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IMDbPro

Tout va bien

  • 1972
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 35min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.5/10
4 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Tout va bien (1972)
Drama

Una huelga en una fábrica de salchichas francesa contribuye al distanciamiento de un cineasta y su esposa reportera.Una huelga en una fábrica de salchichas francesa contribuye al distanciamiento de un cineasta y su esposa reportera.Una huelga en una fábrica de salchichas francesa contribuye al distanciamiento de un cineasta y su esposa reportera.

  • Dirección
    • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Jean-Pierre Gorin
  • Guionistas
    • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Jean-Pierre Gorin
  • Elenco
    • Yves Montand
    • Jane Fonda
    • Vittorio Caprioli
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.5/10
    4 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Jean-Luc Godard
      • Jean-Pierre Gorin
    • Guionistas
      • Jean-Luc Godard
      • Jean-Pierre Gorin
    • Elenco
      • Yves Montand
      • Jane Fonda
      • Vittorio Caprioli
    • 37Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 40Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 1 premio ganado en total

    Fotos94

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    Elenco principal21

    Editar
    Yves Montand
    Yves Montand
    • Him, Jacques
    Jane Fonda
    Jane Fonda
    • Her, Suzanne
    Vittorio Caprioli
    Vittorio Caprioli
    • Factory Manager
    Elizabeth Chauvin
    • Genevieve
    Castel Casti
    • Jacques
    Éric Chartier
    • Lucien
    Louis Bugette
    Louis Bugette
    • Georges
    • (as Bugette)
    Yves Gabrielli
    • Léon
    • (as Yves Gabrieli)
    Pierre Oudrey
    Pierre Oudrey
    • Frederic
    Jean Pignol
    Jean Pignol
    • Delegate
    Anne Wiazemsky
    Anne Wiazemsky
    • Leftist woman
    Marcel Gassouk
    Marcel Gassouk
    Didier Gaudron
    • Germain
    Michel Marot
    Hugette Mieville
    • Georgette
    Luce Marneux
    Natalie Simon
    Cristiana Tullio-Altan
    Cristiana Tullio-Altan
      • Dirección
        • Jean-Luc Godard
        • Jean-Pierre Gorin
      • Guionistas
        • Jean-Luc Godard
        • Jean-Pierre Gorin
      • Todo el elenco y el equipo
      • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

      Opiniones de usuarios37

      6.54K
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      Opiniones destacadas

      6rbloom333

      Good One

      Jean-Luc Godard's follow-up to the ultra-Maoist Weekend, featuring Yves Montand as a former New Wave filmmaker and his wife Jane Fonda, as they become active in a factory takeover. The film is of course very sympathetic to Marxism and perhaps Leninism, but it's certainly toned down from the blood fest that is Weekend, perhaps regrettably. Godard insists on reinterpreting and imposing entirely new ideas about what a film can and ought to be, in this case an intellectualized espousal of the working class struggle. A few moments of daring misce-en-scene are worth mentioning; fist, Godard includes an awesome cutaway of the factory to reveal the power-dynamics of the uprising within, and an elaborate tracking sequence in a supermarket to reveal the gross stupidity of capitalist consumerism. Tout Va Bien is clearly a step-down from Godard's brilliant features of the 60's, but it's still provocative and worth any cinephile's time.
      7Quinoa1984

      an interesting collaboration/experiment, not great, but not boring

      I've always found a kind of disconnect between the Godard films of the 60's and the Godard films of the 80's, 90's and today, which is that in the past twenty or so years Godard has kept on experimenting, not telling the usual stories that we're used to in movies, with impressive camera-work and aloof actors. But in these films he's also gotten rather boring with his material, and sometimes his experimenting goes a little over the edge for my taste. I had yet to see a work of his from the 70's, however, until Tout va Bien, or Everything is Fine (many of his films are either very limited or totally unavailable in the US). It's actually a good movie for him and co-writer/director Jean-Pierre Gorin. Gorin, unlike Godard, was not a big-time cinephile, but did have motivations to become a political filmmaker. What they concocted was a kind of response to the ways that political films are not made, and should or could be made, in the independent/art world of cinema. This time, as usual, Godard takes very long shots of people talking, and has a couple of his inventive, almost scarily calm tracking shots. But this time as well he has two international stars on his hands. This is where he and Gorin get creative more so.

      It's a tale of the working class against the ruling class that gets one thinking during the film, and even after it. They place Jane Fonda and Yves Montand as a married couple who get locked in a bitter struggle between meat-factory workers and the management not giving them their proper due. Although Fonda and Montand are the 'stars' of the movie, right off the start of the film (including discussing narrating voices) the whole idea of what this film should be is dissected- the money involved, what the stars should be doing in this story, why should there even BE a story? In short, the film unfolds as the stars become more so observers than the main gig, and the non-professionals (at least I thought they were, they might've been character actors) became the real stars. There are a few monologues, long ones, that go on during this dispute, and they're inter cut with scenes where Godard and Going seem to be showing the double-edge to these workers- they're part determined to get their way, and partly like kids taking over the school.

      After these scenes, we get mostly all scenes with the stars, as Montand plays a disaffected art-film-turned-commercial director, and Fonda plays an dissatisfied American reporter. Their dialog together sort of winds down the film (including more monologues), leading up to a scene in a supermarket that almost reaches to the heights of the sustained, overwhelming filmic anarchy of the traffic-jam in Godard's Week End. Then the film ends without much else to say. So, basically, Tout va Bien kept me interested with what the characters/actors/people had to say, and unlike in Godard's 80's films there was a structure. And I liked how the screen-time for the extras ended up being balanced out by that of Fonda and Montand.

