Macha Méril – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st Sun, 18 Jan 2026 07:15:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-Vintage-Movie-Camera-Icon-32x32.png Macha Méril – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st 32 32 Guy Gilles – Au pan coupé aka Wall Engravings (1968) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/12/au-pan-coupe-wall-engravings-1968/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/12/au-pan-coupe-wall-engravings-1968/#respond Sat, 16 Dec 2023 01:58:25 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=212210 Au pan coupé (1968) mk2 (a bit revised) wrote:Jeanne and Jean, a sensitive young man, have one last rendez-vous at the “Pan Coupé”, the little café where they always meet. A few weeks later Jean flees, disappears… Jeanne confides in her friend Pierre and his father. They all begin an investigation of their own into …

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Au pan coupé (1968)
Au pan coupé (1968)

mk2 (a bit revised) wrote:
Jeanne and Jean, a sensitive young man, have one last rendez-vous at the “Pan Coupé”, the little café where they always meet. A few weeks later Jean flees, disappears… Jeanne confides in her friend Pierre and his father. They all begin an investigation of their own into the young man’s disappearance. Disillusionment, poetry and dark romanticism combine to create a compelling film in urgent need of rediscovery.

Au pan coupé (1968)1
Au pan coupé (1968)
Au pan coupé (1968)
Au pan coupe - Guy Gilles (1968).mkv

General
Container:  	Matroska
Runtime: 	1 h 11 min
Size: 	2.73 GiB
Video
Codec: 	x264
Resolution: 	956x576 
Aspect ratio:  	5:3
Frame rate: 	24.000 fps
Bit rate: 	5 214 kb/s
BPP: 	0.395
Audio
#1:  	French 2.0ch FLAC @ 218 kb/s

https://nitro.download/view/7CB279666119833/Au_pan_coupe_-_Guy_Gilles_(1968).mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English, French

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Gian Vittorio Baldi – L’ultimo giorno di scuola prima delle vacanze di Natale (1975) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/10/lultimo-giorno-di-scuola-prima-delle-vacanze-di-natale-1975/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2023/10/lultimo-giorno-di-scuola-prima-delle-vacanze-di-natale-1975/#respond Sat, 21 Oct 2023 06:52:02 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=207505 Review by Dario Soldatini, 2006, from imdb:The dark side of an untold page of historyBrief synopsis North Italy, spring 1945, during the nazi-fascist occupation. A gang of fugitive republican fascists (John Steiner, Macha Meril and Lino Capolicchio) kidnaps a metrobus full of civilians and tries to escape to the Swiss’s border, in order to recover …

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Review by Dario Soldatini, 2006, from imdb:
The dark side of an untold page of history
Brief synopsis North Italy, spring 1945, during the nazi-fascist occupation. A gang of fugitive republican fascists (John Steiner, Macha Meril and Lino Capolicchio) kidnaps a metrobus full of civilians and tries to escape to the Swiss’s border, in order to recover from the advancing allies and partisans. During the journey, we are able to see (throughout some flash-backs) the fascists’s activities prior to their runout (Macha Meril, in the role of Egle, a female volunteer for Italian Social Republic, in the attempt to humiliate a nude prisoner before sentencing him to death) alongside the captured civilians (remebrances of their “normal” lives under allies’ bombs and everyday’s troubles of wartime). As the movie rolls on and the Swiss’s border approaches, the three kidnappers decide to kill their hostages anyway: one by one they’re picked up and executed and, at the end of the movie, the three villains arrive at the border…but all the area has been already taken under control by the partisans…. “The last day of school before the Christmas’ holidays” is a small, rare and raw documentary about cruelty of the war, especially civil ones (expecially Italy’s civil war, very often ignored by researchers and film makers).

This movie is actually unreleased on homevideo and it’s a shame: it anticipates Pasolini’s “Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma”. I had been lucky enough to see it once on a latenight show, but I still remember it for its strong mood and documentary style. The lead stars are top-notch artists of 70’s Italian subgeneres, Lino Capolicchio (The house with the laughing windows), Macha Meril (Deep Red) and John Steiner (Shock, Tenebrae, Action, Tinto Brass’s Caligula). I recommend you to have a peer to it.

