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Paris gehört uns

Originaltitel: Paris nous appartient
  • 1961
  • 6
  • 2 Std. 21 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,7/10
2857
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Paris gehört uns (1961)
Paris Belongs To Us: All I Want To Know (Us)
clip wiedergeben1:43
Paris Belongs To Us: All I Want To Know (Us) ansehen
1 Video
99+ Fotos
DramaMysteryThriller

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuThe indiscreet Terry, mistress of an American journalist, revealed to her lovers, Juan and Gérard, something they should never have known.The indiscreet Terry, mistress of an American journalist, revealed to her lovers, Juan and Gérard, something they should never have known.The indiscreet Terry, mistress of an American journalist, revealed to her lovers, Juan and Gérard, something they should never have known.

  • Regie
    • Jacques Rivette
  • Drehbuch
    • Jacques Rivette
    • Jean Gruault
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Betty Schneider
    • Giani Esposito
    • Françoise Prévost
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,7/10
    2857
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Jacques Rivette
    • Drehbuch
      • Jacques Rivette
      • Jean Gruault
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Betty Schneider
      • Giani Esposito
      • Françoise Prévost
    • 16Benutzerrezensionen
    • 38Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 1 Gewinn & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos1

    Paris Belongs To Us: All I Want To Know (Us)
    Clip 1:43
    Paris Belongs To Us: All I Want To Know (Us)

    Fotos121

    Poster ansehen
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    Topbesetzung33

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    Betty Schneider
    Betty Schneider
    • Anne Goupil
    Giani Esposito
    Giani Esposito
    • Gerard Lenz
    Françoise Prévost
    Françoise Prévost
    • Terry Yordan
    Daniel Crohem
    Daniel Crohem
    • Philip Kaufman
    François Maistre
    François Maistre
    • Pierre Goupil
    Brigitte Juslin
    Brigitte Juslin
    • Birgitta
    Noëlle Leiris
    Monique Le Porrier
    Monique Le Porrier
    • Juan's Sister
    Malka Ribowska
    Malka Ribowska
    • Tania Fedin
    Louison Roblin
    • Ida
    • (as Louise Roblin)
    Anne Zamire
    Anne Zamire
    • Aniouta Barsky
    Paul Bisciglia
    Paul Bisciglia
    • Paul
    Jean-Pierre Delage
    Jean-Pierre Delage
    • Monsieur Boileau
    Claus Von Lorbach
    Jean Martin
    Jean Martin
    Henri Poirier
    Henri Poirier
    • Jean-Val - L'assistant de Gérard
    André Thorent
    André Thorent
    • Bernard
    Jane Car
    • Regie
      • Jacques Rivette
    • Drehbuch
      • Jacques Rivette
      • Jean Gruault
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen16

    6,72.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7gavin6942

    Ride the Wave

    Anne Goupil (Betty Schneider) is a literature student in Paris in 1957. Her elder brother, Pierre, takes her to a friend's party where the guests include Philip Kaufman, an expatriate American escaping McCarthyism, and Gerard Lenz, a theater director who arrives with the mysterious woman Terry.

    Begun in 1957 and completed three years later, it was then-critic Jacques Rivette's first full-length film as a director and one of the first works of the French New Wave, though it was not released theatrically until 1961. Oddly, it seems to be one of the lesser-known today, despite being a fascinatingly odd mystery.

    Apparently many people say this film is "like a David Lynch movie". That similarity is there, so I appreciate that... but then the question becomes, does that mean that David Lynch films are "like a Jacques Rivette movie" since Rivette came first by quite a few years?
    9AristarchosTheArchivist

    Lynchesque conspiracy - very interesting

    If you like David Lynch's films, you might enjoy "Paris nous appartient". After having seen it, I still did not know what it was really about. This film develops an atmosphere of sheer mystery, which will never be solved completely. On the other hand, it also touches the political situation of the 50s. The overall existence of conspiracy is very appealing, as is the innocent character of Anne. Music and camerawork are very unusual, the latter making the film rank among the best of the European New Wave.

    9 out of 10.
    chaos-rampant

    Either macrocosms or not

    We have a rather intimidating tappestry here at first sight, about a web of Parisian lives connected to each other and informed by a bunch of nested references. To a mysterious suicide and a missing sound tape, to a staging of a Shakespeare play as mirror of the film we are watching, to shadowy conspiracies supposedly pulling the strings of what we see from a higher, unseen level.

    So we have a film-within, as often with Nouvelle Vague, but also a film without. Or better yet, the film we are watching as devised by unseen minds above shaping its world. Bridged by actors (and non-actors) who act parts knowingly or unknowingly, who may be chess pawns moved in turn by other pawns. The idea is that eventually we never get to find out how much of what we saw was this game and whether or not the game was imagined or masking a sinister plot.

    So far so good, a complex film in which to superimpose the various grids. Yet at the same time not so complex after all, rather obvious in how it handles us the various keys.

