Eine junge stumme Frau erwartet ein Baby. Ihr Mann schreibt zur gleichen Zeit an einem Roman und nutzt die Dorfbewohner der kleinen Insel als seine Figuren. Im kreativen Prozess sind Realitä... Alles lesenEine junge stumme Frau erwartet ein Baby. Ihr Mann schreibt zur gleichen Zeit an einem Roman und nutzt die Dorfbewohner der kleinen Insel als seine Figuren. Im kreativen Prozess sind Realität und Vorstellung ständig miteinander verwoben.Eine junge stumme Frau erwartet ein Baby. Ihr Mann schreibt zur gleichen Zeit an einem Roman und nutzt die Dorfbewohner der kleinen Insel als seine Figuren. Im kreativen Prozess sind Realität und Vorstellung ständig miteinander verwoben.
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 Nominierungen insgesamt
- René de Montyon
- (Nicht genannt)
- Simon
- (Nicht genannt)
- Danny
- (Nicht genannt)
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All Varda's qualities seem to have vanished into thin air:spontaneity,simplicity and sensitiveness,which made her beautiful "Cleo de 5 à 7" so worthwhile and so new at the beginning of the sixties.These qualities seemed to remain in the follow-up "le bonheur",but this latter work is rather unpleasant in several respects.(Mrs Alice Liddell wrote a very good IMDb comment for "le bonheur",read it and you'll know what I mean)
In "les creatures" Varda casts Piccoli as a writer and Deneuve his mute (because of an accident)wife .The other characters are all pawns in a giant chess game.Sometimes the screen turns red ,maybe to indicate that it's not the same "player",who knows?Actually this is the kind of movie which defies analysis.
It was the eighties before Agnès Varda was again in clover with "sans toit ni loi" and "Jacquot de Nantes".
Both suffer injuries from a road accident. He has a deep feeling of guilt, marked by a scar on his forehead, which symbolizes a healthy madness, which he channels into literary creation. She, a loving muteness, the reverse of her husband's guilt, which she only overcomes at the end, with the birth of her son.
Meanwhile, like a demiurge of the small world that surrounds him, he plays the luck and destiny of his characters and of his own life and family.
Of course, with all the hermetic surrealism that dominates the film, everything could mean something completely different to other viewers.
It is certainly not Varda's most representative cinematographic language, nor is it her most inspired or influential film.
The indistinct lines between fiction and reality in the picture are part and parcel of the visuals presented to us, nevermind the tenor that influences all else on hand. With the fantastical bent firmly established after a time, the delightfully vivid choices of filming locations, production design, art direction, costume design, hair, and makeup are made quite clear, and the supremely mindful, tasteful cinematography is all the more lovely for the fact of it. As if she hadn't done so elsewhere, Varda illustrates without question her expertise as a director; shots and scenes here may be on the more curious and offbeat side of things, but she orchestrates the tableau with a shrewd eye and dexterous hand to build the whimsy and the mystery. Even at that, maybe more than anything else what the unusual slant of 'Les créatures' provides is an opportunity for the cast to just have a total blast. Esteemed actors that Michel Piccoli was and Catherine Deneuve is, it feels a bit like this gives them a chance to show another side of themselves, and try something a little different. So it is too with co-stars like Eva Dahlbeck, Bernard La Jarrige, Jeanne Allard, and all others on hand.
By all means, it's a decidedly odd feature that Varda conjured, one that pointedly confuses the levels of "reality" here. I won't say that I understand everything she was doing with her screenplay, but as she had accordingly spoke of "inspiration" as the underlying impetus and motif, I can only reflect in turn that the movie is itself rather inspired. It's wonderfully imaginative in every capacity, the the story she put together is a minor joy. It sure seems like everyone involved was having fun, a feeling that's easily communicated and shared with viewers. I can understand how this won't necessarily appeal to wide general audiences, but I'm very pleased with how inventive 'Les créatures' is, how well it's made, and how enjoyable and satisfying. Unless one is a diehard fan of someone who participated it may not be an outright must-see, but for those who are receptive to all the wild possibilities of what the medium has to offer, as far as I'm concerned this is well worth checking out if one comes across it.
If you like art/weird movies, you will like it as well. Still, it's not a masterpiece.
Wusstest du schon
- PatzerViviane Quellec orders a coke and the waiter pours it in her glass while she holds it in her right hand. In the next shot, the glass of coke is on the table and she picks it up again with her left hand.
- Zitate
Doctor Desteau: Everything is rotten. Decadence is everywhere. Why fight it?
- VerbindungenReferenced in Chroniques de France: Chroniques de France N° 18 (1966)
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- The Creatures
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- Budget
- 1.340.000 SEK (geschätzt)
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 32 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1