Contempt

Contempt a.k.a. Le Mepris is a 1963 movie directed by Jean-Luc Godard.

WHAT HAPPENS?

The marriage between a screenwriter and his wife falls apart during a trip to Italy.

ONE LINE REVIEW

Contempt is a stylish, lush, honest but bleak portrayal of damaged relationships.

THE ACTORS

Michel Piccoli and Brigitte Bardot play Paul and Camille, a young couple whose relationship craters during the production of an Odysseus movie. Piccoli portrays Paul in a sort of suspended state: he takes on a writing job in lush Capri solely for financial gain, which stifles his creativity – and he learns his wife doesn’t love him anymore. Piccoli conveys a continual dread and depression about his life – which is brilliantly contrasted by the immaculate beauty surrounding him.

Bardot assumes the role of Camille, who after meeting Jack Palance’s churlish Jeremy – the producer of the movie – senses the downfall of her own relationship. Bardot’s character is interesting given her rapid emotional fluctuations – she expertly conveys a heavy sadness throughout the movie. She assumes a female role familiar in many Godard works, yet she maintains an appealing grace and power.

Palance and German director Fritz Lang round out the cast. Palance is terrific playing Jeremy – a producer who despises the artistic nature of filmmaking. He is fixated only on the erotic appeal of art, which translates to his continued pursuit of Bardot’s Camille. Lang plays himself – only here he is the director resigned to the commercial limits placed on his art. His dialogue – which he patiently delivers – serves to endorse the truths of the auteur, rather than its system of delivery.

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La Grande Bouffe

La Grande Bouffe is a 1973 movie directed by Marco Ferreri.

WHAT HAPPENS?

A group of men gather for a weekend of gluttony and debauchery, ultimately revealing that they have agreed to eat themselves to death.

ONE LINE REVIEW

La Grande Bouffe is a savage satire that is decadent, gross, hilarious and decidedly human.

THE ACTORS

The movie revolves around five outstanding performances, featuring Marcello Mastroianni’s sex-craved pilot, Michel Piccoli’s television host, Phillipe Noiret’sa judge, Ugo Tognozzi’s chef and Andrea Ferreol as a teacher who is invited to the festivities.

Mastroianni is the most fascinating of the actors – his Marcello symbolizes all the craven lusts the men desire before their deaths. He exhibits a vacant, lustful, all-consuming stare directed towards food, women and his prized Bugatti. His life is possessed by material and carnal desires, yet he is the first of the men to realize the futility of their actions. His being is extinguished when he cannot get aroused.

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