L'ultimo giorno di scuola prima delle vacanze di natale, 1975 , di GianVittorio Baldi (480p_25fps_H264-128kbit_AAC).mkv

General
Container:  	Matroska
Runtime: 	1 h 23 min
Size: 	525 MiB
Video
Codec: 	x264
Resolution: 	640x480 
Aspect ratio:  	4:3
Frame rate: 	25.000 fps
Bit rate: 	749 kb/s
BPP: 	0.098
Audio
#1:  	Italian 2.0ch AAC LC @ 128 kb/s

https://nitro.download/view/F6D02EEC4A2C170/L’ultimo_giorno_di_scuola_prima_delle_vacanze_di_natale,_1975_,_di_GianVittorio_Baldi_(480p_25fps_H264-128kbit_AAC).mkv
https://nitro.download/view/EE731E2F66615B9/L’ultimo_giorno_di_scuola_prima_delle_vacanze_di_natale_(1975)_ENG_V4.srt

Language(s):Italian
Subtitles:English

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Jean-Luc Godard – Une Femme Mariee AKA A Married Woman (1964) (HD) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2021/01/jean-luc-godard-une-femme-mariee-aka-a-married-woman-1964-hd/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2021/01/jean-luc-godard-une-femme-mariee-aka-a-married-woman-1964-hd/#respond Sat, 09 Jan 2021 01:34:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=35945 Quote:Captured in beguilingly chic noir et blanc, Jean Luc Godard’s Une Femme Mariée (A Married Woman) is an erudite, somewhat autobiographical, handsome and twisted examination of female infidelity. Although it has been rather overlooked amidst Godard’s formidable body of work, it is one of his most alluring and personal cinematic endeavours and represents a critical …

