L'homme qui aimait les femmes
Bertrand se lance dans l'écriture descriptive de son addiction aux femmes, qu'il aime sans compter surtout quand elles ont des belles jambes. Il n'est ni collectionneur ni véritablement un D... Tout lireBertrand se lance dans l'écriture descriptive de son addiction aux femmes, qu'il aime sans compter surtout quand elles ont des belles jambes. Il n'est ni collectionneur ni véritablement un Don Juan mais plutôt un amant compulsif qui ne saurait s'attacher. [255]Bertrand se lance dans l'écriture descriptive de son addiction aux femmes, qu'il aime sans compter surtout quand elles ont des belles jambes. Il n'est ni collectionneur ni véritablement un Don Juan mais plutôt un amant compulsif qui ne saurait s'attacher. [255]
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 4 nominations au total
- Hélène
- (as Genevieve Fontanel)
- Fabienne
- (as Valerie Bonnier)
Avis à la une
"L'Homme qui Aimait les Femmes" discloses the memoirs of a womanizer. This sensual and funny film is a great tribute to the beautiful French women with lovely French actresses. The romances of Bertrand are provoking and charming and his character shows that a man does not need to be handsome to be seductive and conquer women. Last but not the least, Bertrand is a man that follows the poetry of the French Henri de Régnier (1864-1936): "Love is eternal while it lasts". My vote is seven.
Title (Brazil): "O Homem Que Amava as Mulheres" ("The Man Who Loved the Women")
The editing, performances and dialogues all contribute to the film's subtle but engaging rhythm. The movie revolves around Bertrand Morane, a gifted womanizer who starts evaluating his life by remembering past love affairs.
Bertrand's love life is a comical and insightful story, that combined with Truffaut's brilliant direction and a perfect script make "L'homme qui aimait les femmes" a very entertaining and original movie.
Beautiful french women, great cinematography and Charles Denner's acting. There are no mistakes in this film, very recommended.
So, we have a film about storytelling. A womanizer who writes the story of his life. Every woman in his life is, herself, a story. So the pleasure of being involved with a woman maps the will Truffaut has to tell a story. The fact that Morane writes all the stories, and makes one single big form (a book) with them enhances this.
The woman editor has an important role. She is the key character that Truffaut places above Morane, and she annotates and comments on the whole structure. Her remarks on Morane's book and personality may as well be taken as commentaries on the very film, and of its director. She is self-reference, she is Truffaut commenting on himself, thus adding reflexivity to the film. That's why she observes that Morane, the writer, doesn't reject the "details" others wouldn't notice, and she literally says that he is basically a storyteller. Also, she is the one who remarks the fact that Morane's funeral is the perfect ending to the story. I saw all this as reflexive annotations on the very structure of the film and, more generally, on the nature of Truffaut's cinema. He was through all his life a storyteller, and above any pleasure he took in making a film, there was the pleasure of narrating. Also he took a special interest in filming details, something i think he took from Hitchcock. The hand dialing phone numbers, or turning the pages in the address book, that sort of thing.
Morane's funeral, which opens and closes the film, gathers all the women around him. It is, like the editor (the second narrator) told, a praising of Morane's life, the recognizing of his qualities, the celebration of his life (cinema).
This and "La nuit américaine" are so far the best built films by Truffaut that i saw. Many times i think that Truffaut (and Godard!) has spent to much time around things which were not that important, like school kids discussing football teams. But in certain points, he made important contributions to the evolving of cinematic narrative. This is one of them.
My opinion: 4/5
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Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFrançois Truffaut wrote the first draft of this script on the set of Rencontres du troisième type (1977).
- GaffesToutes les informations contiennent des spoilers
- Citations
Bertrand Morane: Women's legs are like compass points, circling the globe
- ConnexionsFeatured in François Truffaut: Portraits volés (1993)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Man Who Loved Women?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée2 heures
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.66 : 1