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Two or Three Things I Know About Her

 
Movies:

Two or Three Things I Know About Her

  • Director: Jean-Luc Godard
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Ensemble Film, Psychological Drama
  • Themes: Double Life, Prostitutes
  • Main Cast: Marina Vlady, Anny Duperey, Roger Montsoret, Raoul J. Lévy
  • Release Year: 1966
  • Country: FR
  • Run Time: 90 minutes

Plot

The feminine pronoun in the title of this film from Jean-Luc Godard refers to both a French housewife and the city of Paris, as each are changed in fundamental ways by the growth of consumer culture in Europe. Juliette Janson (Marina Vlady) lives with her husband and two children in a high-rise apartment block in Paris. Juliette and her family used to live in a working class community on the outskirts of town, but they've been drawn into the city in search of a higher standard of living, reflected in their new home and their desire for more of the latest consumer goods. Juliette's husband can barely support the household on his salary, so she taken to working as a prostitute without his knowledge to help pay the bills. Deux ou Trois Choses Que Je Sais d'Elle (aka 2 or 3 Things I Know About Her) follows Juliette over the course of a seemingly ordinary day as she looks after the kids, takes care of her husband and plies her trade when she has the chance. Shot simultaneously with Made In U.S.A., 2 or 3 Things I Know About Her found Godard moving away from his fascination with American genre cinema while exploring radical politics and alternatives to conventional narrative frameworks; it proved to be one of his last films to reach a large audience in theaters. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

In 1966, Jean-Luc Godard was at his peak as a filmmaker, and to accommodate the producers who were seeking to back his then-commercially successful work, he undertook a strange task; he decided to make two films at the same time, partly to prove he could do it, and partly to keep up with audience demand for his films. One of the films was Two or Three Things I Know About Her, a delectable meditation on Marxism, consumer culture, the Vietnam War, sexual politics, and gender roles, all photographed in sumptuous color, and ending with famous shot of a variety of household consumer products neatly arranged on the lawn of a suburban home. As with most of the best of Godard, the film is an essay rather than a narrative; there is a semblance of a plot, involving Marina Vlady's descent into prostitution to pay the household bills behind her husband's back, but this is merely a pretext for an extended examination of contemporary Parisian life, which Godard finds arid, soul-crushing, and stupefyingly empty. The most famous scene is undoubtedly the "cosmos in a coffee cup" sequence, in which Godard's camera stares intently at a cup of coffee as cream swirls around in it, cutting closer and closer to the steaming broth, as philosophical dialogue fills the soundtrack.

Godard demands much of his audience, but he gives much in return; it is some measure of how "dumbed down" we have become as a culture, even in contemporary European cinema, that films like Two or Three Things I Know About Her, once highly commercial propositions, now seem absolutely incomprehensible to most viewers. It's sad, too, because the film is absolutely gorgeous, and Godard has kept up the fight with his more recent films, such as the superb Notre Musique (2004), which deals with the events in Sarajevo in much the same fashion. But this being the 21st century, in which people have been brought up solely on popcorn entertainment, Notre Musique never made it out of a few major U.S. cities as a theatrical feature; happily, it is available on DVD. Two or Three Things I Know About Her has not, as of this writing, been distributed on DVD in the U.S., but only on VHS, although this may change in the future. And the other feature that Godard was shooting at the same time he was making Two or Three Things I Know About Her? That would be the long-suppressed Made in USA (1996), a brilliant and cerebral crime thriller nominally based on a novel by Donald E. Westlake, which Godard neglected to secure the rights to before filming. That film has just been released on European DVD only, the rights issues having apparently been resolved, at least for the moment. Both films are remarkable, individual, sensual, and utterly personal cinematic visions. The world of cinema seems divided into two camps: those who admire Godard intensely and those who feel that his philosophical tracts are both inaccessible and boring. The second group, who don't understand or appreciate his work, are precisely the ones who need to see it the most. Godard's films are a tonic for the senses in an age of hyper-commerciality -- an era he predicted in this prescient film and other works from this period in his long and still evolving career. ~ Wheeler Winston Dixon, All Movie Guide

Cast

Yves Beneyton - Long-Haired Youth; Christophe Bourseiller - Christophe; Blandine Jeanson - Student; Claude Miller - Bouvard; Juliet Berto - Girl Who Talks to Robert; Jean-Luc Godard - Narrator; Jean-Patrick Lebel - Pecuchet; Jean Narboni - Roger; Marie Bourseiller - Solange; Helen Scott - Woman at Pinball Machine

Credit

Gitt Magrini - Costume Designer, Jean-Luc Godard - Director, Francoise Collin - Editor, Chantal Delattre - Editor, Jackie Raynal - Makeup, Raoul Coutard - Cinematographer, Anatole Dauman - Producer, Raoul J. Lévy - Producer, Jean-Luc Godard - Screenwriter, Ludwig van Beethoven - Featured Music

Similar Movies

Cleo from 5 to 7; Masculin/Feminin; My Life to Live; The Oldest Profession; Belle de Jour; The Mother and the Whore; Money on the Side; Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles; Persona; London; Y Tu Mamá También; The Double Life of Veronique; Tokyo-Ga; The Last of England; Die Flambierte Frau; Le Petit Soldat
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Wikipedia: Two or Three Things I Know About Her
Top
Two or Three Things I Know About Her
Directed by Jean-Luc Godard
Produced by Anatole Dauman,
Raoul Lévy
Written by Catherine Vimenet,
Jean-Luc Godard
Starring Joseph Gehrard,
Marina Vlady,
Roger Montsoret
Distributed by New Yorker Films
Release date(s) 17 March 1967 (France)
Running time 87 min
Language French

Two or Three Things I Know About Her (2 ou 3 choses que je sais d'elle) (1967) is a French film directed by Jean-Luc Godard, one of three features he completed that year. Like the other two (Week End and La Chinoise), it is considered both socially and stylistically radical. Many American critics, including Village Voice critics Amy Taubin and J. Hoberman, consider it one of the greatest achievements in filmmaking.[citation needed]

Contents

Plot summary

The film follows the sophisticated but empty lives of Juliette Janson (Marina Vlady) and other characters in 1960s Paris. Juliette is a bourgeois housewife, a loving wife and mother, and a call girl.

American Re-Release

In 2007, a new 35mm print of the film was released in US theaters.

See also

External links



 
 

 

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