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Quote:
Captured in beguilingly chic noir et blanc, Jean Luc Godard’s Une Femme Mariée (A Married Woman) is an erudite, somewhat autobiographical, handsome and twisted examination of female infidelity. Although it has been rather overlooked amidst Godard’s formidable body of work, it is one of his most alluring and personal cinematic endeavours and represents a critical juncture in his evolution as a film-maker.
Originally titled La Femme Mariée (The Married Woman), Godard bowed to the French censors, Commission de Contrôle, who were fearful of the film’s potential to be interpreted as an incendiary indictment of womankind. Made after his most commercial offerings Le Mépris (1963) and Bande à Part (1964), Une Femme Mariée marked a clear departure in style with a defiant, lovelorn Godard disenfranchised with the direction of contemporary Hollywood cinema (to whose mores he had never wholly subscribed); rejecting it as a source of both inspiration and provocation.
Untrammelled by pressures of financial returns or star egos, this feature found the Nouvelle Vague’s most prominent exponent alchemising with a meagre budget to create a fractured, more abstract delivery. Despite its playful aesthetics it is achingly tortured, philosophical and intimate. Alternately fascinated and repelled by the subject matter he presents, Godard both conjures and condemns the thrill of clandestine passions.
Godard hastened the film together to placate Luigi Chiarini, the director of the Venice Film Festival who had hoped that Bande à Part would premiere at the festival (instead it opened at Cannes). Produced directly following his irrevocable separation from his wife and muse, the actor Anna Karina—with whom he had shared several smouldering, turbulent years and, thus far, collaborated on four features – it takes as its focus a common preoccupation of Godard’s: the love triangle.
Karina, to Godard’s considerable anguish, had begun a relationship with Maurice Ronet. With his defunct marriage an open wound, Une Femme Mariée featured several uncomfortable parallels between reality and fiction. It was clear that, with this film (as with, for example Le Mépris, Une Femme est Une Femme), Godard had chosen to plunder his personal traumas and tribulations for material.
The trio of leads, for instance, were the same ages as their off-screen counterparts, and the married woman’s onscreen lover Robert, played by Bernard Noël was, like Ronet, an actor. Such parallels would cause anxiety for his cast; like Brigitte Bardot in Le Mépris before her, Macha Méril, as the female lead Charlotte, was uneasy about playing a character which was so flagrantly based on Karina.
The credits foretell the unusual method of execution, informing us that Une Femme Mariée comprises, “fragments d’un film tourné en 1964” Opening with an unseen woman’s hand feeling its way along a crisp white canvas (subsequently revealed as a bed-sheet); turning, flexing, wavering—her wedding ring visible. We hear her cryptic remark, “I don’t know”. A man’s hand slides in to firmly grasp her wrist, his voice responding, “You don’t know if you love me?” She answers, “Why do you talk all the time?” adding, “It’s so nice here”.
This sequence anticipates the more well-known Pierrot le Fou (1965) where Anna Karina’s exasperated Marianne—who favours experience over discussion—famously tells Ferdinand (Jean-Paul Belmondo), “You talk to me with words, and I look at you with feelings”: dialogue which has been taken as a succinct summary of the inherent incompatibility of the characters of Karina and Godard.
The series of images that immediately follow are partial views of Charlotte, the eponymous married woman, and Robert, her lover, which both brutally dissect their bodies and voyeuristically revel in the intimacy of these moments.
In his excellent book Everything is Cinema: The Working Life of Jean-Luc Godard, Richard Brody describes the effect as, “an anatomy of an affair, as seen through the lens of a coldly repressed jealousy. By isolating the parts of bodies from their characters, Godard suggests that the sexual acts are being performed mechanically and unthinkingly, rather than as the actions of complete, responsible people.”
With this distinctive opening sequence Godard was throwing the gauntlet down to his audience; challenging them from the off with his unabashed, intellectually provocative new approach.
Macha Méril as Charlotte is a serene mistress of duplicity – her implacable elfin exterior barely troubled by ripples of discernable guilt. Her inner turmoil is instead represented by the whispered free-associative phrases that Godard himself recorded for the soundtrack.
By incongruously inserting his own voice; confessing for this representation of his former partner, he undermines the character’s credibility and, as Brody comments “it was as if he were sharing with an intimate stranger the self-lacerating confidences of what he had heard, seen, or imagined from his life together with Anna Karina.”
Méril plays Charlotte as a smiling assassin, her subtle performance holds up impeccably under the intense, almost indecent scrutiny of this most accusatory of directorial gazes. On more than one occasion she gently knocks her fists against her cheeks and dips her head toward the ground ambiguously: are we witnessing nerves, or faux coyness?
Philippe Leroy convincingly portrays her intense, suspicious (albeit with demonstrable good reason), and violent husband Pierre: if he is the primary representation of Godard here, then Godard emphatically does himself no favours. And her lover Robert fares no better; after interrogation to establish his suitability as a partner and father, Charlotte finds him unsatisfactory and the film closes with the end of the affair. The dialogue was skilfully semi-improvised by the actors, and thus the film places realism in tandem with Godard’s sleek modernist visuals.
Godard does not reserve his disdain purely for marital relations. He satirises the vacuous nature of modern wants with the married couple’s glib discussion of their ‘enviable’ abode and lifestyle accoutrements; effortlessly exposing both the ludicrous unimportance of the acquisition of things, and the hollowness of their relationship.
In addition, he exposes the corrupting influence of the prurient world of advertising on young women, with both good humour – Charlotte is wittily framed between the enormous bra cups of a billboard, and acuity – Charlotte listens in on a young girl shyly discussing her tentative steps toward a sexual relationship; footage which is preceded and followed by montages of crude images and text from fashion magazines, thus creating the impression of the innocent reality bewildered and adrift amongst crass fantasy.
Une Femme Mariée is a sophisticated, confessional, dynamic piece of film-making and a pivotal work from the Godard canon. It is highly recommended to both Godard completists and to those interested in the malleability and potential of the cinematic artform; particularly with regards to its ability to convey truth and its relationship to reality.