    For example; describing the play he's staging, the director says that he welcomes the challenge of bringing order to the convoluted mesh of different roles, that the world of the play is chaotic but not absurd. Does anyone have doubts that we're watching a surrogate Rivette describe the film? Then the stuff about conspiracies. The idea is of course that they may or may not be true, yet in getting there we are treated with naive politics about money ruling the world, a policed, monitored world.

    In the finale we get some rather interesting insinuations about where the mind conspiring for answers in the face of an uncertain world leads us. When anything is imagined to be possibly true, nothing is.

    The one notion that holds some actual power in all this, is precisely the one that is not explicit. A film noir plot elusively unraveling in the background of so much distraction, about a mistress and her ex-lover arranging murders as suicides. Why, to what end, again open ends. We may or may not imagine this, but this ambiguity is ours.

    We would later find in the films of David Lynch and Raoul Ruiz all this situated back in the imaginative mind, where all our fanciful storytelling begins and where the illusionary images (bent by desire) we use to represent reality are born. In more cinematic ways, more fluid. This maintains the appearance of an ordinary world, it's talky, and the camera is not adventurous. It's never really dangerous, except until too late, or passionately engaged in its codas.

    But one of the places this mode begins is here, in nascent form. Earlier yet, it was film noir, which the film references and even innovates in an important way, ingenious for its time (by making the noir plot the vague inference, and the karmic forces of noir the explicit reference and actively recognized by the characters). Although it often appeared clearcut and about a simple crime, it was riskier stuff in the right hands.

    (A few more words on this: with noir we view a threatening cityscape where cast upon it are shadows of the mind, illusions of desire about a woman or money which in turn distort what is perceived of reality. With the post-noir landscapes (such as in Lynch), we experience instead the world of the mind - now the shadows are inverted, they're pieces of reality which seep back as filmic devices, which the mind arranges into a movie plot that sustains the illusion! This is for me one of the most fascinating journeys available in cinema, from Shangai to Inland Empire, and Rivette's film may not have refined as much but it's an important link in the transition.)
    7boblipton

    The Contemptuous Camera

    :It's 1957. Betty Schneider is a student who gets involved in small acting troupe. As the rehearsals proceed, she notices odd things, and begins to suspect some secret organization is responsible for the death of the American journalist, novelist and music composer for the show, Daniel Crohem.

    Jacques Rivette's first feature shows the gelid calm that appeared in most of his movies. with politics and assassination merging in a manner that Hollywood would only tackle in the 1970s.... usually with an air of hysteria. There are a lot of shots around Paris that makes the city a cynical observer of these human goings-on, a subjective camera that views the affair with contempt. I wonder how cameraman Charles Bitsch got that effect.
    5adamwarlock

    New wave letdown

    Rivette is perhaps the least known of the 5 Cahiers directors of the New Wave. I've only seen The Nun before and I enjoyed it. This first feature was disappointing to me. Great location work and photography but way too long. Basically a pretty, naive girl gets involved with a bunch of pretentious a-holes who suggest a suicide was a murder and she tries to play amateur detective. Not in the sense an American film like this would. It's mostly her confronting different people who tell her enough to keep her interested but no evidence is found. The film mentions creeping fascism in the forms of McCarthyism in the US and the Franco regime in Spain. But is it all just paranoia? By the end, I could care less and it turned out to be much ado over nothing (Shakespeare). I don't get what this film was trying to achieve. I assume Rivete was a leftist so is he criticizing them or supporting them? Might have been better with the running time cut and a new ending. This isn't The 400 Blows or breathless or even Le Beau Surge.

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      As an inside joke, in Sie küßten und sie schlugen ihn (1959) the film Antoine Doinel and his parents go to see is "Paris Belongs to Us", which wouldn't be released for another two years.
    • Patzer
      Near the end, when Pierre is on a public phone at Dupleix, a poster near him reads "DIMANCHE 31 MAI" (Sunday 31 May), advertising a meeting of the Parti Socialiste Unifié. May 31st was a Sunday in 1959, and this scene was filmed in late 1958. However, the film is supposed to be taking place in June 1957, so it makes no sense that a meeting is being advertised nearly 2 years in advance.
    • Zitate

      Bernard: You're the guilty ones, with bloodstained hands.

      Philip Kaufman: You go too far.

      Bernard: Too far? Too far?

      Philip Kaufman: What about Mayakovsky? He wasn't Spanish, but he killed himself.

      Bernard: Mayaskovsky who?

      Blonde à la party: Mayakovsky, wowsky!

      [laughs]

    • Crazy Credits
      "Paris belongs to nobody." PEGUY
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Cinéma, de notre temps: Jacques Rivette le veilleur: 1-Le jour (1990)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 13. Dezember 1961 (Frankreich)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Frankreich
    • Sprachen
      • Französisch
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Paris Belongs to Us
    • Drehorte
      • Pont des Arts, Paris 6, Paris, Frankreich(2 scenes on bridge)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Ajym Films
      • Les Films du Carrosse
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 2 Std. 21 Min.(141 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono

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