

While Henri was a POW during the war, his wife passed away, and he returned to face the challenges of bringing up three children alone. Henri may get drunk and angry at times, but he also has a better side that will not stay buried.
Acting
Gabin's gruff tenderness defines postwar French cinema.
Direction
La Patellière captures Parisian working-class life with unflinching empathy.
Cinematography
Black-and-white streets that breathe cigarette smoke and sorrow.

Director
Denys de La Patellière
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Gabin was France's biggest star, and this role channeled his own wartime trauma and postwar guilt. The film captures a nation processing occupation, loss, and what 'strength' meant for broken men.
Marie-José Nat was only 19 during filming; Gabin was 55. Their complex chemistry was deliberately ambiguous, and rumors of real tension fueled the father-daughter electricity on screen.