4.37GB | 1h 35m | 960×720 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/F72ED81EF90F614/Une.Femme.Mariee.1964.720p.BluRay.x264-CiNEFiLE.mkv
or
https://tezfiles.com/file/f6070130a5e0b/Une.Femme.Mariee.1964.720p.BluRay.x264-CiNEFiLE.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English

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Raoul Lévy – The Defector AKA L’espion (1966) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/10/raoul-levy-the-defector-aka-lespion-1966/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2020/10/raoul-levy-the-defector-aka-lespion-1966/#comments Sat, 10 Oct 2020 05:22:57 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=134852 Montgomery Cliff (in his last role) plays James Bower, an American physicist visiting West Germany who’s recruited by a shady CIA agent, named Adam, to help them with the defection of a Russian scientist. But an East German secret agent, named Peter Heinzeman, learns of Bower’s meeting with Adam and threatens Bower to mind his …

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Montgomery Cliff (in his last role) plays James Bower, an American physicist visiting West Germany who’s recruited by a shady CIA agent, named Adam, to help them with the defection of a Russian scientist. But an East German secret agent, named Peter Heinzeman, learns of Bower’s meeting with Adam and threatens Bower to mind his own business, while Bower learns of a back story to all this involving stolen microfilm that each side wants.

1.19GB | 1h 39mn | 704×384 | avi

https://nitro.download/view/255BFD0566C54F2/The_Defector_(1966)_aw.avi

Language(s):English
Subtitles:None

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Aldo Lado – L’ultimo treno della notte AKA Last Stop on the Night Train AKA Night Train Murders (1975) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/05/aldo-lado-lultimo-treno-della-notte-aka-last-stop-on-the-night-train-aka-night-train-murders-1975/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/05/aldo-lado-lultimo-treno-della-notte-aka-last-stop-on-the-night-train-aka-night-train-murders-1975/#respond Sun, 05 May 2019 07:00:19 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=98719 Synopsis:Margaret and Lisa, high school friends, take the night train from Germany to Verona to spend Christmas with Lisa’s family. They flirt mildly with male passengers, including two randy delinquents in their 20s, Blackie and Curly. The four of them end up in a first-class cabin with a well-dressed woman of about 30 who has …

The post Aldo Lado – L’ultimo treno della notte AKA Last Stop on the Night Train AKA Night Train Murders (1975) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

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Synopsis:
Margaret and Lisa, high school friends, take the night train from Germany to Verona to spend Christmas with Lisa’s family. They flirt mildly with male passengers, including two randy delinquents in their 20s, Blackie and Curly. The four of them end up in a first-class cabin with a well-dressed woman of about 30 who has pornographic photographs in her valise. Egged on by the woman, the thugs and a male visitor to the cabin menace and then assault Margaret and Lisa. Meanwhile, we also see Christmas Eve and morning scenes at Lisa’s home, where her parents are polite to each other while discussing divorce. On Christmas morning, they go to the station to meet the girls. Will they be on the train?

2.41GB | 1 h 34 min | 1024×554 | mkv

https://nitroflare.com/view/3C51A329AEE87C8/Last.Stop.on.the.Night.Train.1975.576p.BluRay.AAC.x264.mkv

Language:English
Subtitles:English, French, Spanish (muxed)

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Jean Yanne – Les Chinois à Paris AKA Chinese in Paris (1974) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2012/03/jean-yanne-les-chinois-a-paris-aka-chinese-in-paris-1974/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2012/03/jean-yanne-les-chinois-a-paris-aka-chinese-in-paris-1974/#comments Fri, 23 Mar 2012 00:02:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=2025 SynopsisThe Maoist Chinese, by some miracle, have occupied Paris (and France) overnight. The patience of these stern, work-oriented and quite puritanical communists is finally completely worn down by the quarrelsome, cynical and decadent French, who cannot cooperate properly even when they are willing… Les Chinois a Paris.1974.576p.BDRip-AVC.ZONE.mkvGeneralContainer: MatroskaRuntime: 1 h 54 minSize: 2.59 GiBVideoCodec: x264Resolution: …

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Synopsis
The Maoist Chinese, by some miracle, have occupied Paris (and France) overnight. The patience of these stern, work-oriented and quite puritanical communists is finally completely worn down by the quarrelsome, cynical and decadent French, who cannot cooperate properly even when they are willing…

