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Les valseuses

  • 1974
  • 16
  • 1h 58min
NOTE IMDb
7,1/10
10 k
MA NOTE
Les valseuses (1974)
Regarder Bande-annonce [OV]
Lire trailer1:56
2 Videos
99+ photos
ActionComédieCriminalitéDrameComédie noireSatire

70' : deux gais voyous et la copine qu'ils partagent s'en payent une tranche. On pique une bagnole, on fait la nique aux trop cons. En chemin on libère une frangine rousse de son dabe en DS,... Tout lire70' : deux gais voyous et la copine qu'ils partagent s'en payent une tranche. On pique une bagnole, on fait la nique aux trop cons. En chemin on libère une frangine rousse de son dabe en DS, et on lui titille tendrement l'abricot. Non mais sentez-moi ça ! [255]70' : deux gais voyous et la copine qu'ils partagent s'en payent une tranche. On pique une bagnole, on fait la nique aux trop cons. En chemin on libère une frangine rousse de son dabe en DS, et on lui titille tendrement l'abricot. Non mais sentez-moi ça ! [255]

  • Réalisation
    • Bertrand Blier
  • Scénario
    • Bertrand Blier
    • Philippe Dumarçay
  • Casting principal
    • Gérard Depardieu
    • Miou-Miou
    • Patrick Dewaere
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,1/10
    10 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Bertrand Blier
    • Scénario
      • Bertrand Blier
      • Philippe Dumarçay
    • Casting principal
      • Gérard Depardieu
      • Miou-Miou
      • Patrick Dewaere
    • 46avis d'utilisateurs
    • 49avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos2

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:56
    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Going Places
    Trailer 2:01
    Going Places
    Going Places
    Trailer 2:01
    Going Places

    Photos113

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 107
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux26

    Modifier
    Gérard Depardieu
    Gérard Depardieu
    • Jean-Claude
    Miou-Miou
    Miou-Miou
    • Marie-Ange
    Patrick Dewaere
    Patrick Dewaere
    • Pierrot
    Christian Alers
    • Henri, le père de Jacqueline
    Brigitte Fossey
    Brigitte Fossey
    • La femme du train
    Michel Peyrelon
    • Bruno, le chirurgien
    Gérard Boucaron
    Gérard Boucaron
    • Carnot, le mécanicien
    Jacques Chailleux
    Jacques Chailleux
    • Jacques Pirolle
    Eva Damien
    • La femme de Bruno
    Dominique Davray
    Dominique Davray
    • Ursula…
    Isabelle Huppert
    Isabelle Huppert
    • Jacqueline
    Marco Perrin
    Marco Perrin
    • Le directeur du supermarché
    Jacques Rispal
    Jacques Rispal
    • Le vigile du Mammouth
    Claude Vergnes
    Claude Vergnes
    • Merlan, le coiffeur
    Jeanne Moreau
    Jeanne Moreau
    • Jeanne Pirolle
    Bruno Boëglin
    • Le mari de la femme du train
    Sylvie Joly
    • La propriétaire de la voiture volée
    Gérard Jugnot
    Gérard Jugnot
    • Le vacancier en famille
    • Réalisation
      • Bertrand Blier
    • Scénario
      • Bertrand Blier
      • Philippe Dumarçay
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs46

    7,110.4K
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    Avis à la une

    fafff

    Empty

    I only lasted through fifteen minutes of this. The first scene has the two main characters - big strong guys - chasing a middle-aged woman around a block of flats and finally cornering her. The woman is prim and prissy and no-one I'd want to know. Her behaviour is as childish as theirs. But there's two of them and only one of her, and they're stronger than her. It really disturbs me that so many people seem to find this scene, and the ones that follow, funny. I think there's a big difference between being bourgeois and having some basic compassion for the human condition. In fact the emptiness of the main characters strikes me as at least as bourgeois in its way as the people who are into glossy cars and so on. Too bad, since I love Stephane Grappelli.
    8ebsmooth

    A Trio of drifters roam around France creating mischief

    I originally saw this film years ago during Cinemax Friday after dark series(back when the cable box was built like a keyboard),and it intrigued me. Even though there is a pointless aspect to the film it is well acted.The performances of Depardieu & Dewaere are very enjoyable.They have a good chemistry together & Miou-Miou makes a pink fur look breathtaking.A movie like this probably wouldn't be made in these politically correct times(at least not in the US), since it seems to sensationalize things like violence,robbery,& casual sex. This movie proves that with a talented cast & also talented directing a good movie is a good movie no matter the subject.It saddened me to find out Patrick Dewaere committed suicide & in the near future I,ll will check him out with Depardieu & Miou-Miou in Get Out Your Hankerchief.
    8ElMaruecan82

    One big kick in the groin of good taste and social convenance...

