Our French favourites: Deneuve, Dorleac, Adjani & Huppert, Aimee, Audran, Hardy, Laforet .... plenty on them at labels!
2,000 POSTS DONE!, so I am posting less frequently, but will still be adding news, comments and photos.. As archived, its a ramble through my movie watching, music and old magazine store and discussing People We Like [Loren, Monroe, Vitti, Romy Schneider, Lee Remick, Kay Kendall, Anouk & Dirk Bogarde, Delon, Belmondo, Jean Sorel, Belinda Lee; + Antonioni, Hitchcock, Wilder, Minnelli, Cukor, Joni Mitchell, David Hockney etc]. As Pauline Kael wrote: "Art, Trash and the Movies"!
Dedications: My four late friends Rory, Stan, Bryan, Jeff - shine on you crazy diamonds, they would have blogged too. Then theres Garry from Brisbane, Franco in Milan, Mike now in S.F. / my '60s-'80s gang: Ned & Joseph in Ireland; in England: Frank, Des, Guy, Clive, Joe & Joe, Ian, Ivan, Nick, David, Les, Stewart, the 3 Michaels / Catriona, Sally, Monica, Jean, Ella, Anne, Candie / and now: Daryl in N.Y., Jerry, John, Colin, Martin and Donal.
Showing posts with label Francoise Dorleac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Francoise Dorleac. Show all posts
Saturday, 13 May 2017
Tuesday, 11 April 2017
Male Hunt, 1964
Here's a rarity indeed - I had not even heard of it until pal Jerry found it - AND it features a lot of those European favourites early in their careers back at the dawn of the 1960s. LA CHASSE A L'HOMME (MALE HUNT) features Belmondo, Brialy, Claude Rich, Catherine Denueve and her sister Francoise Dorleac (their only other teaming apart from LES DEMOISELLES DE ROCHEFORT in 1967), as well as marvellous Marie Laforet, plus Bernadette Lafont and Micheline Presle, Michel Serrault.
Shot mainly in Paris, it includes locations at Rhodes and the ruins at Lindos - a favourite place of mine. It comes across now as an unpretentious comedy, directed by Edouard Molinaro, with a lot of attractive young players, no doubt made for the home market - which is probably why we never heard of it in London then. Belmondo has a nice bit as his usual young rascal.
Molinaro (who later directed LA CAGE AUX FOLLES) had a
very good eye for comedy. IMDB lists it as a 1964 film but it looks earlier to me - most of the cast were firmly established by then.
Labels:
1960s,
Belmondo,
Brialy,
Catherine Deneuve,
Comedy,
Francoise Dorleac,
French,
Marie Laforet
Monday, 6 February 2017
New year re-views 5: Les Demoiselles de Rochefort
LA LA LAND got me in the mood for those Jacques Demy musicals once again - we love THE UMBRELLAS OF CHERBOURG, but even more, his 1967 THE YOUNG GIRLS OF ROCHEFORT, which is sheer endless delight, as per my previous items on it, here's a reprise:
The BFI dvd includes Agnes Varda's documentary on the film's 25 year anniversary party held at Rochefort, which sadly Francoise Dorleac was a major absentee ...
Saturday, 2 January 2016
1965: Where the spies are
WHERE THE SPIES ARE. I really liked this comedy spy thriller back in 1965, nice to see it again - here is what I said about it back in 2011.
David Niven is Dr Jason Love, an English country doctor whose passion for vintage cars gets him dragooned into helping the security services (as represented by a dry John Le Mesurier) into doing some spy work for them abroad – in Beirut, Lebanon to be exact, a 60s playground then. He is meant to be helping out local agent Nigel Davenport, but when Nigel ends up dead Dr Love realises he is out of his depth as goons with guns chase him all over the place.


One of our favourites, Francoise Dorleac is the very 60s model on a fashion shoot at the airport who turns out to be his local contact, but is she a double agent? A plane exploding after take-off is nicely suggested as the bodies and thrills pile up. Director Val Guest keeps it briskly moving and of course it turns out the Russians are behind it all. The climax is good as a Russian plane has to be tricked into making an emergency landing. Dorleac is lovely as ever and Niven is ideal here before he got too old for this kind of thing. It was meant to be the first of a series, from novels by James Leasor, but there were no more…. Jazzman Jimmy Smith did a recording of the theme tune, which teenage me bought at the time. I’ve still got it!
David Niven is Dr Jason Love, an English country doctor whose passion for vintage cars gets him dragooned into helping the security services (as represented by a dry John Le Mesurier) into doing some spy work for them abroad – in Beirut, Lebanon to be exact, a 60s playground then. He is meant to be helping out local agent Nigel Davenport, but when Nigel ends up dead Dr Love realises he is out of his depth as goons with guns chase him all over the place.
Its Sixties groove fits in with my current mood: there were other amusing '60s British spy capers too like 1968's OTLEY (Tom and Romy) and DUFFY (Susannah with the James': Fox, Coburn, Mason) and of course Losey's MODESTY BLAISE which topped them all - not to mention CARRY ON SPYING!
Next: It was 50 years ago: 1966!
Next: It was 50 years ago: 1966!