Les Chinois à Paris (1974)
Les Chinois à Paris (1974)
Les Chinois à Paris (1974)
Les Chinois a Paris.1974.576p.BDRip-AVC.ZONE.mkv

General
Container: Matroska
Runtime: 1 h 54 min
Size: 2.59 GiB
Video
Codec: x264
Resolution: 958x576
Aspect ratio: 5:3
Frame rate: 24.000 fps
Bit rate: 3 000 kb/s
BPP: 0.227
Audio
#1: French 2.0ch AC-3 @ 224 kb/s

https://nitro.download/view/AA55948FB861EA6/Les_Chinois_a_Paris.1974.576p.BDRip-AVC.ZONE.mkv

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English, French

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Jean-Luc Godard – Une Femme Mariee AKA A Married Woman (1964) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2012/01/jean-luc-godard-une-femme-mariee-aka-a-married-woman-1964/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2012/01/jean-luc-godard-une-femme-mariee-aka-a-married-woman-1964/#respond Mon, 30 Jan 2012 13:52:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=2852 PotMatters Review : Captured in beguilingly chic noir et blanc, Jean Luc Godard’s Une Femme Mariée (A Married Woman) is an erudite, somewhat autobiographical, handsome and twisted examination of female infidelity. Although it has been rather overlooked amidst Godard’s formidable body of work, it is one of his most alluring and personal cinematic endeavours and …

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29f7c043f76a2bde437fd0d52a185152

PotMatters Review :
Captured in beguilingly chic noir et blanc, Jean Luc Godard’s Une Femme Mariée (A Married Woman) is an erudite, somewhat autobiographical, handsome and twisted examination of female infidelity. Although it has been rather overlooked amidst Godard’s formidable body of work, it is one of his most alluring and personal cinematic endeavours and represents a critical juncture in his evolution as a film-maker.

Originally titled La Femme Mariée (The Married Woman), Godard bowed to the French censors, Commission de Contrôle, who were fearful of the film’s potential to be interpreted as an incendiary indictment of womankind. Made after his most commercial offerings Le Mépris (1963) and Bande à Part (1964), Une Femme Mariée marked a clear departure in style with a defiant, lovelorn Godard disenfranchised with the direction of contemporary Hollywood cinema (to whose mores he had never wholly subscribed); rejecting it as a source of both inspiration and provocation. Untrammelled by pressures of financial returns or star egos, this feature found the Nouvelle Vague’s most prominent exponent alchemising with a meagre budget to create a fractured, more abstract delivery. Despite its playful aesthetics it is achingly tortured, philosophical and intimate. Alternately fascinated and repelled by the subject matter he presents, Godard both conjures and condemns the thrill of clandestine passions.

Godard hastened the film together to placate Luigi Chiarini, the director of the Venice Film Festival who had hoped that Bande à Part would premiere at the festival (instead it opened at Cannes). Produced directly following his irrevocable separation from his wife and muse, the actor Anna Karina—with whom he had shared several smouldering, turbulent years and, thus far, collaborated on four features – it takes as its focus a common preoccupation of Godard’s: the love triangle. Karina, to Godard’s considerable anguish, had begun a relationship with Maurice Ronet. With his defunct marriage an open wound, Une Femme Mariée featured several uncomfortable parallels between reality and fiction. It was clear that, with this film (as with, for example Le Mépris, Une Femme est Une Femme), Godard had chosen to plunder his personal traumas and tribulations for material.

The trio of leads, for instance, were the same ages as their off-screen counterparts, and the married woman’s onscreen lover Robert, played by Bernard Noël was, like Ronet, an actor. Such parallels would cause anxiety for his cast; like Brigitte Bardot in Le Mépris before her, Macha Méril, as the female lead Charlotte, was uneasy about playing a character which was so flagrantly based on Karina.

The credits foretell the unusual method of execution, informing us that Une Femme Mariée comprises, “fragments d’un film tourné en 1964” Opening with an unseen woman’s hand feeling its way along a crisp white canvas (subsequently revealed as a bed-sheet); turning, flexing, wavering—her wedding ring visible. We hear her cryptic remark, “I don’t know”. A man’s hand slides in to firmly grasp her wrist, his voice responding, “You don’t know if you love me?” She answers, “Why do you talk all the time?” adding, “It’s so nice here”.

