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IMDbPro

L'amour fou

  • 1969
  • 4h 12min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,3/10
961
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Jean-Pierre Kalfon and Bulle Ogier in L'amour fou (1969)
DrammaRomanticismo

Sébastien dirige una versione di Andromaca in cui interpreta il ruolo di Pirro. Il suo rapporto con la moglie, che interpreta il ruolo principale, inizia a deteriorarsi, soprattutto quando d... Leggi tuttoSébastien dirige una versione di Andromaca in cui interpreta il ruolo di Pirro. Il suo rapporto con la moglie, che interpreta il ruolo principale, inizia a deteriorarsi, soprattutto quando deve sostituirla con la sua ex moglie.Sébastien dirige una versione di Andromaca in cui interpreta il ruolo di Pirro. Il suo rapporto con la moglie, che interpreta il ruolo principale, inizia a deteriorarsi, soprattutto quando deve sostituirla con la sua ex moglie.

  • Regia
    • Jacques Rivette
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Jacques Rivette
    • Marilù Parolini
  • Star
    • Bulle Ogier
    • Jean-Pierre Kalfon
    • Josée Destoop
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,3/10
    961
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Jacques Rivette
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Jacques Rivette
      • Marilù Parolini
    • Star
      • Bulle Ogier
      • Jean-Pierre Kalfon
      • Josée Destoop
    • 9Recensioni degli utenti
    • 15Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 vittoria e 1 candidatura in totale

    Foto70

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    + 66
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    Interpreti principali16

    Modifica
    Bulle Ogier
    Bulle Ogier
    • Claire
    Jean-Pierre Kalfon
    Jean-Pierre Kalfon
    • Sébastien…
    Josée Destoop
    • Marta…
    Michèle Moretti
    • Michèle
    Celia
    • Célia…
    Françoise Godde
    • Françoise…
    Maddly Bamy
    • Maddly-Céphise
    Liliane Bordoni
    • Puck
    Yves Beneyton
    • Yves…
    Dennis Berry
    • Dennis…
    Michel Delahaye
    Michel Delahaye
    • Michel…
    André S. Labarthe
    • Le réalisateur de télévision
    Didier Léon
    • Didier
    Claude Richard
    • Philippe
    • (as Claude-Eric Richard)
    Étienne Becker
    • Le chef-opérateur
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Patrice Wyers
    • Le caméraman
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Jacques Rivette
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Jacques Rivette
      • Marilù Parolini
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti9

    7,3961
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    10

    Recensioni in evidenza

    10Falkner1976

    Andromaque Zombie as an image of an emotional world that seems to dissolve.

    Extraordinary and long film by Rivette, who reinvents himself with this kind of mockumentary about theatre, full of dead times, and which defines many of the aspects of what will be the director's work from now on.

    By no means a rehearsal for Out 1, but a great film absolutely mature in itself, and as interesting as the more famous and marathonian following work.

    Claire and Sebastian are a married couple of actors from the Parisian experimental scene, embarking on the project of representing Andromaque by Racine. Sebastian is also the stage manager. The film begins when, after a dispute over how to recite a reply, Claire decides to leave the project and Sebastian replaces her with Marta.

    With Sebastian embarking on this project that he is passionate about but very minority oriented and Claire without a job (and not interest in finding it) and spending the mornings recording herself on a tape recorder, surprisingly it does not seem that they have financial problems to make ends meet.

    The film alternates scenes of private life with long rehearsals being filmed by a television crew.

    Sebastian's rants about his revolutionary concept of acting are very typical of the time, posing a way that they want to pass off as revolutionary. The rehearsals, to call them somehow, naturally take place on an empty stage and the actors, to call them something, read their parts in the purest zombie style with a tone of unbearable laconicism. What is supposed to internalize emotions is actually shown as disinterest or inability to express them.

    This is repeated in the relationships of the characters offstage: Claire and Sebastian apparently love each other, but there is a certain coldness and self-absorption that is frightening. Sebastian doesn't even show real interest in his infidelities, and rarely comes out of a distanced laconicism, and Claire shows her superficiality when she capriciously wants to buy herself a dog (buying herself is the best way to call it) because she likes the photograph of a pet on the cover of an album. .

    Claire begins to show clear signs of imbalance and depression. She wanders around the house, while Sebastian sleeps (apparently) terrifyingly caressing her eyelids with a needle...

    At one point, without us having witnessed any specific crisis, Sebastian decides to spend his nights at the theater, while Claire slits her wrists in an apparent clumsy suicide attempt. But in the next scene we have them casually spending an afternoon together, as playfully distant as ever.

    There is something annoying and unpleasant in the environment and in the behavior of the characters, an emotional emptiness that is almost terrifying: like the actors on stage who seem to be talking to themselves, unable to show their emotions and declaiming without any conviction a text that seems impossed to them, in the same way outside the essays the characters are equally isolated, laconic and self-absorbed.

    I like Rivette's concept of de-dramatizing his films, and lengthening the times, giving us the illusion of a world that runs with absolute naturalness. Even in the more eventful second part of the film, we don't get that feeling of stepping into a movie plot.

    The second part is more dynamic, the long scenes are mostly replaced by agile parallel editing, the shots are shortened, there is a planning of the scenes and a manipulation of the contents with expressive purposes that becomes more evident. Even the rehearsals begin to be manipulated in the editing, interspersing different scenes and making their character as a commentary on the actors' own lives more clear.

    Faced with the actors incarnating a role of traditional cinema, and the "non-professional" actors of neorealist cinema, or Bresson's models, Rivette seems to choose a different path, choosing his actors clearly for their own personality and showing them in the least manipulative possible. That is why we intuit that there is a lot of improvisation, that they work on minimal plot lines.

