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La collectionneuse

  • 1967
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
11K
YOUR RATING
La collectionneuse (1967)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer2:09
1 Video
99+ Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

A womanizing art dealer and a painter find the serenity of their Riviera vacation disturbed by a third guest, a vivacious bohemian woman known for her long list of male conquests.A womanizing art dealer and a painter find the serenity of their Riviera vacation disturbed by a third guest, a vivacious bohemian woman known for her long list of male conquests.A womanizing art dealer and a painter find the serenity of their Riviera vacation disturbed by a third guest, a vivacious bohemian woman known for her long list of male conquests.

  • Director
    • Éric Rohmer
  • Writers
    • Patrick Bauchau
    • Haydée Politoff
    • Daniel Pommereulle
  • Stars
    • Patrick Bauchau
    • Haydée Politoff
    • Daniel Pommereulle
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Éric Rohmer
    • Writers
      • Patrick Bauchau
      • Haydée Politoff
      • Daniel Pommereulle
    • Stars
      • Patrick Bauchau
      • Haydée Politoff
      • Daniel Pommereulle
    • 34User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 2:09
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos103

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    Top cast18

    Edit
    Patrick Bauchau
    Patrick Bauchau
    • Adrien
    Haydée Politoff
    Haydée Politoff
    • Haydée
    Daniel Pommereulle
    • Daniel
    Alain Jouffroy
    • Writer
    Mijanou Bardot
    Mijanou Bardot
    • Carole
    • (as Mijanou)
    Annik Morice
    • Carole's girlfriend
    Dennis Berry
    • Charlie
    Seymour Hertzberg
    • Sam
    Néstor Almendros
    Néstor Almendros
    Patrice De Bailliencourt
    • Homme dans l'auto
    László Benkö
    Anne Dubot
    Jackie Raynal
    Eugene Archer
    • Sam
    • (uncredited)
    Brian Belshaw
    • Haydée's boyfriend
    • (uncredited)
    Pierre-Richard Bré
    • Homme dans l'auto
    • (uncredited)
    Donald Cammell
    Donald Cammell
    • Garçon à St-Tropez
    • (uncredited)
    Alfred de Graff
    • Touriste perdu
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Éric Rohmer
    • Writers
      • Patrick Bauchau
      • Haydée Politoff
      • Daniel Pommereulle
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews34

    7.310.5K
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    Featured reviews

    10totius

    For me, this is the Rohmer's masterpiece

    It's hard to explain what is the Rohmer's cinema. In his movies you can't find heroes, incredible adventures or great action sequences. Everything happens inside the mind of the characters, and the most important aspect is the psychology of them.

    La Collectioneuse is simply the masterpiece of Rohmer.

    The plot is very simple: two boys and one girl in their friend's house in St.Tropez. That's all. There are not incredible events that happen, they simply LIVE there. It's an typical situation of Rohmer who likes to study the evolution of love triangles, in different situations. The explanation of the development steps, made by the usual interior voice of the main character (Adrien), it's incredibly accurate and likely. It's fantastic that sometimes Adrien's thoughts look at first to be absurd, but even in this case if we reflect a bit to that we can realize that it's true, that really in similar cases we have non-sense thoughts like those. In this way, Rohmer is unique: the psycho-evolution of the characters is incredibly real. Dialogs, internal and not, are superb and the directing essential.

    Rohmer shows us how it's possible to make a masterpiece with a ridiculous budget, and how an intellectual movie can be also enjoyable and not so heavy.

    The vote, of course, can't be different by 10 out of 10.
    6claudio_carvalho

    Arrogance, False Value Judgment and Pretentious Intellectuality of a False Moralist

    The arrogant and pretentious intellectual art dealer Adrien (Patrick Bauchau) invites his girlfriend to travel with him to the coast to spend one month vacation with his close friend and painter Daniel (Daniel Pommereulle) in the house of their Randolphe. Adrien expects to do nothing but read and rest in the house and meet a possible investor in an art gallery that he dreams on having; however she prefers to travel to London. When he arrives, he discovers that the sexy and promiscuous pleasure-seeking Haydee (Haydée Politoff) that had one nightstand with Randolphe is sharing the house with Daniel. Along the days, Adrien becomes obsessed in a sick game of humiliating Haydee and imaging that she is trying to seduce him; however, his lust for her increases but his moral rationalization of their possible relationship keeps them apart.

    "La Collectionneuse" is an erotic tale of arrogance, false value judgment and pretentious intellectuality of a false moralist. The witty and cynical screenplay uses excessive narrative in off of the unlikable lead character Adrien that is despicable as well as his friend Daniel. Actually, the only likable character is the libertine Haydee that accepts passively the cruel comments and treatment of Adrien and Daniel. Eric Rohmer uses the successful idea of a triangle of love with two men and a woman of "Jules et Jim" in a different and monotonous approach. My vote is six.

