CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.7/10
2.2 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Una mujer sale un viernes por la noche, el día antes de irse a vivir con su novio, pero se queda atrapada en el tráfico, donde conoce a un apuesto desconocido.Una mujer sale un viernes por la noche, el día antes de irse a vivir con su novio, pero se queda atrapada en el tráfico, donde conoce a un apuesto desconocido.Una mujer sale un viernes por la noche, el día antes de irse a vivir con su novio, pero se queda atrapada en el tráfico, donde conoce a un apuesto desconocido.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 3 nominaciones en total
Florence Loiret Caille
- La jeune fille du flipper
- (as Florence Loiret-Caille)
Opiniones destacadas
Claire Denis sure knows the French woman's mentality. She is very sly in presenting us this story, that on the surface tells us one thing, but deep down, it has nothing to do what we are actually watching.
The transit strike plot, with Laure sitting in traffic and going nowhere, is played too long. We all get the idea of the boredom and frustration of the driver caught in similar circumstances. That part of the film can drive the viewer nuts, since nothing happens.
Laure doesn't feel any remorse into picking up Jean, who is obviously stranded, or is he?. Their conversation doesn't reveal anything, yet, one can feel where this is leading to: somewhere where Laure and Jean can copulate to their hearts content.
The clue of what's to come takes place after they have an espresso at the cafe. Jean asks for change to go downstairs to the vending machine for a 4 condom pack. Oh la la... Jean is not a casual sex offender, he must protect himself, as well as the woman he takes to bed. Casual meetings such as these can be very dangerous!
The scenes in the hotel are well staged. In fact, there is nothing shocking, or done in bad taste. When Laure and Jean are making out, their behavior is very chaste, without French kisses, (I wonder if Pres. Bush would call them Liberty kisses?...) is a let down. But Jean and Laure do it very stylishly and with decorum.
Jean, obviously, is not a one-woman man. After all he has more condoms in his pocket and when he is in the pizzeria, he spots another woman who makes it known she wants to play with him downstairs.
At the end of the film we watch Laure leave the hotel room running into the deserted streets with a grin on her face. She'll go now to her own lover as though nothing had ever happened that night. She is a woman empowered by her own will to have fun, yet not take it too seriously, or hurt anyone. Perhaps she's laughing at her own sense of adventure having done something that perhaps no one will ever know.
Both of the principals are very effective. Veronique Lemercier and Vincent Lindon play very well together. The director is perhaps telling us that there is still hope for all of us, non movie star types, to have fun and meet a partner for the night, have great sex on the next transit strike, if we are in Paris.
The transit strike plot, with Laure sitting in traffic and going nowhere, is played too long. We all get the idea of the boredom and frustration of the driver caught in similar circumstances. That part of the film can drive the viewer nuts, since nothing happens.
Laure doesn't feel any remorse into picking up Jean, who is obviously stranded, or is he?. Their conversation doesn't reveal anything, yet, one can feel where this is leading to: somewhere where Laure and Jean can copulate to their hearts content.
The clue of what's to come takes place after they have an espresso at the cafe. Jean asks for change to go downstairs to the vending machine for a 4 condom pack. Oh la la... Jean is not a casual sex offender, he must protect himself, as well as the woman he takes to bed. Casual meetings such as these can be very dangerous!
The scenes in the hotel are well staged. In fact, there is nothing shocking, or done in bad taste. When Laure and Jean are making out, their behavior is very chaste, without French kisses, (I wonder if Pres. Bush would call them Liberty kisses?...) is a let down. But Jean and Laure do it very stylishly and with decorum.
Jean, obviously, is not a one-woman man. After all he has more condoms in his pocket and when he is in the pizzeria, he spots another woman who makes it known she wants to play with him downstairs.
At the end of the film we watch Laure leave the hotel room running into the deserted streets with a grin on her face. She'll go now to her own lover as though nothing had ever happened that night. She is a woman empowered by her own will to have fun, yet not take it too seriously, or hurt anyone. Perhaps she's laughing at her own sense of adventure having done something that perhaps no one will ever know.
Both of the principals are very effective. Veronique Lemercier and Vincent Lindon play very well together. The director is perhaps telling us that there is still hope for all of us, non movie star types, to have fun and meet a partner for the night, have great sex on the next transit strike, if we are in Paris.
The traffic jam sequence alone stands as an amazing and lyrical study of the rhythms of stop and start driving. The two lovers are so anchored in the magnetism of the present. This movie is a homage to human nature, and sexual attraction consummated. Also, I absolutely love that the film accepts and cherishes the moment as the lovers do. It's very French.
