriel Solvay as Nicole de Grandcourt
  • Philippe Duquesne as Gérard
  • Annie Mercier as Madame Triboulet
  • Michèle Gleizer as Germaine Bronech
  • Camille Gigot as Bertrand Joubert
  • Jean-Charles Deval as Olivier Joubert
  • Christine Vézinet as Valentine
  • Jeupeu as Boulard
  • Vincent Nemeth as Monsieur Armand
  • Philippe du Janerand as Piquer
  • Patrick Bonnel as Golmard
  • Laurent Claret as Blamond
  • Jean-Claude Jay as Pelletier
  • Joan Massotkleiner as Fernando
  • Ivan Martin Salan as Miguel

Production

Two of the Spanish actresses, Berta Ojea and Concha Galán, did not speak French before the film and learned their roles phonetically.[6]

Release

The film premièred at the Montpellier International Festival of Mediterranean Film on 23 October 2010 and its cinematic run in France began on 16 February 2011. First shown in the USA in March 2011 at Rendezvous with French Cinema, it began its release there on 7 October 2011. The film was screened out of competition at the Berlinale in 2011.[7]

Reception

It was well received by critics and audiences. Le Monde wrote "The entertainment is as good as the actors are pitch-perfect. Fabrice Luchini and Sandrine Kiberlain are among our best stars."[3] Dissenting, La Croix described the "lazy screenplay, poor dialogue, catalogue of clichés, indigent mise en scène".[8] The New York Press reviewed the film at the Rendez-vous with French Film festival in New York, calling it "charming".[9]

Awards

The movie was nominated in three categories at the César Award 2012 : Best costume design, Best production design and Best supporting actress. It won the Best supporting actress César - Carmen Maura.[10]

Discography

The original soundtrack to Les Femmes du 6e étage is included on the CD compilation Les Musiques de Jorge Arriagada pour les films de Philippe Le Guay, released by Canadian label Disques Cinémusique in 2013. French and English liner notes.[11]

References

  1. JP. "Les Femmes du 6e étage (The Women on the 6th Floor) (2011)- JPBox-Office". www.jpbox-office.com.
  2. Page on allocine.fr Archived 21 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 24 March 2011 (in French)
  3. 1 2 "Les Femmes du 6e étage" : inconfort matériel et chaleur humaine des chambres de bonne Le Monde, 15 February 2011. Retrieved 25 March 2011. (in French)
  4. Smith, Ian Hayden (2012). International Film Guide 2012. p. 120. ISBN 978-1908215017.
  5. Van Hoej, Brad The Women on the Sixth Floor -Les Femmes du 6e etage Variety, 15 February 2011. Retrieved 26 March 2011.
  6. Shooting secrets on allocine.fr Retrieved 26 March 2011 (in French)
  7. Berlinale programme Berlinale film festival website. Retrieved 26 March 2011
  8. « Les femmes du 6e étage » : le patron coincé et les rudes Ibères La Croix,15 February 2011. Retrieved 26 March 2011. (in French)
  9. Rendez-Vous: ‘Service Entrance’ Will Leave You Charmed by the Help New York Press staff blogs, 8 March 2011. Retrieved 25 March 2011.
  10. 37th César Awards, 37th César Awards
  11. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 13 July 2015. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
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