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Eine verheiratete Frau

Originaltitel: Une femme mariée: Suite de fragments d'un film tourné en 1964
  • 1964
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 35 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,1/10
4601
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Eine verheiratete Frau (1964)
DramaRomance

Eine übermenschliche Frau muss sich zwischen ihrem missbrauchenden Ehemann und ihrem eitlen Liebhaber entscheiden.Eine übermenschliche Frau muss sich zwischen ihrem missbrauchenden Ehemann und ihrem eitlen Liebhaber entscheiden.Eine übermenschliche Frau muss sich zwischen ihrem missbrauchenden Ehemann und ihrem eitlen Liebhaber entscheiden.

  • Regie
    • Jean-Luc Godard
  • Drehbuch
    • Jean-Luc Godard
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Bernard Noël
    • Macha Méril
    • Philippe Leroy
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,1/10
    4601
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Drehbuch
      • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Bernard Noël
      • Macha Méril
      • Philippe Leroy
    • 16Benutzerrezensionen
    • 34Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Fotos79

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    Topbesetzung10

    Ändern
    Bernard Noël
    • Robert, the Lover
    Macha Méril
    Macha Méril
    • Charlotte
    Philippe Leroy
    Philippe Leroy
    • Pierre, the Husband
    Christophe Bourseiller
    Christophe Bourseiller
    • Nicolas
    • (as Chris Tophe)
    Roger Leenhardt
    Roger Leenhardt
    • Self
    Margareth Clémenti
    • Girl in Swimming Pool
    • (as Margaret Le-Van)
    Véronique Duval
    Véronique Duval
    • Girl in Swimming Pool
    Rita Maiden
    Rita Maiden
    • Madame Celine
    Georges Liron
    • The Physician
    Jean-Luc Godard
    Jean-Luc Godard
    • The Narrator
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Drehbuch
      • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen16

    7,14.6K
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    7StevePulaski

    Expect Godard, receive Godard, what you do and think after may vary

    To call Jean-Luc Godard's Une Femme Mariée a ponderous film is nothing short of the truth; the film, even at ninety-one minutes, is a lengthy, patient-testing endeavor. Yet, the film captures remarkable essences of mood and emotion that are nothing shy of poetic and quietly moving. Godard, once again, resorts back to classic, black-and-white film in order to accurately and wisely capture the sensual moods of the 1960's rather than become wrapped up in petty detail.

    This is yet another Godard film that will likely be appreciated by many after the film is over. When enduring the film, it becomes quite the challenge to stay in-tuned with it, since the prolific title-cards, frequent narrations, and sometimes uneventful instances seem to do everything they can in alienating and turning-off a viewer. However, after several hours (or, admittedly, days), contemplating a Godard film or keeping it in your head makes you warm up to its sensibilities and its techniques, as if you just cracked (or found yourself closer to cracking) the film's code.

    The film's plot is a sentence long, following the relationship between Charlotte (Macha Méril) and her lover Robert (Bernard Noël), despite having a relationship with Pierre (Philippe Leroy), as well with having a child with him in the process. Despite this setback, Charlotte still spends much of her time with Robert, doing typical things you'd find in a Godard movie; whispering softly, discussing philosophy, getting romantic, and simply enjoying the presence of each other.

    Once you get past the fact that the film is stripping everything you'd expect it to include down to very minimalistic ingredients is when your response to Une Femme Mariée may be a bit stronger or perhaps simply unfazed. The film is a film of essences, atmosphere, tone, and emotion, captured in black and white to only affirm its details are shifted out in favor of a less-distracting experience. Throughout the film, we see Robert and Charlotte show affection for one another and also admire their own bodies. Of Godard's French New Wave films that I have seen up until this point, Une Femme Mariée is the one that contains the most controversial imagery (by American standards) in terms of nudity.

    Yet, Godard's film is certainly not graphic by any means; by American censorship standards even in the present day, it's incredibly tame, mostly using lengthy close-ups to depict pasty-white skin. By doing this, Godard creates a very intimate and sexual mood, a common characteristic of the 1960's in France, again, catering to the idea that he favors capturing an essence or a mood rather than focusing on plot-progression and intense character development. This sexual atmosphere is surprisingly not arousing but more tender and appreciative of human anatomy, something we're sometimes believed we are not supposed to be proud of.

    In the regard of being a meditative, moody little drama with some raw feelings of emotion and intimacy, Une Femme Mariée does succeed and meshes nicely with Godard's other New Wave films. However, the picture does become watery and difficult to sit through, especially during the third act when things seem to take a more ambiguous road. Expect Godard, receive Godard, what you do and think after may vary.

    Starring: Bernard Noël and Macha Méril. Directed by: Jean-Luc Godard.
    5Ben_Cheshire

    Half show, half tell. Half great, half horrid.

    I was all set to adore this movie. I'd just seen Woman is a Woman and loved it, and the opening 30 mins of this look gorgeous in black and white on Blu Ray. The whispering and close-ups are hypnotic, and the monkeying around is not bothersome. But then, quel disastre, a typical Godard left turn, and I have to sit through (what felt like) 45 minutes of ponderous talking heads. You had to be there. I took years to get around to watching this, and I was loving it, honest, but man, he just wore me down. I had to admit that I was hating it. Just like some boring documentary. Why oh why such extended ruminations. Show not tell that's the idea. In this film its show for 30 minutes then tell for 30. I had to turn it off, sadly. So, my rating reflects this. I loved exactly half of what I saw.

