Agrega una trama en tu idiomaThe friendship of Bertrand and Guillaume is complicated when the womanizing Guillaume begins to pursue a charming girl named Suzanne.The friendship of Bertrand and Guillaume is complicated when the womanizing Guillaume begins to pursue a charming girl named Suzanne.The friendship of Bertrand and Guillaume is complicated when the womanizing Guillaume begins to pursue a charming girl named Suzanne.
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- (sin créditos)
- Jean-Louis
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- Party Guest
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
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Opiniones destacadas
The movie is about four young adults acting like adolescents. They pair up, break up, and come back together again. They talk, talk, talk, mostly about each other.
The two men are Philippe Beuzen as Bertrand and Christian Charrière as Guillaume. The two women are Catherine Sée as Suzanne and Diane Wilkinson as Sophie. It's interesting to me that none of the four had a successful film career following this movie.
This film has a borderline IMDb rating of 7.0. I didn't think it was that good and rated it 6. My thought is that the only reason to see this film is to complete your viewing of Rohmer's Six Moral Tales.
Watching "Suzanne's Career" reminds me of a home movie--a very good home movie, but a home movie nonetheless. It appears to have been made using an 8mm camera, is quite grainy, have occasionally sloppy edits and has no titles or introduction. The camera also appears to have been hand-held at times and is, occasionally, a bit jerky. Because of all these factors and the non-professional style of the acting, it's not very easy to take this film seriously. The way I see it, it's a way for Eric Rohmer fans to see his early works in order to see how much he improved and evolved over the next few decades. And because of all this, it's NOT a movie for the casual viewer--more for the die-hard Rohmer fans. And, because I assume this was only made for Rohmer and his New Wave buddies, I really don't think it's possible to score this one.
By the way, twice in the film the line "Girls like to be forced" was repeated. How very progressive!!
There is a great deal of narration in the film and we are privy to Bertrand's thoughts and feelings as he sorts out for himself what is right and what is wrong. Suzanne is sweet but seemingly rather passive and easily exploited and we root for her to assert herself, and in typical Rohmer style we don't have to wait very long. This is a lovely film and, though it goes on a bit too long in pursuing its resolution, the ending is deliciously satisfying.
At the beginning, we see Bertrand and Guillaume, two young college boys, having a conversation with Suzanne, a girl whom they've just met. Guillaume decides early on to use the girl, manipulate her emotions, exploit her in any way he can. And he does so effectively, for awhile. Guillaume flirts with other girls in Suzanne's presence, talks down to her, lives off of her money completely regretless. Throughout the whole thing, Bertrand stands by. He is torn between whether or not to go against his friend, who he looks up to, or to join him and manipulate the girl in order to benefit himself.
This is a fairly good film. It is longer than the first moral tale, but not quite feature length. The moral dilemma here, concerning fair and right treatment of women, is very interesting to watch unfold. It takes a little too long to get to where it's going, though. The middle drags on for longer than it needed to. There is no question that the two male characters are absolute pigs, but watching them act on their chauvinism gets a little old after awhile. However, good narration, an excellent plot, and a good statement about how people should be treated salvage this moral tale. Suzanne's Career is definitely worth the hour.
7/10
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- TriviaThis film is part of the Criterion Collection, spine #344.
- Citas
Guillaume: [after spanking Suzanne's behind] Don't pout. Its was just a joke.
Suzanne: I don't like jokes in bad taste.
Guillaume: If I had good taste, I wouldn't like you.
Suzanne: Well, what counts is that you like me.
Guillaume: I'm beginning to wonder.
Suzanne: If you don't, there are plenty of others who do.
Guillaume: Pimply-faced kids.
Suzanne: Not at all. As good as you. Better, even.
Guillaume: [to Bertrand] The girl's no dummy. She can hold her own.
- ConexionesFollowed by La collectionneuse (1967)
Selecciones populares
- How long is Suzanne's Career?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución54 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1