Traveling Light (1944 film)

{{short description|1944 film}}

{{Infobox film

| name = Traveling Light

| image = File:Traveling Light (1944 film).png

| alt =

| caption =

| director = Jean Anouilh

| producer = Léon Carré

| screenplay = Jean Anouilh

| based_on = Le Voyageur sans bagage by Jean Anouilh

| starring = Pierre Fresnay
Blanchette Brunoy

| music = Francis Poulenc

| cinematography = Christian Matras

| editing = Jean Feyte

| studio = Eclair-Journal

| distributor =

| released = {{Film date|1944|2|23|df=yes}}

| runtime = 99 minutes

| country = France

| language = French

| budget =

| gross =

}}

Traveling Light ({{Langx|fr|Le Voyageur sans bagage}}) is a 1944 French drama film directed by Jean Anouilh, starring Pierre Fresnay and Blanchette Brunoy.

Plot

The narrative is set in 1931, when a man with amnesia tries to recover his memories from World War I, in order to find out what kind of man he really is. The film is based on Anouilh's 1937 play with the same title.

Cast

Production

Just like with Jean Cocteau, World War II gave Jean Anouilh the opportunity to advance in the French film industry. Anouilh had written dialogue for several films in the 1930s, but Traveling Light was his directorial debut. He would eventually direct one additional film, Two Pennies Worth of Violets from 1951. The screenplay for Traveling Light was based on Anouilh's own 1937 play Le Voyageur sans bagage. Filming began on 4 October 1943.{{Cite book|last=Crisp|first=Colin|year=2015|chapter=Le Voyageur sans bagage|title=French Cinema—A Critical Filmography: Volume 2, 1940–1958, Volume 2|location=Bloomington, Indiana|publisher=Indiana University Press|pages=91–94|isbn=978-0-253-01695-9}}

Reception

The film premiered on 23 February 1944.{{Cite web|url=http://cinema.encyclopedie.films.bifi.fr/index.php?pk=46440|title=Le Voyageur sans bagage (1943) Jean Anouilh|language=French|work=bifi.fr|publisher=Cinémathèque Française|accessdate=2015-03-07}} It was successful although the records of the release are fragmentary, because the theatrical run coincided with the Allied invasion of France. The film was criticized by the church for its "systematic ridicule of the family".

References