    Title (Brazil): "A Colecionadora" ("The Female Collector")
    6Slime-3

    Rohmer's Slow Burning Tale Of Sixties Hedonism And Moral Pomposity

    Eric Rohmer's movies are, it seems almost without exception, slow- burners that reward those with the patience to sit through them, preferably more than once in some cases, and think about whats being said as much as whats being shown. This, his first feature in colour requires considerable thought on the part of the viewer, serving up nothing in the way of dramatic excitement and featuring three loathsome main characters who's morals are very in keeping with the era of late- 60s self satisfaction and hedonistic excess. Not that the hedonism is very wild. Jimi Hendrix does not blast from the simple record player that sits near a chair and provides the only music in the film. No one smokes anything illegal or pops any pills, talks of Indian mystics or goes in for meditation. But there is the very liberated (nowadays we'd say reckless) attitude to casual sex, although we don't see very much; the relaxed tangle of naked legs half glimpsed through one doorway, a brief an unrevealing shot of the main protagonist, the disturbingly young looking Haydee, quietly enjoying the intimate attention of another one-night-stand. Otherwise it's all hints and the more effective for that. Haydee is the very image of a swinging-sixties bed hopper. Young, slender, independent, cool and seemingly amoral she wrecks the plans of Adrian, an art dealer with time on his hands, when he finds her resident in a borrowed holiday villa at which he intends to devote himself to doing nothing at all for a few weeks while his girlfriend is in London. Haydee's noisy night-time frolics disturb his sleep and offend his self- declared sense of morality and the added presence in the house of his lazy, grumpy painter-friend Daniel sets up a spiralling tension between them all. But this is pure Rohmer and that tension manifests itself not in fist-fights, broken furniture, tearful confessions and blood-letting, but insults, low-key/nigh-brow arguments, teasing, sniping and political manoeuvring. In fact the more one thinks about the film, and it's one of those movies that does hang around long after the credits, the more one realises it's actually rather more like real-life, certainly as most of us endure it from time to time, than the over-dramatic offerings we are used to from mainstream movie-makers. Haydee maybe cute, Adrien describes himself as handsome and the setting is idyllic but you really wouldn't like to be on holiday with these unsympathetic characters. Observing their antics from without is one thing but to be part of it would be a nightmare! Oddly with it's morality so perfectly fixed in it's own time, this seems far more like a film from the 1970s. Something in it's look and after-the-party sense of deflation and disenchantment fits in with that later decade. Seeing it without knowing the release date you might well guess at 1972 or even later. If Godard's BANDE A PARTE is set in a Swinging-Sixties that hasn't yet arrived, Rohmer's film portrays one that has already left the building, although it's after-effects continue to create a problem. It all sounds somewhat depressing on paper and to some extent it is! It's not an easy film but if you give it time and maybe second look, you might well find there is more to this outwardly simple tale than you thought.
    9MOscarbradley

    Rohmer at his very best

    Two tired cliches are that sex destroys friendships and that men and women can never really be friends and no-one chronicled these two sayings better than Eric Rohmer who made it his life's work to explore the psychological battles that we call courtship. In doing so he became, perhaps, the cinema's greatest director of women. Let's forget for a moment that he divided his films into series, (Six Moral Tales, for example, of which "La Collectionneuse" is one), and concentrate on the film at hand.

    "La Collectionneuse" is very simple and very straightforward. Two male friends spend a summer sharing a villa in the south of France. There is another occupant, a slightly younger woman who sleeps around and it is she the men christen the collector since she 'collects' men wherever she goes. They, of course, consider themselves moral but they are also intellectuals and perhaps womanisers, too. They want to collect the girl; they want the girl to collect them.

    Like all of Rohmer's best work this is a film of talk rather than action. Rohmer doesn't film love scenes or sex scenes; once his male and female characters enter the bedroom he loses interest. It's the chase and not the catch he cares about and whether men and women really can be friends as well as lovers. He takes his subjects seriously but he also likes to have fun at their expense and like so many of his films "La Collectionneuse" will have you chuckling if not exactly laughing out loud.

    In his later films it was usually the women who took the lead but here it is Adrien, (a superb Patrick Bauchau), who acts as our narrator, guiding us through the moral maze but then all three players are excellent. This may be a minor Rohmer film but minor only in the way a short story is considered minor when compared to a novel. Personally I think "La Collectionneuse" is a Rohmer crying out for your collection.
    9ilpositionokb

    Charm and Guile between the Sexes

    "La Collectionneuse", the third film in Eric Rohmer's six moral tales, is packed with lacerating observations on life, love, and the nature of man. It is a sensitive conversation piece with elegant people commenting poetically on their lives and of those around them. Attractive men and women who reflect openly about the conflicts of intellect and impulse; inclination and action, solitude and companionship. Rohmer characteristically paces this eloquent tale of sexual temptation with long, fluid takes. "La Collectionneuse(Collector Girl) centers around a young, hedonistic girl(Haydee) who saunters laconically around the provincial environs of a large vacation home, seemingly indifferent to the two older men's(Adrian and Danele) existence. Haydee exudes a casual independence and an unflappable reserve. Her cursory dealings with her young lovers prompts Danele to cast her as 'the atrocious ingenue'. Though they find her unexpectedly alluring, both men regard 'the idea of collecting boyfriends opposite of purity'. Rohmer, the director of "Chloe in the Afternoon" and "A Tale of Springtime", enjoys revealing which individual can best cast their charm and guile to their best advantage. This 'game' between the sexes only leads to unwanted desires for the men and a resumption of her search by Haydee. Rohmer handles the material with a light touch throughout and concludes his story by offering a tenuous solution to the prevailing tension in the movie between one's solitude and fraternity. Adrian privately confesses that 'I was overwhelmed by a feeling of delightful independence, of total self-determination. But in the emptiness and silence of the house, I was overcome with anguish'. A universal truth clearly-rendered by one of cinema's most ingenious and graceful filmmakers.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Éric Rohmer's first color film.
    • Quotes

      Adrien: In all sincerity, I think I serve mankind better by taking it easy than by working. It's true. It takes courage to not work.

    • Connections
      Featured in Uuden aallon jäljillä (2009)

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    FAQ17

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    • What are the names of all six of Rohmer's moral tales?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 2, 1967 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official site
      • Les Films du Losange (France)
    • Languages
      • Italian
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Six contes moraux IV: La Collectionneuse
    • Filming locations
      • Côte d'Azur, France(coastal line and landscapes)
    • Production companies
      • Les Films du Losange
      • Rome Paris Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $7,077
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 26m(86 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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