This sequence anticipates the more well-known Pierrot le Fou (1965) where Anna Karina’s exasperated Marianne—who favours experience over discussion—famously tells Ferdinand (Jean-Paul Belmondo), “You talk to me with words, and I look at you with feelings”: dialogue which has been taken as a succinct summary of the inherent incompatibility of the characters of Karina and Godard. The series of images that immediately follow are partial views of Charlotte, the eponymous married woman, and Robert, her lover, which both brutally dissect their bodies and voyeuristically revel in the intimacy of these moments.

In his excellent book Everything is Cinema: The Working Life of Jean-Luc Godard, Richard Brody describes the effect as, “an anatomy of an affair, as seen through the lens of a coldly repressed jealousy. By isolating the parts of bodies from their characters, Godard suggests that the sexual acts are being performed mechanically and unthinkingly, rather than as the actions of complete, responsible people.” With this distinctive opening sequence Godard was throwing the gauntlet down to his audience; challenging them from the off with his unabashed, intellectually provocative new approach. Macha Méril as Charlotte is a serene mistress of duplicity – her implacable elfin exterior barely troubled by ripples of discernable guilt. Her inner turmoil is instead represented by the whispered free-associative phrases that Godard himself recorded for the soundtrack.

By incongruously inserting his own voice; confessing for this representation of his former partner, he undermines the character’s credibility and, as Brody comments “it was as if he were sharing with an intimate stranger the self-lacerating confidences of what he had heard, seen, or imagined from his life together with Anna Karina.” Méril plays Charlotte as a smiling assassin, her subtle performance holds up impeccably under the intense, almost indecent scrutiny of this most accusatory of directorial gazes. On more than one occasion she gently knocks her fists against her cheeks and dips her head toward the ground ambiguously: are we witnessing nerves, or faux coyness?

Philippe Leroy convincingly portrays her intense, suspicious (albeit with demonstrable good reason), and violent husband Pierre: if he is the primary representation of Godard here, then Godard emphatically does himself no favours. And her lover Robert fares no better; after interrogation to establish his suitability as a partner and father, Charlotte finds him unsatisfactory and the film closes with the end of the affair. The dialogue was skilfully semi-improvised by the actors, and thus the film places realism in tandem with Godard’s sleek modernist visuals. Godard does not reserve his disdain purely for marital relations. He satirises the vacuous nature of modern wants with the married couple’s glib discussion of their ‘enviable’ abode and lifestyle accoutrements; effortlessly exposing both the ludicrous unimportance of the acquisition of things, and the hollowness of their relationship.

In addition, he exposes the corrupting influence of the prurient world of advertising on young women, with both good humour – Charlotte is wittily framed between the enormous bra cups of a billboard, and acuity – Charlotte listens in on a young girl shyly discussing her tentative steps toward a sexual relationship; footage which is preceded and followed by montages of crude images and text from fashion magazines, thus creating the impression of the innocent reality bewildered and adrift amongst crass fantasy.

Une Femme Mariée is a sophisticated, confessional, dynamic piece of film-making and a pivotal work from the Godard canon. It is highly recommended to both Godard completists and to those interested in the malleability and potential of the cinematic artform; particularly with regards to its ability to convey truth and its relationship to reality.

http://www.nitroflare.com/view/637C1E7123EF80C/jean-luc.godard.1964.une.femme.mariee.dvdrip.xvid-kg.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/2CC0D75417A9900/jean-luc.godard.1964.une.femme.mariee.dvdrip.xvid-kg.srt
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/09C109F4C98CFC1/une.femme.mariee.1964.original.trailer.dvdrip.xvid-kg.avi
http://www.nitroflare.com/view/06C5D2AFE7D3020/une.femme.mariee.1964.original.trailer.dvdrip.xvid-kg.srt

Spanish srt:
http://www.opensubtitles.org/es/subtitles/3561414/une-femme-mariee-suite-de-fragments-d-un-film-tourne-en-1964-es

Language(s):French
Subtitles:English,Spanish

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