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Les glaneurs et la glaneuse

  • 2000
  • G
  • 1h 22m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,7/10
9,6 k
MA NOTE
Les glaneurs et la glaneuse (2000)
Documentaire

Agnès Varda filme et interviewe des glaneurs de tout type en France, de ceux qui ratissent les champs après la cueillette à ceux qui fouillent les poubelles dans Paris.Agnès Varda filme et interviewe des glaneurs de tout type en France, de ceux qui ratissent les champs après la cueillette à ceux qui fouillent les poubelles dans Paris.Agnès Varda filme et interviewe des glaneurs de tout type en France, de ceux qui ratissent les champs après la cueillette à ceux qui fouillent les poubelles dans Paris.

  • Director
    • Agnès Varda
  • Writer
    • Agnès Varda
  • Stars
    • François Wertheimer
    • Agnès Varda
    • Jean La Planche
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,7/10
    9,6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Agnès Varda
    • Writer
      • Agnès Varda
    • Stars
      • François Wertheimer
      • Agnès Varda
      • Jean La Planche
    • 43Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 33Commentaires de critiques
    • 86Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 16 victoires et 3 nominations au total

    Photos51

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    Rôles principaux4

    Modifier
    François Wertheimer
    • Self
    Agnès Varda
    Agnès Varda
    • Self
    Jean La Planche
    • Self
    Bodan Litnanski
    • Self
    • Director
      • Agnès Varda
    • Writer
      • Agnès Varda
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs43

    7,79.6K
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    Avis en vedette

    9theoscillator_13

    One of the best docs I've ever seen!

    Yeah, it was that good. I was introduced to the French New Wave when I was in college and I was instantly a fan. Of course I loved Godard and Truffaut but I was also a always a fan of Varda's work. The one woman allowed run with "the boy's club".

    Even in her later years in 2000, the mark of the Nouvelle Vague was still evident in her work. Shot on video at a time when things looked like they were shot on video, this movie held true to all of the same ideals that Varda stood for 40 years earlier. There wasn't a lot of time or money spent on lighting and capturing the perfect image but what was lacking was made up for with true cinematography and framing of the shots. Visually the movie is both cheap and no frills and meticulous and artistic.

    But like any good documentary, Varda's vision and message trumps any superficial aspect of the film-making. The message that there is beauty in every aspect of our existence regardless of how insignificant we think it is resonates throughout the story and will stick with you long after the movie has ended.
    10Quinoa1984

    Wow!

    1) Agnes Varda doesn't care that the quality of her digital camera is low; on the contrary, she loves is and is fascinated by how it captures things like her own hand (which she calls a "horror," which may or may not be a joke), and that love I think transfers to the audience. Anyway, her editing shows that this new digital quality gives more opportunities to capture life and images in exciting, vivid timing.

    2) Gleaning isnt as inherently interesting as the people Varda talks to... At least that was my impression at first. And she talks to many of then. And guess what? These people, who vary from being old (and young) professionals to the destitute to old pros at this (even if theyre amateurs, specially if theyre amateurs), are so wholly rich and absorbing to watch that one realizes any filmmaker can make anything interesting so long as the subject matter connects. Varda connects with people, and art and with objects like potatoes and grapes and oysters and of course cats, and you feel that connection in your bones (if you're open to this, and Id fear meeting someone who was bored by this).

    3) those rap songs are wondrous.

    4) Varda wisely keeps her mistakes in - at one point while in a field she left her camera on and got a "dance" of a lens cap in front of her frame. Hey, why not put in a jazz track for a moment? And why put this in a movie about cleaning? Why not? Varda is all about the chances of life that happen in front of her (even finding a painting with gleaners while looking for something else). In a way this lends itself to what the film might really be about which is how people find joy in what they do. It might be stopping over to get things off the ground (and it may not be in a field, it may be more urban), or it may be filmmaking itself, which happens to be what Varda does (a curious point is when she meets someone whos a descendant of an early pioneer of cinema, ill leave it at that for you to see more).

    5) If you are looking for this be about more concrete things, Varda has you covered too as there's the legal matters of gleaning and how it has been, how to say it, kindly outlawed in some parts of France (that is, some farmers dont want to see it gone, but that's the way it is). She even talks to legal officials - one in a field, naturally - and looks at a case of some kids tossing over trash cans. In this film, of course, it's not simply only about the joy or passion or even the compulsion of gleaning off fields, but waste and trash itself: how do we throw things out as a society and are okay with that? Can things that are discarded be reused, as clothes, as food, or even as art?

    We may/are all be connected through what we throw out and what can be saved, which is a lot, and the difference is in who finds value in it or not. These people do, and Varda finds empathy, or at least wants us to. So while there's the legal questions, there's the real-world applications too. Theres politics underlying those who glean in rural places and those in the cities, but it's not too explicit. Just showing people picking through trash and leftovers is enough, because... Dont we all do it?

    6) I continue to lament how much Varda I haven't seen till now.
    8bedazzle

    unique

    There are a number of reasons why I enjoyed this movie.

    1.) I am into etymology. Most english words come through French through Latin and it was fun to attempt to match spoken word and subtitle.

