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Playtime

  • 1967
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 35min
NOTE IMDb
7,8/10
28 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
4 575
44
Playtime (1967)
Regarder Trailer
Lire trailer1:32
1 Video
99+ photos
FarceQuirky ComedySatireSlapstickComedy

Monsieur Hulot se promène avec un regard curieux dans un Paris ultramoderne, en parallèle d'un groupe de touristes américaines. Pendant ce temps, un restaurant night-club encore en travaux s... Tout lireMonsieur Hulot se promène avec un regard curieux dans un Paris ultramoderne, en parallèle d'un groupe de touristes américaines. Pendant ce temps, un restaurant night-club encore en travaux se prépare à être inauguré.Monsieur Hulot se promène avec un regard curieux dans un Paris ultramoderne, en parallèle d'un groupe de touristes américaines. Pendant ce temps, un restaurant night-club encore en travaux se prépare à être inauguré.

  • Réalisation
    • Jacques Tati
  • Scénario
    • Jacques Tati
    • Jacques Lagrange
    • Art Buchwald
  • Casting principal
    • Jacques Tati
    • Barbara Dennek
    • Rita Maiden
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,8/10
    28 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    4 575
    44
    • Réalisation
      • Jacques Tati
    • Scénario
      • Jacques Tati
      • Jacques Lagrange
      • Art Buchwald
    • Casting principal
      • Jacques Tati
      • Barbara Dennek
      • Rita Maiden
    • 119avis d'utilisateurs
    • 102avis des critiques
    • 99Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 2 victoires et 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:32
    Trailer

    Photos108

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 101
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    Rôles principaux46

    Modifier
    Jacques Tati
    Jacques Tati
    • Monsieur Hulot
    Barbara Dennek
    • Barbara, la touriste américaine
    Rita Maiden
    Rita Maiden
    • La compagne de M. Schultz
    • (as Rita Maïden)
    France Rumilly
    • La vendeuse de lunettes
    France Delahalle
    • Une cliente dans le grand magasin
    Valérie Camille
    • La secrétaire de M. Lacs
    Erika Dentzler
    • Mme Giffard
    Nicole Ray
    • La chanteuse
    Yvette Ducreux
    • La demoiselle du vestiaire
    Nathalie Jem
    • Une cliente du Royal Garden
    Jacqueline Lecomte
    • L'amie de Barbara
    Oliva Poli
    • Une cliente du Royal Garden
    Alice Field
    Alice Field
    • Une cliente du Royal Garden
    Sophie Wennek
    • Une cliente du Royal Garden
    Evy Cavallaro
    • Une cliente du Royal Garden
    Laure Paillette
    Laure Paillette
    • Première dame à la lampe
    Colette Proust
    • Deuxième dame à la lampe
    Luce Bonifassy
    Luce Bonifassy
    • Une cliente du Royal Garden
    • Réalisation
      • Jacques Tati
    • Scénario
      • Jacques Tati
      • Jacques Lagrange
      • Art Buchwald
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs119

    7,828.1K
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    Avis à la une

    8losidea

    This is not a movie!!!

    This is not a movie, it's art captured in film!

    Sometimes it's hard to watch and understand films from another time, but Playtime is a completely different concept and worth watching, but if you're expecting the standard "good story" style of 99% films today, you won't find it here, and should probably refrain.

    It's a film to be watched many times, like a painting hanging on the wall. Every time you watch it, a different detail will come up, a different story will appear, and every scene is just there to tell you things. It's up to each one to interpret them and they can be as boring, interesting, funny or sad as you want.

    It's also a nice movie to watch with other people: each one will laugh and react at different things. It's funny to interact and try to "recreate" the entire action.

    Finally, I agree with people saying that it should be watched on a big screen with high quality. There's so much detail in the shots that you will miss a lot if you don't have the right setup. I would say FullHD is the minimum acceptable, along with a big screen.
    ggfinn

    A humorous look at the 'international' architecture movement

    Others have commented about Tati's artistry and his sense of humour. I won't add to that.

    One thing that many seem to miss is the physical setting for virtually the entire film, which is in and around international-style architecture. Tati continually pokes fun at it, demonstrating how inhumane much of it is in practice. Although idealistic and pure in some sense and appreciated for that (consider Philip Johnson's Glass House in New Canaan), it is often better looked at or visited than lived in.

    From one viewpoint, the entire film can be seen as a criticism of that architectural school. It may be the only film that concentrates its energy on architectual criticism.
    10UltraMagic

    It's Tati's World. We're just living in it.

    I comment 2 years after seeing "Playtime" at the Art Institute of Chicago, an event in which the film was presented in its original 70mm format for the first time since its debut. Over the years it had been cropped and recropped for standard prints and video leaving little of the original magic, which is the sheer SCOPE of this visual marvel.

    Absolutely amazing sells "Play" short. The picture was so clear and the sequences so thrilling that I dare say this is Tati's Masterpiece. Apparently, he created an entire 1/5th scale city outside Paris and shot over the course of three years to get this honey in the can, and man-o-man, does it show.

    This is the kind of film that reminds a viewer just how standardized modern cinematic narrative has become. Tati exists in an alternate plane of recorded consciousness; I walked out of "Play" as if hallucinating, having fully entered his perspective and adopted his suggestions as my own.

    This is a film in balance with the nature of cinema itself; if Frank Lloyd Wright was a director, Tati would be his disciple: Tati's cinematic interpretations are in natural proportion to the distinctive elements of film. Visual dominance, sound hyperbarically in support of the image rhythm, help me I'm hallucinating again-thanks Jaques...

