In 1952 Marcel Pagnol wrote and directed MANON DES SOURCES but 40 minutes were cut so he rewrote it into two novels. Claude Berri decided to turn it into two films.|
Ugolin Soubeyran returns from WWI to his Provence home
planning to grow carnations; his stern uncle César, impressed by the
first crop's return, suggests they expand by buying a neighbour's
field.
The owner and César scuffle which results in the owner's death. An ex-villager Florette inherits the property but she dies, tranferring it to her tax collector son Jean.
The Soubeyrans are shocked when hunchback Jean arrives with wife Aimée and daughter Manon to grow vegetables and breed rabbits, totally self-taught.
Jean doesn't know his property includes a spring which could supply water but the Soubeyrans have blocked it, Jean's desparation for water leads to catastrophe.
The Soubeyrans unblock the spring watched by a hidden, crying Manon.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Years later in MANON DES SOURCES, Ugolin's carnations cover the land that Jean failed on.
Manon is now a teenage goatherd, running her flock over the hills above her former home. The town's new teacher meets her and a mutual attraction develops.
César insists Ugolin marry to continue the Soubeyran name, César still regrets his one failed chance of marrying. But Ugolin obsessively loves Manon, who he secretly follows in the hills.
But Manon is disgusted when he proposes as she knows he and César caused her father's failure.
She then overhears two locals talk of how the townsmen knew of the hidden spring but did nothing to help Jean rather than provoke Cesar's anger.
Manon discovers the hidden source of the town's water so, in revenge, blocks it.
When Manon confronts the town over it's collective guilt, Ugolin loses his reason and César discovers a devastating secret too late.
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