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A Woman Is a Woman

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A Woman Is a Woman

Longing for a baby, a stripper pursues another man in order to make her boyfriend jealous.

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Release : 2003
Rating : 7.3
Studio : Rome-Paris Films,  Euro International Films, 
Crew : Production Design,  Title Designer, 
Cast : Jean-Claude Brialy Anna Karina Jean-Paul Belmondo Henri Attal Karyn Balm
Genre : Drama Comedy Romance

Cast List

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Reviews

Unlimitedia
2018/08/30

Sick Product of a Sick System

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PiraBit
2018/08/30

if their story seems completely bonkers, almost like a feverish work of fiction, you ain't heard nothing yet.

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Brainsbell
2018/08/30

The story-telling is good with flashbacks.The film is both funny and heartbreaking. You smile in a scene and get a soulcrushing revelation in the next.

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Kaelan Mccaffrey
2018/08/30

Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.

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Vonia
2018/03/21

A Woman Is a Woman (French: Une femme est une femme) (1961) Comedy? Think not. Drama? Too confused to care. Musical? Satire. Romance? She sleeps with best friend. Visual zest, but not much else. Tanka, literally "short poem", is a form of poetry consisting of five lines, unrhymed, with the 5-7-5-7-7 syllable format. #Tanka #PoemReview

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MovieGuy109
2011/11/22

Jean-Luc Godard's films are always intelligent and this is no exception. Though this is a very subjective film. If you appreciate Godard's style and his satirical points on American musicals, then you should enjoy it. If you do not understand Godard's points, you should be a little bored. The self-indulgence of the film is notable, but the film has a lot of great satire and a strong, uncompromising energy about it that refuses to back down. Does not always entertain, especially when it takes shots at Truffaut's Jules and Jim, but always has a redeeming factor within the storytelling to compensate for the opinions Godard is obviously expressing through his characters.

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bobsgrock
2009/07/15

Make no mistake about it, A Woman is a Woman is still very much an experimental Godard film; one that plays with sound effects and visual images that accentuate the characters' emotions. Still, it feels fresh and vivid; a rare thing indeed in today's movies.The beautiful and vixen-like Anna Karina plays Angela, a bored stripper who does her work, cooks for her boyfriend, but ultimately dreams of having a baby. Her boyfriend, played by the impossibly straight and upright Jean-Claude Brialy, refuses although we are not sure exactly why. The main theme in this story that I think most people might miss is that Godard is showing us a couple that really is firmly rooted in their loyalty to one another. Other directors might consider having the woman go off to look for other men to get her pregnant immediately, and indeed Angela does talk about this. However, whenever she and Emile seem to get angry, they either make up or settle the dispute with comedic efforts.This gives way for Godard to experiment with some very clever and original ideas. The soundtrack is constantly being interrupted either by dialog or action. It seems annoying at first but it soon becomes clear that Godard is using it to make obvious the feeling and emotions of the characters since they can be a little cloudy. He also fiddles around with breaking the fourth wall, as well as a few comedic scenes between Karina and Brialy that sparkle and make us smile.As I said before, this is a fine film if only because it so defies that which we are used to today. Angela is a stripper and this movie is about pregnancy, yet there is hardly any nudity and no sex at all. This just proves that Godard was capable of getting the point across without consenting to visual effects. He truly is an original artist and auteur. Having seen three of his films, I have seen his style and vision for cinema. It is as personal as Hitchcock, Kubrick or Scorsese. And with Karina in front of the camera, everything shines and glimmers.

