VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,3/10
19.953
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Un'artista di striptease francese desidera disperatamente diventare madre. Quando il suo ragazzo riluttante suggerisce che il suo migliore amico la metta incinta, i sentimenti si complicano ... Leggi tuttoUn'artista di striptease francese desidera disperatamente diventare madre. Quando il suo ragazzo riluttante suggerisce che il suo migliore amico la metta incinta, i sentimenti si complicano quando lei accetta.Un'artista di striptease francese desidera disperatamente diventare madre. Quando il suo ragazzo riluttante suggerisce che il suo migliore amico la metta incinta, i sentimenti si complicano quando lei accetta.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 2 vittorie e 2 candidature totali
Anna Karina
- Angela
- (as Karina)
Jean-Claude Brialy
- Émile Récamier
- (as Brialy)
Jean-Paul Belmondo
- Alfred Lubitsch
- (as Belmondo)
Henri Attal
- Faux Aveugle #2
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Dorothée Blanck
- Prostitute 3
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Catherine Demongeot
- Magazine Girl
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Marie Dubois
- Angela's Friend
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Ernest Menzer
- Bar Owner
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Jeanne Moreau
- Woman in Bar
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Nicole Paquin
- Suzanne
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Gisèle Sandré
- Prostitute 2
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Marion Sarraut
- Prostitute 1
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Dominique Zardi
- Faux Aveugle #1
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Absolutely beautiful. I loved every minute of this piece. The Color. Anna Karina. The opening scenes. The closing scenes. The concept. Whenever I think of Godard, I think of Anna Karina singing in the cabaret about her beauty. If you consider yourself a fan of Godard, French New Wave, musicals (although coming into seeing this, i was expecting quite a different type of musical, a more American version, which it wasn't) or just film in general, this is a must see. Godard holds a huge influence over todays films, i.e. Wes Anderson's work. I love seeing Anna Karina walking into the coffee shop, past the traffic, from the drab looking outside, ordering coffee, and leaving. I am so happy that Mr. Godard is still making films today, what a gift.
A Woman is a Woman belongs to the period when Godard was playful, uninhibited and really a wild child of the movies. So when he made a musical, in fact he made a childish and free imitation of a musical that at the same time showed, in an Godardian analytic way, how the Hollywood musicals usually depict life and love. In the film characters love and evade committing to love at the same time. There is music by Legrand and spontaneous looking movements which are aspirations to dance but at the same some oblique realism is at work. As with Godard, fantasy and realism interact in a dialectical way so that both seem indistinguishable after a while.
The trio of Brialy, Belmondo and Karina is great but Karina is obviously unique in that she makes the whole subject of performance seem out of place. She is there playing innocent, dumb, inviting, sad etc. and again at the same time she seems NOT THERE as though her mind is some place else. Her big eyes work and shine all the time but they don't give away the character. There is no argue about Godard's style which after so many years and so many innovations in the language of film has remained fresh and unsurpassed in vitality and an acute understanding of "Films as Games" or rather "Life depicted as a game within a game". However watching A Woman is a Woman after some years I still wonder at the their cinematic child: Acting as a sort of being there and being free to feel the film, breathing the air of movies. The plot is as unimportant as it can be. In its place moments show up, little but infinitely joyful moments of adults looking like teenagers amused and fascinated by the thought of being in a musical comedy. Was Godard the biggest daydreamer of the cinema or what?
The trio of Brialy, Belmondo and Karina is great but Karina is obviously unique in that she makes the whole subject of performance seem out of place. She is there playing innocent, dumb, inviting, sad etc. and again at the same time she seems NOT THERE as though her mind is some place else. Her big eyes work and shine all the time but they don't give away the character. There is no argue about Godard's style which after so many years and so many innovations in the language of film has remained fresh and unsurpassed in vitality and an acute understanding of "Films as Games" or rather "Life depicted as a game within a game". However watching A Woman is a Woman after some years I still wonder at the their cinematic child: Acting as a sort of being there and being free to feel the film, breathing the air of movies. The plot is as unimportant as it can be. In its place moments show up, little but infinitely joyful moments of adults looking like teenagers amused and fascinated by the thought of being in a musical comedy. Was Godard the biggest daydreamer of the cinema or what?
Angela makes a living in a club, where she struts around after, she's got dressed up, she then casually discards, almost all untasteful garbs, gets paid, and goes back home, to homme Jean-Claude. She's yearning for that man to make a child, causes friction with the two, driving her wild, should she pursue their friend Alfred, he's more than willing to go to bed, or can she find a way, to become, reconciled.
A truly original and innovative romcom from the master of New Wave French cinema. Anna Karina plays to perfection the adorable Angela, so desperate for a child, with great support all round, especially Jean-Paul Belmondo. If mainstream traditional storytelling is what you're after you'll not find it here, just a quirky, daft, stylised and occasionally bizarre performance that's thoroughly entertaining and packed full of links to remind you to revisit some of the influences that make this time in cinema so refreshing.
A truly original and innovative romcom from the master of New Wave French cinema. Anna Karina plays to perfection the adorable Angela, so desperate for a child, with great support all round, especially Jean-Paul Belmondo. If mainstream traditional storytelling is what you're after you'll not find it here, just a quirky, daft, stylised and occasionally bizarre performance that's thoroughly entertaining and packed full of links to remind you to revisit some of the influences that make this time in cinema so refreshing.
A French striptease artist (Anna Karina) is desperate to become a mother. When her reluctant boyfriend (Jean-Claude Brialy) suggests his best friend (Jean-Paul Belmondo) to impregnate her, feelings become complicated when she accepts.
Godard declared this triangle "an excellent subject for a comedy à la Lubitsch" and, in fact, the Belmondo character is named Alfred Lubitsch, which is no subtle tip of the hat. This is Lubitsch with an eccentric French touch.
Only the third of Godard's films (he made many, many more), it is not really my favorite by a long shot. It has some of the quirkiness of his other films (especially early on when the music seems to be completely unaware of the movie). But it just never really hits home for me.
Godard declared this triangle "an excellent subject for a comedy à la Lubitsch" and, in fact, the Belmondo character is named Alfred Lubitsch, which is no subtle tip of the hat. This is Lubitsch with an eccentric French touch.
Only the third of Godard's films (he made many, many more), it is not really my favorite by a long shot. It has some of the quirkiness of his other films (especially early on when the music seems to be completely unaware of the movie). But it just never really hits home for me.
This is a Jean-Luc Godard musical-comedy, which sounds like a contradiction in terms, a fact which he himself acknowledged. The wide-screen color cinematography by Raoul Coutard is amazing, and the experiments with color are lovely. Anna Karina is incredibly pretty and rather too self-consciously adorable; Jean-Claude Brialy is suavely understated, and Jean-Paul Belmondo is certainly exuberant. There's a lot to recommend, even if it's far from the most successful of early Godard films.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizJean-Luc Godard's first film in color.
- BlooperWhen Angela first meets Alfred on the street, the red and blue armband he wears changes from his right to his left arm between the start and end of the scene
- Citazioni
Émile Récamier: Is this a tragedy or a comedy? Either way it's a masterpiece.
- ConnessioniEdited into Bande-annonce de 'Une femme est une femme' (1961)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paesi di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- A Woman Is a Woman
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 160.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 209.837 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 13.213 USD
- 18 mag 2003
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 210.919 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 25min(85 min)
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1
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