    "They don't make movies like this anymore" has been used for so many movies but in the case of "Les Valseuses" (or "Going Places") you might say, "they can't make movies like this anymore". Whether it's a positive or a negative is a matter of opinion.

    From the way I see it, only a gender swap would justify a remake for it's impossible to imagine a filmmaker making a film, let alone a debut, about two marginals at the prime of their masculine strength enjoying harassing and assaulting women, making us wish they could 'just' keep on stealing cars or money. It's quite fitting that the title is a slang term meaning "balls" in French as that's what it takes to dare concoct such a vitriolic story, even in the liberated post-68 France. One can despise Bertand Blier's misuse of talents but not without admiring his nerve.

    The film met with commercial success and was one of the highest-grossing of the year only topped by the erotic "Emmanuelle". I guess the timing worked in favor of Blier for the cinematic community was eager to embrace a sort of free-spirited joyful anarchical ride by thugs who don't give a damn about the consequences of their action in their quests for instant pleasures. It's a revenge of the "populo" against the little ones and the weaselly bourgeois hiding in the limited coziness of their suburban life.

    The opening sequence says it all, Jean-Claude played by Depardieu is sitting in a caddie (the symbol of consumerist society) pushed by Pierrot (Patrick Dewaere), they swing across a deserted street, preying on a fat woman they end up cornering next to her apartment, steal her purse after stealing a few kisses. The scene is not enjoyable but has the merit of setting the tone, making the starting point of your rooting below "zero" and it's a credit to a solid narrative and the incredible writing talent of Blier (who wrote the original 72 novel) to make these characters reach a certain point of likability.

    They're no better at the end, but they realize sex and money can't be the only drivers, there's got to be more than or behind that. The caddie scene already established them as drifters and vagabonds, but that's the stuff poetry was made off and in the first post-war oli-crisis, where good society looked for scapegoats, they were targets, too. And so when they bring a stolen car back to its owner Pierrot gets shot in the groin. Their only trophy is Marie-Ange (Miou-Miou) a worker used and abused by the car owner. Point is made that even the victims aren't always innocent in that rigged game of life.

    One could see a tactical trick from Blier who doesn't make us root for his antiheroes rather than show the rest no better than them, but there are exceptions: the doctor who heals Pierrot isn't immune to a robbery, Jean-Claude even makes the sinister threat of "paying goodnight to his children". And later in a train, they watch a woman (Brigitte Fossey) breastfeeding her baby and one thing leading to another, Pierrot suckles the woman's breast while Jean-Claude titillates her. Now that's hardly a detail and as horrific as the scene is (and it is) it mostly highlights the insecurity of the thugs and their incapability to draw moral lines into their actions. A honest question would be "why"?

    They're bad guys, but indeed, why? Marie-Ange is used as a sexual object and while Jean-Claude is having a good time, she doesn't. Pierrot can't bring himself to pleasure fearing impotence from the wound. Earlier, the car mechanic took Marie-Ange as a 'benefit in kind' but got upset because she was frigid. Marie-Ange is the catalyst character in the way she reveals the limit of the Pierrot and Jean-Claude's hedonism, inasmuch as they want to bring her to pleasure, they're so focused on their own that ultimately it backfires at them. It might explain Pierrot's need for tenderness in the infamous train sequence, a wish to reassure himself that it's still working. It's a quest of pleasure but unlike money, it takes two to get it, and it's a miracle that nothing coming close to a real rape is shown.