    The two leads are magnificent, especially Bulle Ogier. Little more is required of the rest of the cast than to appear natural.

    One of Rivette's great films, with the director's characteristic treatment of time (some would call it unbearably slow), but without the fantasy element that Rivette will include in almost all of his other films, more along the lines of La belle noiseuse than in that of Celine et Julie vont en bateau.
    4Zbigniew_Krycsiwiki

    Lourd

    Strikingly photographed, low key cinema verite, sometimes difused, sometimes harsh, high contrast black and white; it's almost like we're watching a film/ play, *and* a "Making Of" documentary of same, as the drama and dissolution of a marriage unfolds during rehearsals for a theatrical production- but the film goes on for four hours, and little happens, until a 20 minutes long mix of amour et fureur, as the couple take axes and chop down the walls of their apartment, and smash their television set with the same ax, vandalise the walls, and maybe reconcile.

    I greatly enjoyed Rivette's later, Out 1, and can see its foundation being layed here in its lengthy runtime, and conversations filmed in mirrors, but I found this film to be quite a chore to endure. I look forward to watching Out 1 again, but can't say I have any interest in watching this again (and I watched it twice already, hoping something would click for me, but no such luck)
    2BlissQuest

    The word BORING doesn't justify...

    4 hours+ to tell a dull story! Chain smoking french men and women rehearsing for Greek play, and some weak-ass relationship drama on the side. That's it!!! I started fast forwarding after 40 minutes, and I can believe I actually endured that much. A complete waste of time, so don't bother!
    8Quinoa1984

    A great 184 minute film that happens to be 252 - but there's little else like it even from the Nouvelle Vague

    L'Amour Fou (translates literally to Crazy Love) probably is one of the most harrowing, unique, slightly (no, very much so) deranged, special and brilliantly shot in 16mm/35mm black and white relationship dramas of its or any era that has slivers of surrealism and dream-like beats but is largely drenched in a realistic approach to the cinematography and staging and that makes it all the more affecting.... And at the same time it is hard not to think this really could have been a 3 hour or even 3 1/2 hour or so film instead of 4 and a 1/2. To put it another way, sometimes when you're full from a meal and your friend keeps making you eat, you're going to barely be able to keep your belt from breaking off your body in a clump, if you take my meaning.

    And I get it. I really, really do, please dont @ me; I comprehend that the length is a major part of the point, that we need to see the grind day by night by day how this relationship deteriorates so completely that when they somehow are happy again in the latter part it isnt any kind of healthy joy, on the contrary it is the kind of apocalyptic-level of being on Cloud Nine that feels like being on a drug (and the come-down will be that much more emotionally fraught).

    Maybe there weren't the words for it at the time too, but the nature of the characters, who are mood swinging to the sky and crashing to the ground again, speaks to what one might describe as BPD (Borderline Personality Disorder) or even like a chronicle of Bi-Polar disorder through and through and it's the fact that it's just... there and that honesty makes it compelling (one scene has Sebastien's assistant comment he should talk to someone; insert 'Men will direct agonizing Greek tragedy rather than go to Therapy' joke here).

    So, Rivette puts the audience through the many productive and awkward and emotionally violent and turbulent and sorrowful and joyful days and nights where we gotta be with this couple and see the repitition and staging this play with these actors (some of who, I'm glad we are shown, are getting visibly tired and fed up with the moody director), and how that starts to send him into a downward spiral and so on. And there are stretches where this hits your heart and drops your jaw and when they tear apart that one wall it's darkly funny. But my goodness, this is so much cinema - and when I can point to specifics that could be cut (the sub plot with buying/not buying a dog), that's a problem.

    Extra kudos has to go to the 2 lead actors, particularly Ogier (a Rivette regular and from Bunuel's Discreet Charm) who digs so deep into her pain to bring out what we see on the screen (or can pretend better than anyone from the 60s in France), who definitely were a main reason for keeping me in my seat until the ending.... even though the male lead Kalfon looks distractingly like a young Steve Martin to the point where I sometimes wondered if he would just go into a rendition of being a dentist and get over with. 8.5/10.
    9bob998

    Mad love

    Yes, on the face of it, four hours spent in the company of stage actors rehearsing a Racine play might seem excessive. After all, how many changes can Rivette ring on a discontented couple who do all sorts of things to hurt each other? How many times can Claire cheat on Sebastien with that weedy fellow, and how many times can Sebastien flirt with the brunette who's going to replace Claire as Andromaque? Whatever the answer, I have to say I find the whole thing fascinating. The film crew sent in to cover the proceedings seems to comment on everything. At times it has the air of a high school dramatic society offering, at other times it's deadly serious.

    The performers do everything expected of them. Bulle Ogier became Rivette's favourite actress; she is stunning. Bright, sullen, depressed, elated--she goes through it all. Kalfon appeared in a later film, L'amour par terre, as a playwright. He's all silky assurance until the confused ending. A wonderful experience, a must for Rivette enthusiasts.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      When the movie was released in french theaters in 1969, two versions were offered to the audiences. Either an edited version of the 35mm footage based on a script which lasted about 2 hours or a longer version (about 4 hours), including 16mm footage made by a television crew, during the rehearsals of the play.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Cinéma, de notre temps: Jacques Rivette le veilleur: 1-Le jour (1990)
    • Colonne sonore
      Fa Fa Fa Fa Fa (Sad Song)
      (excerpt) (uncredited)

      By Otis Redding and Steve Cropper

      Performed by Otis Redding

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 15 gennaio 1969 (Francia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Francia
    • Lingua
      • Francese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Mad Love
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Cocinor
      • Les Films Marceau
      • Sogexportfilm
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      4 ore 12 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono

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