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6.5/10
2.9 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंYoung sociologist Stanislas Previne is preparing a thesis on criminal women. He meets Camille Bliss in prison to interview her. Camille is accused of murdering her husband Clovis and her lov... सभी पढ़ेंYoung sociologist Stanislas Previne is preparing a thesis on criminal women. He meets Camille Bliss in prison to interview her. Camille is accused of murdering her husband Clovis and her lover Arthur She tells Stanislas about her life and her love affairs..Young sociologist Stanislas Previne is preparing a thesis on criminal women. He meets Camille Bliss in prison to interview her. Camille is accused of murdering her husband Clovis and her lover Arthur She tells Stanislas about her life and her love affairs..
- निर्देशक
- लेखक
- स्टार
Marcel Berbert
- Le libraire
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Jean-Loup Dabadie
- Un photographe
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Annick Fougery
- Teacher
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Jean-François Stévenin
- Le vendeur de journaux
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
It was the François Truffaut's 12th movie and somehow it's off patten of the director, a black comedy built in sexual overtones scattered along the story, he starts this project after the flop in box-office and critics of "Les Deux Anglaises et le Continent" a dramatic story, then make sense the change.
The recently graduated sociologist Stanislas Prévine (André Dussollier) must make his thesis over criminal women, he starting hear the multi-colored story of Camille Bliss (Bernadette Lafont) a kind of girl sexually promiscuous, she re-telling her unusual story by flashbacks since tender age when unintentionally was a cause of her drunkard father, henceforth the young Camille was raised in a penal institution for underage people, she grow up there and managing to escaping stealthily and aftermaths getting married with Clovis (Philippe Léotard), having many affairs thereafter with a singer Sam Golden (Guy Marchant), a crook lawyer Marchal (Michel Delahaye) and finally the straitlacer pest-terminator Arthur (Charles Denner) ends up imprisoned by a murdered the last one.
The naïve and blind Stanislas even has a gorgeous applicant Hélène (Anne Kreis) at his feet end up falling in love by the scheming Camille, apart some oddities on the lame screenplay the picture is resourceful and pleasant to watch, also the eye-candy Bernadette Lafont was so generous in countless sexy sequences with her undeniable sex-appeal letting us gaping, Truffaut extracts the high-octane of both elements at your hands the spicy story on black humor oriented, quite sure it deserves respect quite.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First Watch: 2015 /How many: 2 /Source: DVD /Rating: 7.25.
The recently graduated sociologist Stanislas Prévine (André Dussollier) must make his thesis over criminal women, he starting hear the multi-colored story of Camille Bliss (Bernadette Lafont) a kind of girl sexually promiscuous, she re-telling her unusual story by flashbacks since tender age when unintentionally was a cause of her drunkard father, henceforth the young Camille was raised in a penal institution for underage people, she grow up there and managing to escaping stealthily and aftermaths getting married with Clovis (Philippe Léotard), having many affairs thereafter with a singer Sam Golden (Guy Marchant), a crook lawyer Marchal (Michel Delahaye) and finally the straitlacer pest-terminator Arthur (Charles Denner) ends up imprisoned by a murdered the last one.
The naïve and blind Stanislas even has a gorgeous applicant Hélène (Anne Kreis) at his feet end up falling in love by the scheming Camille, apart some oddities on the lame screenplay the picture is resourceful and pleasant to watch, also the eye-candy Bernadette Lafont was so generous in countless sexy sequences with her undeniable sex-appeal letting us gaping, Truffaut extracts the high-octane of both elements at your hands the spicy story on black humor oriented, quite sure it deserves respect quite.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First Watch: 2015 /How many: 2 /Source: DVD /Rating: 7.25.
The first in the new trend of heroic female action movies.
When first introduced to the leading lady, I felt excitement that here was a unique female role played by the perfect actress.
I was feeling like this may be the best movie I had ever seen.
However the ending was a downer.
If she had been redeemed in the end by the love of a good man, this movie would have gone on to recognized for the brilliant creation it is.
I am reminded of the letdown I experienced when Kalisi went bad in Game of Thrones.
When first introduced to the leading lady, I felt excitement that here was a unique female role played by the perfect actress.
I was feeling like this may be the best movie I had ever seen.
However the ending was a downer.
If she had been redeemed in the end by the love of a good man, this movie would have gone on to recognized for the brilliant creation it is.