    I guess that would have prompted people to walk out the theaters and Ebert himself, hated the film for its uncompromising sociopathy, saying Bertrand Blier (who wrote the original novel) almost presented himself as a man one would like to spend time with. Still, despite the virulent criticism it got in France, the film became the equivalent of "Easy Riders". There is wildness, unpredictability but even a tenderness during a segment where the duo meets a former inmate played by Jeanne Moreau, a woman they wish to bring her as much pleasure as she needs. Ultimately even Marie-Ange would reach the fourth sky and as the plot moves forward, the film gets a little less macho-centric. And by playing it a little less 'fast and furious', the two thugs become more genuinely appealing.

    And their appeal with a teenager named Jacqueline (Isabelle Huppert) speaks volume about the way self-proclaimed and careless rebels are regarded, like romantic figures. Any lesser film would have made it look manipulative but Dewaere and Depardieu have such great chemistry and are so complementary, one is nervous and cerebral, the other is flamboyant and exuberant, so maybe the success of the film lies in that simple truth, with the right cast, you can get away with everything, except for a few scenes. But to call Blier misogynistic would be unfair, unlike "Last Tango in Paris", the shooting went well, no polemic resurfaced and even Miou-Miou said she had great memories (she even worked with Blier again).

    And thankfully, Blier would sign other great movies where women would be treated with more consideration, but heneeded one shocker, one punch in the guts of good taste and social convenience to put himself in the radar. And so he did.
    9liangdong

    To dance a valse you need to be elegant, but going places you don't.

    Not so many people like the movies of Bertrand blier simply because they don't understand them. Simply because they are different kinds of people.

    If you have not been living under a deep desperation intertwined with great personal hope it may be hard for you to enjoy the humor blier shown here.

    And also the film of blier cannot be classified easily as black-comedy or cult etc. like those of pulp fiction etc. Because there is this delicacy which the audience of north-america frequently fail to appreciate.

    When I looked at these two `hooligans' dining with Jeanne moreau in the seaside restaurant, I felt they were more gentil than any gentleman can have been.

    The urge to make love wildly like these is the normal reaction we feel under the unbearable pressure of meaningless being-symbolized by the camion suddenly emerges at the Carrefour.

    SO, les valseuses is much better a name than going places. To dance a valse you need to be elegant, but going places you don't.
    10christopher-underwood

    this uncompromising and daring film demands respect

    A wonderful, free flowing, often lyrical film that whisks you along, ever smiling, even if there are truly shocking incidents along the way. One gasps at the way the women are treated and yet ultimately they seem to come through very well and it is much credit to all concerned that so many potentially disastrous scenes all work so very well. This is possibly Depardieu's best performance, certainly his most natural. Jeanne Moreau performs outstandingly in what must have been a very difficult role to play and including vigorous sex scenes with a couple of guys at least half her age. Miou-Miou is lovely throughout and again has very difficult scenes to play. Initially this seems a down and dirty misogynist rant/romp but as the tale and characters unfold a much more tender and honest picture emerges. In the end this uncompromising and daring film demands respect.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The original French title is slang for "balls" (the testicular variety).
    • Gaffes
      Toutes les informations contiennent des spoilers
    • Versions alternatives
      Despite being already rated "18" the German version is heavily cut, removing the following scenes:
      • The rape of "Ursula" and the fight/chase sequence with the locals afterwards.
      • The fight with the vigilantes after meeting Marie-Ange.
      • Between getting a new car from the mechanic and looking for a doctor there's a sequence missing when Marie-Ange has sex with the mechanic.
      • Hitting and driving over the store detective.
      • The theft of two bikes from a farmhouse.
      • Jean-Claude having sex with Pierrot just before leaving the beach house (this is later referred to by Pierrot when he says: "You surprised me, you bastard!")
      • A longer sex scene between Jeanne, Jean-Claude and Pierrot after she starts to get down on Pierrot.
      • In-between cuts of Marie-Ange being "educated" by Jacques, while Jean-Claude and Pierrot wait and fish outside the farmhouse.
      • Jacqueline being "educated" by Jean-Claude, Pierrot and Marie-Ange.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Drugoe Kino: Les valseuses (2006)

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    FAQ

    • How long is Going Places?
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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 20 mars 1974 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
    • Langue
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Los rompepelotas
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Veuvey-sur-Ouche, Côte-d'Or, France(house by the canal)
    • Sociétés de production
      • C.A.P.A.C.
      • Uranus Productions France
      • S.N. Prodis
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 771 540 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 58 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.66 : 1

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