    Don't miss this one, but don't see it in any other format than a special 70mm screening. Somebody put a screening together!!!
    Camera-Obscura

    Monsieur Hulot's transition into the modern world

    The issue of viewing a film in the right format has seldom been more pressing than with this film. Although I've only seen it on DVD, it shows immediately that it's best seen in the original 70mm format on the biggest screen possible, because of the numerous subtle sight gags on screen, that go largely unnoticed when watching it on a regular TV-set. A treatment equally essential for films like "2001: A Space Odyssey" or "Lawrence of Arabia". Unless living in London, Paris, New York, or a few other places, chances of seeing this in the proper way in the foreseeable future are slim for most of us, so one has to cope with whatever is available.

    At the time, "Play Time" was the most expensive French film ever made. Tati built an enormous set outside Paris, that included an airline terminal, city streets, high rise buildings and traffic circles, that was soon dubbed "Tativille". Three years in the making, experiencing numerous setbacks and financial difficulties and combined with Tati's perfectionist way of filming, the project could only have been saved - financially that is - if the film was an enormous success. It wasn't and "Play Time" bankrupted Tati, forcing him to sell the rights of all his films for little more than a fee.

    Tati shot the entire film in medium-long and long shots, not one close-up. The result is a bewildering pastiche of people on their daily do-abouts in modern Paris (the old Paris, like the Eiffel Tower, is only seen through reflections in the glass facades) amidst flickering neon signs, voices through intercoms, buzzers, and through all this, Monsieur Hulot tries to find his way while stumbling across the urban frenzy surrounding him. The film is virtually dialog-free, and mainly serves as background noise. When watching a film by Tati, you expect Monsieur Hulot. Well, he is present in almost every frame, but he is nothing close to a real character, which is probably one of the reasons audiences didn't connect with the film. On an another level, the sight and sound gags abound. It's not particularly funny in a laugh-out-loud sense, but each viewing seems to reveal a new unseen joke or small detail, a funny sign or a person in the background, not seen before. Most of the gags only work because they are part of a carefully orchestrated ensemble. At the core, the kind of humor is the same as in "Les vacances de Monsieur Hulot" or "Mon Oncle", but here, the jokes are more subtle. It's an enormous canvas where there's so much going on, it's fascinating to look at, but can be a bit tiring after a while. However, the long party scene at the restaurant, when the crowds befall in a collective euphoria, is priceless.

    I think for most people, it's all a little too much upon first viewing and in many ways it remains a bit of a folly, a director gone mad in making a film no audience was ripe for at the time, and perhaps never will be. Assesing this film by some of the more conventional qualities one can look for in a film is not a very useful approach in case of this film. Tati certainly made something completely unique. If anything, a work of art that poses more than a few challenges.

    Camera Obscura --- 9/10
    8stefan-144

    Peace in our time: the past and the future embrace

    Where 'Mon oncle' was Tati's initial statement on the modern and its collision with the old, here in 'Playtime' he reaches his conclusion. They can unite - there is beauty in the new, as well. Yes, what is new and alienating now, will soon be the old familiar tradition. Everything changes, but the spirit of things remain.

    This he manages to show in a series of beautiful scenes, brilliant observations, in a Paris which has been rebuilt to the extent, where the old Frenchman doesn't find his way around it, anymore, and the Eiffel tower can only be found in reflections on shiny glass or steel surfaces of modern buildings.

    This is a film language all of its own, and driven to a razor sharp perfection. Through Tati's eyes, we can see exactly what he both worries about and marvels at, and of course we feel the same. The love he does in all his movies show for people, no matter how silly they might be, he also shows the city itself, and its megalomaniac constructions. It's all crazy, he tells us, but isn't it great fun, too? Yes, Jacques, it is, indeed.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The elaborate set of Tativille had its own roads, electrical systems, and (in one of the office buildings) a fully working elevator.
    • Gaffes
      The escalator handrails aren't moving in the airport scene. The actors skim their hands along pretending it's moving, when you can see by reflections of its surface that it is indeed not.
    • Citations

      Barbara, Young Tourist: How do you say "drugstore" in French?

      Monsieur Hulot: Drugstore.

    • Crédits fous
      The title isn't shown until the end of the opening credits. Additionally, there are no end credits. The final shot simply fades out and there is about a minute of exit music.
    • Versions alternatives
      The first cut of the film ran 155 minutes with intermission and exit music. This version, which ran for six months, was edited down by Tati himself to 135 minutes based on audience reactions. It was released on 70 mm with 6-Track sound. In the US the film was released with a running time of 93 min. and 1-Track mono sound. Other versions ran between 108-120 min. and were released on 35 mm with 4-Track Stereo sound (quadraphonic). When the film was re-released in France of 1978, cinemas refused to screen the film if it was over two hours long so Tati edited it down to 119 minutes. In 2002 the film was restored a length of 124 minutes based on two surviving copies of the 135 minute cut. It premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 2002 and is the version that is widely available since.
    • Connexions
      Edited into L'ombre qui pensait plus vite que son homme (1991)
    • Bandes originales
      L'Opéra des Jours Heureux
      Music by Francis Lemarque

      Lyrics by Francis Lemarque

      Performed by Francis Lemarque

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    FAQ

    • How long is Playtime?
      Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 16 décembre 1967 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
      • Italie
    • Site officiel
      • StudioCanal International (France)
    • Langues
      • Français
      • Anglais
      • Allemand
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • PlayTime
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Joinville-le-Pont, Val-de-Marne, France(set)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Specta Films
      • Jolly Film
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 15 000 000 F (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 66 537 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      2 heures 35 minutes
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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