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Graham Greene
2008/04/16

For me, Godard is easily the greatest living filmmaker; the most radical and revolutionary, one of the few director's whose work is so defiant, unique and idiosyncratic that he can go without credit on some of his greatest films - Weekend (1967) and Hélas pour moi (1993) to name just two - and yet, the work is always distinctive, exciting and immediately identifiable. Une femme est une femme (1961) was Godard's first film in colour and also his first in cinema scope, and he uses both of these devises to the fullest of their capabilities. As a result, it is one of the most important films of his career, sowing the seeds of creativity that would give way to later films like Le Mepris (1963), Pierrot le fou (1965) and La Chinoise (1967), and in the process creating a unique and entertaining film that rewards repeated viewings, whilst simultaneously remaining true to the filmmaker's progressive, cinematic intent. Like much of Godard's earlier work, the preoccupations here are almost entirely referential. He's still trying to revolutionise the format somewhat - playing with codes and conventions, simplifying character and narrative to an almost ironic degree and creating the drama from an accumulation of scenes - but there is also something more playful going on alongside a genuine love of cinema that is all too often overshadowed by the cynicism in his more recent work, such as Slow Motion (1980) and the underrated In Praise of Love (2001).At first glance, the story of Une femme est une femme would seem to be incredibly sweet; a play on relationship difficulties and notions of love, honour and friendship wrapped up in the eternal battle of the sexes in a way that makes for great, light-hearted farce. However, on closer inspection, the giddy production design and typically imaginative use of mise-en-scene seem to be presenting a number of abstractions that draw our eye away from the deeper themes behind the film and the characters that are introduced. Like Jean Pierre Jeunet's Amélie (2001), the colourful format and child-like games being played by both character and filmmaker alike seem to be hiding darker notions that point towards ideas of loneliness, emasculation and dissatisfaction. With this in mind, we must ask ourselves if Godard's playful references and elements of sardonic pastiche are intended to be seen as something chic, or are they instead more in tune with the escapism presented by a film like Lars von Trier's Dancer in the Dark (2000), in which musical sequences and the air of American melodrama is used as an exit point for the hopelessness of the central character.With this interpretation it is important to look at the character of Angela, a strip-club artist in a tempestuous relationship with the cold and chauvinistic Emile. Angela delights in playing games with Emile and with the audience as well; acting out her existence as if trapped between the continually juxtaposing worlds of the sitcom and the Hollywood musical as a desperate attempt to derive a simple sense of pleasure from a life that seems entirely joyless. She believes her relationship with Emile can be salvaged by the birth of a child, but when Emile seems unwilling and unaccommodating she turns to his best friend Alfred and begins yet another duplicitous game between the two. This throws something of a shadow over the character of Angela, her name itself creating an ironic juxtaposition as she plays the two men off against each other in an attempt to get what she wants. These issues would appear in subsequent Godard films, from Vivre sa vie (1962) to Slow Motion, with the depiction of women as performers, and indeed, women as prostitutes, seemingly allowing themselves to be put-upon in an attempt to get what they really want. Unsurprisingly, these are serious themes and issues with real dramatic weight that could, in the hands of a lesser filmmaker, have been used to mine a path of social-realist melodrama. Godard is more shrewd than that and presents the film as a carefree farce that is continually undercut by the distancing and distracting use of both audio and visual experimentation.Despite the darker and more despairing thematic issues presented by the script, the tone of the film and the central performance from Anna Karina as Angela is undoubtedly bubbly, with its vibrant conversations, imaginative use of role playing and blithe musical interludes. However, the film is still reliant on Godard's iconic use of early deconstructive elements, with jarring and dissonant bursts of music, random jump cuts, provocative inter-titles filled with sardonic wit and devious puns, and the appropriation of numerous genre characteristics and stylistic cross-references to offset the story at its most basic level. Regardless of such personal interpretations, the film works just as well if taken at face value, with the boundless energy and imagination of Godard and his crew, the playful references to Truffaut and the relationship between the burgeoning French New Wave and its roots in Hollywood B-pictures, and the fantastic performances from Karina, Jean-Claude Brialy and Jean-Paul Belmondo.Without question, Une femme est une femme could be seen as Godard's first true masterpiece. It is funny, witty, clever and insightful - filled with imaginative vignettes and the infectious sense of joie de vivre that only great film-making can present - whilst beneath the surface we find all manner of hidden depths and avenues of interpretation that remind us of the filmmaker's particular sense of genius. Regardless of your interpretation, the final moments of Une femme est une femme, with that devilish last line, visual pun and wink to the camera is a masterstroke from Godard; one that works within the context of the film as a frothy attempt at jovial farce, whilst simultaneously reinforcing the darker side of Angela's character and the empty life that she leads. As the character herself proclaims halfway through; "I don't know if this is comedy or tragedy... but it is a masterpiece".

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