    5/10
    9Quinoa1984

    on women, love, bodies, affairs, marriage, and other concerns

    We see a hand, then another hand, in the frame of the opening shot of Jean-Luc Godard's Une femme mariee. It's from here that we see a succession of images, all of the body but never anything explicit- a leg, a belly-button, hands, a back, a nude front but covered breasts. Godard is inquiring about the form of a body in and of itself while also trying to find new ways of photographing it. In these shots, which also happen again in this sort of physical poetry a couple of other times in the film, illustrate something both absorbing and elusive about the film in general.

    It's about form and 'lifestyle, of the married life and the affair, of a bad husband and a tricky squeeze on the side... but then we also have scenes that puncture through the infidelity drama: there's a scene where Robert, the lover, and Charlotte, the main femme of the movie, are sitting in a movie theater at an airport, discreetly, and one wonders what they're about to watch (just before this an image of Hitchcock appears as if Charlotte sees it in the lobby), and it turns out to be some kind of holocaust documentary ala Night & Fog. They leave right away. Too much of a shock, or too much reality? How does the outside world affect these people?

    We get a lot of scenes of characters just talking to one another, asking questions, sometimes in documentary form. Whether it's really Godard off camera asking the questions and turning it into a docu-narrative of some sort (the old Bazinian logic taken to an extreme that an actor in front of a camera is still in a documentary of the actor acting on camera perhaps), or the characters themselves is kept a little unclear. But this doesn't distract from the dialog and monologues being generally, genuinely intriguing and moving even. There's one scene in particular that I shall not forget easily, no pun intended, when Pierre, the husband, espouses about memory and how "impossible" it is for him to forget, and how rotten it can be for someone who has dealt with real horror (he recalls a story, as his character is a pilot, of talking to Roberto Rossellini about a concentration camp victim and memory and that it made him laugh - again, a very harsh contrast of Dachau and Auschwitz mentioned for interpretation).

    This and a few other times when characters just go off on something has a lasting impact. Une femme Mariee is filled with the sort of cinematic rhythm that would immediately say to someone unfamiliar with foreign/art-house film, let alone Godard, "oh, that's an 'arty' movie". It certainly is: everything from its themes of alienated characters to its lyrical and original cinematography to the repetition of the Beethoven music (later used in Prenom Carmen) to image itself becomes an issue like when Charlotte obsesses over ladies wearing bras in a magazine, it's all from an artist who expresses his concerns in a my-way-or-the- highway attitude to the audience. And you want to go along with him, if curious enough, to see where he'll take his trio of characters in the Parisian settings. Sometimes there's even weird, dark humor, like when Charlotte finds a random record of some woman in agony and it's the sound of a woman just laughing - something that Charlotte and Pierre listen to in silence until Charlotte wants to put on another record and she becomes like a little kid trying to put it on without Pierre getting in her way.

    What looks disjointed and without a plot is deceptive when looking at it in pieces. But somehow Godard's film works as a whole piece, and it's part of the point to find this character Charlotte not easy to figure out. The men in her life barely know themselves. And by the end, when it should be about the melodrama of a baby on the way, Godard side- steps this (already dealing with it comically in A Woman is a Woman), by making it about something else on the surface and underneath full of tension. Notice how demanding Charlotte is of answers from Robert about what it means to be an actor. He answers well and stands his ground, but it becomes noticeable that it's not about getting answers on acting or real love but about this woman's tortured self-made life. It's not emotionally gripping, but it gets one to think and it's this that makes Godard's film special in his cannon of great 1960's works.
    6Xstal

    Lessons in Lingerie...

    You decide to make the leap, Pierre to Robert, an actor, he likes you shorn of blouse and your skirts, doesn't overpower you, like Pierre's inclined to do, and he fits into an image, you prefer. Pierre was made aware, of all your cheating, had you followed and found out of covert meetings, but he thought it was all over, the affair had found its closure, he's oblivious that you haven't been retreating. A doctor lets you know there'll be another, in six months you will become natural mother, but the father could be either, 50/50 the conceiver, have to decide if it's one, or it's the other.

    A typically abstract tale from the director of the deep, conceptual and symbolic, centred around Charlottes dilemma and how the world around her influences.
    8lasttimeisaw

    Cinema Omnivore - A Married Woman (1964) 8.1/10

    "No compunction can be traced from a two-timing Charlotte, she juggles Pierre's brute aggressiveness and tenderness (Leroy implements both with stark precision), with Roger's sophistication and clinginess, even the moral conundrum of pregnancy cannot fluster her, she only wants to know whether her pursuit of physical pleasure is wrong or not. Méril has a knack for evasion, her high-born delicacy, impish self-effacement emblazons her with an air of nonchalance that is essentially why French women on screen are so ethereal, yet, Godard's self-referential monologue often brings Charlotte down to earth, her inner thoughts, private ideations, her conviction in trust above anything else, find her beyond moral reproach, essentially, it is her aw-shucks niceness and realness (words are not put into her mouth, she seems to mean what she articulates) that establishes herself as an unusual Godard heroine, Charlotte's modernity is head of her time."

    read my full review on my blog: Cinema Omnivore, thanks.

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    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      Roughly 30 minutes into the film, in the scene where Pierre, Charlotte and Roger Leenhardt are sitting down in the living room, a small, cockroach looking-like insect crawls on the floor between Pierre's legs.
    • Zitate

      Charlotte: It's odd. Men will allow for themselves which they won't allow for women.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Godard, l'amour, la poésie (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Quand le Film est Triste
      (Sad Movies Make Me Cry)

      Written by John D. Loudermilk

      French lyrics by Georges Aber and Lucien Morisse

      Performed by Sylvie Vartan

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 17. September 1965 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Frankreich
    • Sprache
      • Französisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • A Married Woman
    • Drehorte
      • Paris, Frankreich
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Anouchka Films
      • Orsay Films
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 120.000 $ (geschätzt)
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 35 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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