I am reminded of the letdown I experienced when Kalisi went bad in Game of Thrones.
I must begin by admitting my headlong love for Truffaut's work. As connoisseur ratings go, this might not be his best film (Jules et Jim, Argent de Poche, Le Dernier Metro, Baisers Volés, Tirez sur le Pianiste, and Les 400 Coups are all at least as good and possibly better) but there is just so much life, tongue in cheek, unbridled pleasure in directing and in treating life as art, and the acting is so deceptively simple that I have to say this is probably my most favourite film by one of my most favourite directors. The initial sequence with the young dilettante's flatulent and cursing father kicking her rugby style sets the tone for the rest of the film, consistently pitting the stupidity of the male against the instinctive and openly unscrupulous intelligence of the leading female (there is hope yet in the typist but she is not the one all the men fall in love with...) Glorious comic touches sprinkle the film but if I had to select the cherry on this cake that would be the sequence where Denner, the rat exterminator, is waiting for Bernadette to come back from her visit to the singer. Look at how he tries to establish where the racing cars are that he hears but cannot see on the open road! Oh you must see this!
Few of Truffaut's films can be considered lighthearted; misunderstood young heroes à la Antoine Doinel, tragic characters like those of "Le dernier métro" and "La femme d'à côté", without forgetting the disappointed actors-lovers in "La nuit américaine" are some of the personalities around which his films' plots revolve. Yet, in "Une belle fille comme moi", Truffaut presented one of his most witty and intelligent characters, the one and only Camille Bliss.
In her short yet (in) glorious existence, Camille Bliss (Bernadette Lafont) has found herself a presumed murderer, and the lover of such different men as her brutish and childish husband (Philippe Léotard), a suspicious banker (Claude Brasseur), a famous singer (Guy Marchand), and an exterminator (Charles Drenner). Whilst imprisoned for the murder of the latter, she recounts her life, from her troubled childhood up to her incarceration, to a sociologist doing a thesis on criminal women, Stanislas (André Dussolier). During their interviews, she will exhibit not only her vulgarity and irritability, but also an irresistible charm. Poor Stanislas will fall for her, madly, and will try to prove her innocence.
Released the same year as the intellectual "Les Deux anglaises et le Continent", "Une belle fille comme moi" proved to be a pleasant change from the usual complexity of most Truffaut films. In lieu of that, it has something even better; wit. Camille Bliss finds herself entangled in a network of lies, failed relationships and crime,of which she (unsuccessfully) tries to get out through her intelligence and her charming personality. In that, of course, she is helped by the fact that most of her lovers are either too gullible, like the exterminator, or just plainly stupid, like her husband, what with his constant obsession with his superprotective mother. Modern viewers will surely find Camille's confidence and self-assurance more satisfying to watch than the tragic nature of, say, Mathilde in "La femme d'à côté", victim of a passionate love, or Jeanne Moreau's character in"La mariée était en noir", forced to commit murders to vindicate her lover's death.
Bliss is not a completely innocent heroine, though, being the product of a world full of undependable people. The only woman in her environment, she is surrounded by men, none of which knows how to deal with her exuberant character. Only Stanislas will try to understand her, something which will actually turn out to be detrimental to him. For all his good intentions, he continues to be a member of the establishment, and the outcast Bliss will not betray her past of morally dubious actions to settle down with him.
The reason we empathize with Camille is her convincing portrayal by Bernadette Lafont. Intelligent, funny and seductive at the same time, she contrasts perfectly with the reserved Dussolier, and her multifaceted personality is shown with detail through her various testimonies during their interviews. In them, her nature as the outcast stripped of her rights for something she isn't even guilty - according to her - by a society that ignores people like her becomes apparent.
Without forgetting the two opposing main actors, Truffaut assembled an amazing team for the film. Composer Georges Delerue offered an excellent score, which shines for the few moments it is heard playing, while Léotard, Marchand, Brasseur, and Drenner are all great in their roles as Camille's various lovers.
Far from being a masterpiece, "Une belle fille comme moi" is one of an acclaimed director's best works, showing both his ability at choosing a capable cast, and his talent for storytelling. With only a little over six hundred thousand admissions in France during his initial release, it remains one of Truffaut's most underrated works. Unfortunately, the charm of Camille didn't work for everyone. In other words, Camille gave the spectators little Bliss.
