The Song of Bernadette
Here is greatness... wonder... and majesty... no human words can describe!
In 1858 Lourdes, France, adolescent peasant Bernadette has a vision of "a beautiful lady" in the Massabielle grotto - the townspeople assume this lady to be the Virgin Mary. Pompous government officials think the girl is insane, doing their best to suppress her and her followers, while the church wants nothing to do with the matter. But as Bernadette attracts wider and wider attention, the phenomenon overtakes everyone in the town, ultimately transforming their lives.
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Cast

Jennifer Jones
Bernadette

William Eythe
Antoine Nicolau

Charles Bickford
Father Peyramale

Vincent Price
Prosecutor Vital Dutour

Lee J. Cobb
Dr. Dozous

Gladys Cooper
Sister Marie Therese Vauzous

Anne Revere
Louise Soubirous

Roman Bohnen
François Soubirous

Mary Anderson
Jeanne Abadie

Patricia Morison
Empress Eugenie

Aubrey Mather
Mayor Lacade

Charles Dingle
Jacomet

Edith Barrett
Croisine Bouhouhorts

Sig Ruman
Louis Bouriette

Blanche Yurka
Aunt Bernarde Casterot

Ermadean Walters
Marie Soubirous

Marcel Dalio
Callet

Pedro de Cordoba
Dr. LeCramps

Jerome Cowan
Emperor Louis Napoleon III

Charles Waldron
Bishop of Tarbes (uncredited)
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Jennifer Jones turns in an engaging performance as the eponymous girl, living in mid-19th Century France, who claims to have received divine communications in a grotto near her local village of Lourdes. Unsurprisingly, she faces a fairly sceptical clergy and state but her fellow villagers lap it all up. That enthusiasm soon spreads and soon - like it or not - she is a phenomenon that has drawn the attention of the Empress Eugenie herself. Her problems only worsen when she is finally accepted, and validated by her church and she takes up residence in a nunnery where she is respected and resented in pretty much equal measure. Cynics may cast aspersions on the reasons behind the casting of Jones in this film, but nobody could argue that her performance is anything other than perfect. She has an innocence that lends well to the plausibility of her charming, unassuming persona and of her pretty turbulent - and short - life too. Charles Bickford also delivers well as her initially suspicious parish priest as do local magistrate "Dutour" (Vincent Price) and doctor "Dozous" (Lee J. Cobb). The writing is maybe not the most significant element of the story, indeed it is a bit vapid at times, but the story quite successfully captivates even now, 80 years later.
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