Masculin Féminin (2005) France
Masculin Féminin Image Cover
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Director:Jean-Luc Godard
Studio:Criterion Collection
Producer:Anatole Dauman
Writer:Guy de Maupassant, Jean-Luc Godard
Rated:NR
Date Added:2014-04-12
UPC:037429209226
Price:$29.95
Awards:3 wins & 1 nomination
Genre:Comedy
Release:2005-09-20
IMDb:0060675
Location:1342
Duration:101
Picture Format:Pan & Scan
Aspect Ratio:1.33:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Languages:French
Subtitles:English
Features:Black and White
Jean-Luc Godard  ...  (Director)
Guy de Maupassant, Jean-Luc Godard  ...  (Writer)
 
Jean-Pierre Léaud  ...  Paul - un jeune homme instable
Chantal Goya  ...  Madeleine Zimmer - une petite chanteuse
Marlène Jobert  ...  Elisabeth Choquet - la copine d'Elisabeth
Michel Debord  ...  Robert Packard - un syndicaliste
Catherine-Isabelle Duport  ...  Catherine-Isabelle
Eva-Britt Strandberg  ...  Elle (la femme dans le film)
Birger Malmsten  ...  Lui (l'homme dans le film)
Willy Kurant  ...  Cinematographer
Agnès Guillemot  ...  Editor
Marguerite Renoir  ...  Editor
Jean-Jacques Debout  ...  Composer
Summary: Masculine Feminine was Jean-Luc Godard's first (but not his last) foray into the burgeoning "Children of the Sixties" generation -- or, as Godard described it, "the children of Marx and Coca-Cola." Impressionable teenager Paul (Jean-Pierre Léaud) tries to make sense of the world by working as an interviewer for a research firm. Meanwhile, Paul cohabits with aspiring singer Madeleine (Chantal Goya), with two additional young ladies joining the nocturnal festivities. Paul jumps or is pushed from a window, leaving a pregnant Madeleine to move on to the next aimless youth she meets. While the nominal hero has failed to find fulfillment in personal relations, another male protagonist (Michel Debord), a political activist, is luckier -- an indication that the director favored revolutionary politics over simple emotionalism at this point in his career. Though Godard's free-form style is usually opposed to linear storytelling, Masculine Feminine has solid literary roots, having been inspired by two Guy de Maupassant stories.