PROLOGUE: 1815, DIGNE
Jean Valjean, released on parole after 19 years on the chain gang, finds that
the yellow ticket-of-leave he must, by law, display condemns him to be an outcast. Only the saintly Bishop of Digne treats
him kindly and Valjean, embittered by years of hardship, repays him by stealing some silver. Valjean is caught and brought
back by police, and is astonished when the Bishop lies to the police to save him, also giving him two precious candlesticks.
Valjean decides to start his life anew.
1823, MONTREUIL-SUR-MER
Eight years have passed and Valjean, having
broken his parole an changed his name to Monsieur Madeleine, has risen to become both a factory owner and Mayor. One of his
workers, Fantine, has a secret illegitimate child. When the other women discover this, they demand her dismissal. The foreman,
whose advances she has rejected, throws her out.
Desperate for money to pay for medicines for her daughter, Fantine
sells her locket, her hair, and then joins the whores in selling herself. Utterly degraded by her new trade she gets into
a fight with a prospective customer and is about to be take to prison by Javert when "The Mayor" arrives and demands she be
taken to a hospital instead.
The Mayor then rescues a man pinned down by a runaway cart. Javert is reminded of the
abnormal strength of convict 24601 Jean Valjean, a parole-breaker whom he has been tracking for years, but who, he says has
just been recaptured. Valjean, unable to see an innocent man go to prison in his place, confesses to the court that he is
prisoner 24601.
At the hospital Valjean promises the dying Fantine to find and look after her daughter Cosette. Javert
arrives to arrest him, but Valjean escapes.
1823, MONTFERMEIL
Cosette has been lodged for five years with
the Thenardiers who run an inn, horribly abusing the little girl whom they use as a skivvy while indulging their own daughter,
Eponine. Valjean finds Cosette fetching water in the dark. He pays the Thenardiers to let him take Cosette away and takes
her to Paris. But Javert is till on his tail...
1832, PARIS
Nine years later there is a great unrest in the
city because of the likely demise of the popular leader General Lamarque, the only man left in the Government who shows any
feeling for the poor. The urchin Gavroche is in his element mixing with the whores and the beggars of the capital. Among the
street-gangs is one led by Thenardier and his wife, which sets upon Jean Valjean and Cosette. They are rescued by Javert,
who does not recognize Valjean until after he has made good his escape. The Thenardiers' daughter Eponine, who is secretly
in love with the student Marius, reluctantly agrees to help him find Cosette, with whom he has fallen in love.
At
a political meeting in a small cafe, a group of idealistic students prepare for the revolution they are sure will erupt on
the death of General Lamarque. When Gavroche brings the news of the General's death, the students, led by Enjolras, stream
out into the streets to whip up popular support. Only Marius is distracted by the thoughts of the mysterious Cosette.
Cosette
is consumed by the thoughts of Marius, with whom she has fallen in love. Valjean realizes that his 'daughter" is changing
very quickly but refuses to tell her anything of her past. In spite of her own feelings for Marius, Eponine sadly brings him
to Cosette and then prevents an attempt by her father's gang to rob Valjean's house. Valjean, convinced it was Javert who
was lurking outside his house, tells Cosette they must prepare to flee the country. On the eve of the revolution the students
and Javert see the situation from their different viewpoints; Cosette and Marius part in despair of ever meeting again; Eponine
mourns the loss of Marius; and Valjean looks forward to the security of exile. The Thenardiers, meanwhile, dream of rich pickings
underground from the chaos to come.
The students prepare to build the barricade. Marius, noticing that Eponine has
joined the insurrection, sends her with a letter to Cosette, which is intercepted at the Rue Plumet by Valjean. Eponine decides,
despite what he has said to here, to rejoin Marius at the barricade.
The barricade is built and the revolutionaries
defy an army warning that they must give up or die. Gavroche exposes Javert as a policy spy. In trying to return to the barricade
Eponine is shot and killed. Valjean arrives at the barricades in search of Marius. He is given the chance to kill Javert,
but instead lets him go.
The students settle down for a night on the barricade and, in the quiet of the night, Valjean
prays to God to save Marius from the onslaught which is to come. The next day, with ammunition running low, Gavroche runs
out to collect more and is shot. The rebels are all killed, including their leader, Enjolras.
Valjean escapes into
the sewers with the unconscious Marius. After meeting Thenardier, who is rubbing the corpses of the rebels, he emerges into
the light only to meet Javert once more. he pleads for time to deliver the young man to a hospital. Javert decides to let
him go and, his unbending principles of justice having been shattered by Valjean's own mercy, he kill himself by throwing
himself into the swollen River Seine. A number of Parisian women come to terms with the failed insurrection and its victims.
unaware of the identity of his rescuer, Marius recovers in Cosette's care. Valjean confesses the truth of his past to Marius
and insists that after the young couple are married, he must go away rather than taint the sanctity and safety of their union.
At Marius and Cosette's wedding the Thenardiers try to black mail Marius. Thenardier says Cosette's "father" is a murderer
and, as proof, produces a ring which he stole from the corpse in the sewers the night the barricades fell. It is Marius' own
ring., and he realizes it was Valjean who rescued him that night. He and Cosette go to Valjean, where Cosette learns for the
first time of her own history before the old man dies, joining the spirits of Fantine, Eponine, and all those who died on
the barricades.
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