Claire Denis' films may look slick to the jaundiced American audiences, since many fashion and advertising makers employ devices that create Denis-esque effects. Beau Travail was unfortunately evocative of Bruce Webers' damp pretty man ad campaigns and books, yet the power of the film remained when the memory of the packaging had faded.
This film was beautiful to my innocent eye, as it wistfully, abstractly spreads out night-time Paris as a diorama into which drivers and passengers are thrown during a harrowing transit strike. The intimacy that occurs in the film between strangers is intensely depicted - close close close and the camera - as with Beau Travail - is genius. The film made me sad to consider the sense of loneliness inside of that city and my own during the night, yet I am pleased to have seen such a lovely rendering of that idea. I saw the film last night and the pictures are still downloading inside today, my mark of great films.
Finally, THANK YOU Claire Denis for never being ponderously intellectual during appearances and for not feeling that you need 3 hour films to make art. This film - in less than 90 minutes - is more profound than any of the 3 hour French films made.
This film was beautiful to my innocent eye, as it wistfully, abstractly spreads out night-time Paris as a diorama into which drivers and passengers are thrown during a harrowing transit strike. The intimacy that occurs in the film between strangers is intensely depicted - close close close and the camera - as with Beau Travail - is genius. The film made me sad to consider the sense of loneliness inside of that city and my own during the night, yet I am pleased to have seen such a lovely rendering of that idea. I saw the film last night and the pictures are still downloading inside today, my mark of great films.
Finally, THANK YOU Claire Denis for never being ponderously intellectual during appearances and for not feeling that you need 3 hour films to make art. This film - in less than 90 minutes - is more profound than any of the 3 hour French films made.
Vendredi Soir (2002), directed by Claire Denis, is a film about two
residents of Paris who come together because of a horrendous,
citywide traffic jam. The movie is slow and deliberate, but not
boring. The film's power derives from the interaction of two
attractive strangers who are temporarily trapped--and yet
liberated--by the fact that mass transit is shut down, and auto
traffic has come to a standstill.
Valérie Lemercier portrays Laure, a young woman who has left her
apartment to move in with her lover. Ms. Lemercier owes a great
debt to Ms. Denis, who could have cast the part with a more
traditionally beautiful woman. (In the U.S., the role would probably
have gone to Demi Moore.) Instead, the director chose an actor
who is undeniably beautiful, but in an interesting, complex way.
Lemercier is an outstanding actor, and she is given enough time
on screen to demonstrate her professional skills.
Don't see this film if you're looking for excitement, graphic sex,
violence, or a strong narrative story line. See this film if you want to
view Paris--and human relationships--portrayed in a serious, but
almost dreamlike, lyrical, fashion.
residents of Paris who come together because of a horrendous,
citywide traffic jam. The movie is slow and deliberate, but not
boring. The film's power derives from the interaction of two
attractive strangers who are temporarily trapped--and yet
liberated--by the fact that mass transit is shut down, and auto
traffic has come to a standstill.
Valérie Lemercier portrays Laure, a young woman who has left her
apartment to move in with her lover. Ms. Lemercier owes a great
debt to Ms. Denis, who could have cast the part with a more
traditionally beautiful woman. (In the U.S., the role would probably
have gone to Demi Moore.) Instead, the director chose an actor
who is undeniably beautiful, but in an interesting, complex way.
Lemercier is an outstanding actor, and she is given enough time
on screen to demonstrate her professional skills.
Don't see this film if you're looking for excitement, graphic sex,
violence, or a strong narrative story line. See this film if you want to
view Paris--and human relationships--portrayed in a serious, but
almost dreamlike, lyrical, fashion.
This film resists all that is wrong with blockbuster cinema, totally refusing to offer straight-forward, passivity-inducing narrative structures. It is one of the most book-like films you are likely to see, taking its time to develop the central characters in manner that leaves them open to determination by the audience's imagination. It is an erotic film that has no climax. It is a film that engages in life rather than distracts us from it.
This is an immensely subtle film that uses a broad range of cinematic techniques so you should definitely see it on a big screen. In fact, I wouldn't even bother seeing it on TV, so diminished would its impact be.
This is an immensely subtle film that uses a broad range of cinematic techniques so you should definitely see it on a big screen. In fact, I wouldn't even bother seeing it on TV, so diminished would its impact be.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Friday Night
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 156,918
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 9,381
- 25 may 2003
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 609,542
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 30min(90 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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