    2.) French rap. I am very much interested in the hip hop subculture and was amazed how similar theirs is to ours.

    3.) Scenic shots. There were: orchards, fields, barren highways, a gypsie camp, a great many paintings, "junk" yards, and such.

    4.) The camera shots. The journal/documentary filming allowed for several film taboos to be artfully waived. For example, the directors hands often purposefully find themselves in a shot, these were my favorite parts because of the witticisms she gave at these times. Also, an accidental shot were the camera lense gets in the way was made into another piece of ordinary object art.

    5.) Also, I was intrigued by the comparison between classical gleaning, modern gleaning, and modern scavenging. See Dark Days for another good real life scavenger flick.

    6.) Lastly, I felt a connection with many of the characters. People who were on the fringe of society and enjoyed it. Specifically, there were a few who had jobs and apartments, but still chose to rumage through old trash for their meals. "I've been living off trash for 10 years and I haven't been sick once," as on of them candidly stated.

    Note - For me, these 6 items more than made this movie an enjoyable experience, but this is basically all there is, so be warned: There is no plot! Really it is just a bunch of stuff that happens, but feel that this helps the movie more than hurts.
    8jotix100

    The gatherers

    Jean Francois Millet, the French painter of the Barbizon school, seems to have been the inspiration for Agnes Varda's interesting documentary "Les glaneurs et la glaneuse". In fact, Ms. Varda makes it a point to take us along to the French countryside where Millet got the inspiration for his masterpiece "Les Glaneurs". Like in his other paintings, Millet comments about the peasantry working the fields in most of his canvases. One can see the poverty in his subjects as they struggle to gather crops for their employers.

    Ms. Varda takes a humanistic approach to another type of activity in which she bases her story. In fact, the people one sees in the film are perhaps the descendants of the gleaners of Millet's time, except they are bringing whatever is left behind once the machinery takes care of gathering the best of each crop, leaving the rest to rot in the fields.

    Agnes Varda takes a trip through her native France to show us the inequality of a system that produces such excesses that a part of it has to be dumped because it doesn't meet standards. On the one hand, there is such abundance, and on the other, one sees how some of the poor people showcased in the documentary can't afford to buy the basics and must resort to take it on their own to get whatever has been left in order to survive.

    With this documentary, Agnes Varda shows an uncanny understanding to the problems most of these people are facing.
    9Red-125

    A fascinating, offbeat French film

    The French film Les glaneurs et la glaneuse was shown in the U.S. as The Gleaners & I (2000). It was written and directed by Agnès Varda,

    Varda is a fascinating figure in the history of French filmmaking. Although she was making movies in France in the 60's, she wasn't actually a member of the French New Wave. Instead, Varda was part of a loosely joined group of directors that also included Alain Resnais and Chris Marker. (Although theoreticians place them into a group, Resnais said, "It is true that we are always ranked together, but what can you say we share apart from cats?") In any event Varda has a secure place in the history of French filmaking.

    The Gleaners is a movie about people who survive by searching for food or objects that others don't want, or, at least, don't want to work to find. In the country, gleaners find fruits and vegetables that remain after the harvest has been completed. In the cities they scavenge for food that has been thrown out as garbage, or that has been left behind when the vegetable markets close. They also claim discarded furniture and appliances for repair and resale.

    Whether by choice or by necessity, gleaners do their work at the fringes of the society. What they do isn't illegal, but it's not exactly mainstream either. However, this doesn't mean that the gleaners don't have their own fascinating personalities and informal codes of conduct.

    Varda interviews gleaners in both rural and urban areas. What she learns--as do we--is that they are very skilled at--and often proud of--what they do. As Varda shows us, it takes skill and knowledge to survive as a gleaner. You have to know where to look and when to look to get enough to eat, or to sell. The gleaners are interesting individuals, and they're happy to talk about what they do. Varda has taken what they told her, and fashioned it into a fascinating movie.

    The irony of this is clear when you look at the French title of the movie. The film is about gleaners, but it's also about one gleaner--Agnès Varda. Varda uses the bits and pieces offered to her by the gleaners, and fashions them into a movie. So, in that sense, she herself is the ultimate gleaner.

    We saw the film on the large screen at Rochester's Dryden Theatre, as part of the excellent Rochester Labor Film Festival. However, it should also work on DVD.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The film was included for the first time in 2022 on the critics' poll of Sight and Sound's list of the greatest films of all time, at number 67.
    • Citations

      Agnès Varda: He looked at an empty clock but put it back down. I picked it up and took it home. A clock without hands works fine for me. You don't see time passing.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Say It Isn't So/Wit/The Brothers/The Tailor of Panama/The Gleaners and I (2001)
    • Bandes originales
      Apfelsextett
      Composed by Pierre Barbaud

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Gleaners & I?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

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    • Date de sortie
      • 7 juillet 2000 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
    • Langue
      • French
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Gleaners and I
    • Lieux de tournage
      • France
    • société de production
      • Ciné-tamaris
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 155 320 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 12 655 $ US
      • 11 mars 2001
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 159 165 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 22 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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