Labels:
1965,
British,
Comedy,
Francoise Dorleac,
Thrillers
Thursday, 17 December 2015
Les Demoiselles de Rochefort
Click the full-screen icon to see it widescreen.
Jacques Demy's films are awash with that particular type of
French glamour, as we have noted here before, see labels. Here he
dresses up Deneuve and Dorleac in those pastels for LES DEMOISELLES DE
ROCHFORT in 1967, turns Jacques Perrin into a blonde sailor in a sailor
suit, gets George Chakiris and Grover Dale into tight trousers, and makes
Danielle Darrieux a very glamours mother to the singing and dancing sisters, then there is an older Gene Kelly!
LES DEMOISELLES DE ROCHEFORT is now on the BFI
list of '10 Best Gay French Films" .... it may not be gay as such, but there is a definite gay sensibility here. Bliss is assured watching it in mid-winter.
As the BFI put it: "File this one under ‘queer aesthetic’. In the most excessive
of Jacques Demy’s
films, he creates an infectiously cheery musical in which everyone has a ball. Catherine Deneue and Francoise Dorleac are
the damsels of the title, looking for love in the sunny seaside town of Rochefort .
But will any of the attractive men on offer fall for their charms?
There’s nothing explicitly gay here, but any film that
shoves Jacques Perrin in
a sailor suit, squeezes George Chakiris into tight white trousers and decorates itself with lavish,
lurid sets definitely has a queer eye. Its relentless good nature isn’t for
Scrooges, but it’s a hard heart that can’t enjoy Gene Kelly’s surprise cameo,
or the vision of Deneuve in elbow-length gloves, chain-smoking while removing a
chicken from the oven (trust us, it’s amazing)".
Wednesday, 24 June 2015
Deneuve & Dorleac
Thursday, 27 February 2014
French glamour, thanks to Monsieur Demy ...
As per report below, LES DEMOISELLES DE ROCHEFORT is now on the BFI list of '10 Best Gay French Films" ....
| Sorel & Hossein in '63 |
Classic French glamour of course with Catherine Deneuve (again, in INDOCHINE, which we liked a lot, review at French label), those VIVA MARIA girls, and of course back to the dawn of the 60s, and the PLEIN SOLEIL crew, and Belmondo and Dorleac in THAT MAN FROM RIO! We love them.
Friday, 11 October 2013
Catherine Deneuve: from Indochine to Place Vendome
| INDOCHINE |
Indochina
during the 1930s: One of the largest rubber-tree plantations is owned
by French colonist Eliane who lives with her father and her native
adopted daughter Camille
(Linh Dan Pham). Elaine gets to know young French officer Jean-Baptiste
(Vincent Perez); after a short affair she refuses to see him again, as
Camille falls deeply in love with him. Elaine gets him transferred to a
far island where Camille goes in search of him, despite an arranged
marriage. Her saga is rivetting and engrossing, as the fates of the
three leads play out, rather like a parable of France's place in
Indochina and Vietnam. It looks marvellous - Deneuve is perfect in those
30s clothes, and striding around her plantation in jodhpurs. Colonial
life is nicely depicted showing also the brutality meted out to the
peasants (like that family Camille travels with to that island).
It
is a vast, panoramic love story set in the twilight
years of French Indo-China. Comparisons with David Lean are inevitable,
considering director Régis Wargnier's use of the setting as a backdrop
to the
love-triangle between the three main characters. Catherine Deneuve gives
a
strong, emotionally restrained performance as Eliane, the plantation
owner
whose colonial paradise is slowly falling apart. Linh Dan Pham is
affecting as Camille, Eliane's adopted daughter whose
journey from aristocratic ancestry to Marxist induction personifies the
changing face of South-East Asia in the period around World War Two. It
won the Oscar for best Foreign Film of 1992, and Deneuve was nominated
as Leading Actress.
THE LAST METRO.
I finally saw Truffaut's big hit from 1980 yesterday, despite having
the dvd for years. and to my surprise I really did not like it at all.
Paris, 1942. Lucas Steiner is a Jew and was compelled to leave the
country. His wife Marion, an actress, directs the theater for him. She
tries to keep the theater alive with a new play, and hires actor Bernard
Granger for the leading role. But Lucas is actually hiding in the
basement...
GOD LOVES CAVIAR – a Greek curiosity from 2012 which I just
had to see, as it features a sedate Denueve as Catherine the Great
of Russia! Shrewd casting. It is based on the true story of Greek pirate turned businessman
Ioannis Varvakis, who made his fortune selling caviar in Russia and all
over the world. This epic tale moves from Greece to the court of Catherine the Great
in Russia and the shores of the Caspian Sea, and to the civil war in
Greece and the fight for independence, during the Revolution of 1821
against the Ottoman Empire. It looks good as directed by Yannis
Smaragdis. It reminded me of that 1959 Warner costumer JOHN PAUL JONES
with that other adventurer at the court of the great Catherine (Bette
Davis for the last 5 minutes).
Labels:
1980s,
1990s,
2000s,
Catherine Deneuve,
David Bowie,
Francois Ozon,
Francoise Dorleac,
French,
Horror,
Jacques Demy,
Truffaut
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