In her short yet (in) glorious existence, Camille Bliss (Bernadette Lafont) has found herself a presumed murderer, and the lover of such different men as her brutish and childish husband (Philippe Léotard), a suspicious banker (Claude Brasseur), a famous singer (Guy Marchand), and an exterminator (Charles Drenner). Whilst imprisoned for the murder of the latter, she recounts her life, from her troubled childhood up to her incarceration, to a sociologist doing a thesis on criminal women, Stanislas (André Dussolier). During their interviews, she will exhibit not only her vulgarity and irritability, but also an irresistible charm. Poor Stanislas will fall for her, madly, and will try to prove her innocence.
Released the same year as the intellectual "Les Deux anglaises et le Continent", "Une belle fille comme moi" proved to be a pleasant change from the usual complexity of most Truffaut films. In lieu of that, it has something even better; wit. Camille Bliss finds herself entangled in a network of lies, failed relationships and crime,of which she (unsuccessfully) tries to get out through her intelligence and her charming personality. In that, of course, she is helped by the fact that most of her lovers are either too gullible, like the exterminator, or just plainly stupid, like her husband, what with his constant obsession with his superprotective mother. Modern viewers will surely find Camille's confidence and self-assurance more satisfying to watch than the tragic nature of, say, Mathilde in "La femme d'à côté", victim of a passionate love, or Jeanne Moreau's character in"La mariée était en noir", forced to commit murders to vindicate her lover's death.
Bliss is not a completely innocent heroine, though, being the product of a world full of undependable people. The only woman in her environment, she is surrounded by men, none of which knows how to deal with her exuberant character. Only Stanislas will try to understand her, something which will actually turn out to be detrimental to him. For all his good intentions, he continues to be a member of the establishment, and the outcast Bliss will not betray her past of morally dubious actions to settle down with him.
The reason we empathize with Camille is her convincing portrayal by Bernadette Lafont. Intelligent, funny and seductive at the same time, she contrasts perfectly with the reserved Dussolier, and her multifaceted personality is shown with detail through her various testimonies during their interviews. In them, her nature as the outcast stripped of her rights for something she isn't even guilty - according to her - by a society that ignores people like her becomes apparent.
Without forgetting the two opposing main actors, Truffaut assembled an amazing team for the film. Composer Georges Delerue offered an excellent score, which shines for the few moments it is heard playing, while Léotard, Marchand, Brasseur, and Drenner are all great in their roles as Camille's various lovers.
Far from being a masterpiece, "Une belle fille comme moi" is one of an acclaimed director's best works, showing both his ability at choosing a capable cast, and his talent for storytelling. With only a little over six hundred thousand admissions in France during his initial release, it remains one of Truffaut's most underrated works. Unfortunately, the charm of Camille didn't work for everyone. In other words, Camille gave the spectators little Bliss.
Like Michael Winner, Truffaut thinks a feminist movie would be about a sexually promiscuous woman who turns the tables on a serious of idiotic men who are so caricatured that they bear little relation to the real oppressors facing women at this time, especially in institutionally misogynistic France.
I should really like this film, it has everything I wanted - directed by the maker of my three desert-island films; magic realism; a Chinese-whispers narrative structure; bawdy comedy; grotesques; superb performances. Bernadette Lafont is sprightly in the lead role, escaping all the traps men lay for her (including her director). Andre Dussolier is sensational is his first role as the intellectual, spectacles-wearing professor who can't see beyond his own nose, and Guy Marchand is hilarious as a spectacularly vain rock star.
All these things are good. The film isn't. Go figure.
I should really like this film, it has everything I wanted - directed by the maker of my three desert-island films; magic realism; a Chinese-whispers narrative structure; bawdy comedy; grotesques; superb performances. Bernadette Lafont is sprightly in the lead role, escaping all the traps men lay for her (including her director). Andre Dussolier is sensational is his first role as the intellectual, spectacles-wearing professor who can't see beyond his own nose, and Guy Marchand is hilarious as a spectacularly vain rock star.
All these things are good. The film isn't. Go figure.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाAnne Kreis's debut.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in L'amour en fuite (1979)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is A Gorgeous Girl Like Me?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- A Gorgeous Girl Like Me
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- Palais de Justice, Place de la Révolution, Béziers, Hérault, फ़्रांस(prison's entrance)
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- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 38 मिनट
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.85 : 1
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