      The downsides, which there are a few, are that Fonda and Montand, up until their scenes together &/or their monologues, don't have much at all to do in the film. I can't criticize or comment too much on their acting, because they seem to be too natural (by way of Godard/Gorin's simplicity throughout, sometimes funny sometimes not) to be doing anything very powerful. And there were a few times the experimenting got annoying. But overall, Tout va Bien works on its own terms, and its the kind of film now on DVD can find its audience somehow. Whether or not the same audience that embraced with loving arms Breathless and My Life to Live will do the same with this is another matter- it's part frustrating, but part clarity all the same. At the least, it's not just Godard's doing whether or not the film works or not- Gorin deserves equal credit or berating. B+
      7zetes

      Newly released on (Region 1) DVD by Criterion

      Although I'm quite familiar with most of Jean-Luc Godard's career, there is that 1970s period where he completely abandoned commercialism in all its forms and made experimental political films with Jean-Pierre Gorin and others. Tout Va Bien is not an impossible work, but it is challenging and, even if you win that challenge, the rewards are fairly limited. But it's interesting work, and Godard's fractured cinematic imagination is definitely brilliant at times. The grocery store sequence near the end of the film is as cinematic ally accomplished and impressive as the tracking shot of the apocalyptic highway in Week-End. And I love the meta-cinematic material at the beginning, where the filmmakers discuss how they can make a political film about May '68 and how the movement has evolved in the following four years. Step on: hire some stars. With stars come money. Thus Yves Montand and Jane Fonda are recruited for that purpose. The longest segment of the film has the two stars trapped with the manager of a slaughterhouse as his workers bar him from leaving his office. Godard and Gorin have a set designed after that large-windowed apartment building in Tati's Playtime. Perhaps it is even the same exact set, remodeled a bit for the way they want to use it here? The new Criterion DVD includes a follow-up film, A Letter to Jane, which discusses the famous photograph of Fonda meeting with the Viet-Cong. It is nearly unwatchable, though, and I gave up after 15 or 20 minutes (it's 52 minutes of Godard and Gorin speechifying – which is also prevalent (and hard to take) in Tout Va Bien, as well).
      Michael_Elliott

      Yet Another Strange One

      Tout va bien (1972)

      ** (out of 4)

      Jean-Luc Godard and Jea-Pierre Gorin directed this film about two directors (Godard, Gorin) who are trying to piece a film together, which is being played out by Jane Fonda and Yves Montand. Godard has been very hit and miss with me so this film here is somewhat in the middle. I really didn't hate this movie but at the same time I can't say that I was entertained by it either. I think there's some good ideas floating around here but I never felt like they were pulled together to make anything too interesting. I'm sure fans of the film will say there's a political message here and I'm sure there is somewhere but with all the madness going on I wasn't about to look for it. I think Montand is very good in his role but Fonda was a tad bit lacking and this is probably the biggest disappointment I've had with any of her films. I really enjoyed the sequence in the store and there's some very good moments scattered around but in the end this is just Godard being Godard and I wasn't going for it.
      9Sergeant_Tibbs

      One of Godard's finest efforts.

      I find that the films of Jean-Luc Godard rarely speak to me, but they do, such as Pierrot Le Fou, it really hits hard. Perhaps he's most effective when he talks about cinema itself. While Pierrot is most profoundly interesting through its debate about the arts, Tout Va Bien immediately addresses its own existence in its opening scene. It analyzes premise, storytelling, filmmaking and how they got the film made with how it cast two major stars in the lead roles. It's fascinatingly direct, almost confessional. With this abrasive and confrontational style in mind it charges full throttle into its politics of the French revolution in the late 60s as the lower and middle classes rebel against capitalism. While sometimes it can be a little too on-the-nose with its arguments as characters talk to the audience, Godard's point is undeniable and its very well demonstrated through the style. The highlight of the film is definitely the use of sets and colour. I love the stage-like sets where you can see into two floors and a dozen rooms. It categorizes the drama in a cartoonish way that satirizes the politics brilliantly while still retaining their power. Although this argument does interrupt the initial contrived story, it jumps back into it seamlessly making it work for the characters in an unexpectedly emotional way. Tout Va Bien is an incredible film and one of Godard's finest efforts. It lived up to my expectations and more.

      9/10

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      Argumento

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      • Trivia
        Most of the shots contain all the three colours of the French flag: blue, white and red.
      • Citas

        Narrator: There'd be farmers who farm. Workers who work. And bourgeois who bourgeois.

      • Conexiones
        Edited into Bande-annonce de 'Tout va bien' (1972)
      • Bandas sonoras
        Il y a du Soleil sur la France
        Music by Eric Charden

        Lyrics by Frank Thomas and Jean-Michel Rivat

        Performed by Stone et Charden

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      Preguntas Frecuentes17

      • How long is All's Well?Con tecnología de Alexa

      Detalles

      Editar
      • Fecha de lanzamiento
        • 28 de abril de 1972 (Francia)
      • Países de origen
        • Francia
        • Italia
      • Idiomas
        • Francés
        • Inglés
      • También se conoce como
        • All's Well
      • Productoras
        • Anouchka Films
        • Vieco Films
        • Empire Films
      • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

      Especificaciones técnicas

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      • Tiempo de ejecución
        1 hora 35 minutos
      • Mezcla de sonido
        • Mono
      • Relación de aspecto
        • 1.66 : 1

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