Diary of a Chambermaid - Criterion Collection (1965)
Facts
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Diary of a Chambermaid - Criterion Collection
DVD Price: You save 10%! As of Jan 2 19:49 EST (details)
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| Directed by | Luis Buñuel |
| Cast | Jeanne Moreau, Georges Géret, Daniel Ivernel, Françoise Lugagne, Muni and Michel Piccoli |
| Theatrical Release | March 9, 1965 |
| DVD Release | June 5, 2001 |
| Running Time | 98 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | Unrated |
| UPC Code | 037429158128 |
| Buy this item | $26.99 at Amazon.com As of Jan 2 19:49 EST (details) 1 DVD, Image Entertainment, Usually ships in 24 hours, Anamorphic, Black & White, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: French (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), English (Subtitled) Or 30 new from $21.05, 17 used from $15.97 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Diary of a Chambermaid |
| Subtle and sarcastic criticism of prewar French society |
One of the reasons that I gave this film 5 stars was that beyond just being a good film, it is a terrific example of the film makers art. Everything about this film is just so well done. Great acting, well (and subtly) written script, an obvious film to include in the Criterion Collection. If I had any negative statement to make about this film, I would say that I agree with one of the other reviewers (R. A. Rubin) in that it is an anti-Fascist film, but totally avoids the other side of the evil coin - Communism. November 18, 2007
| Essential French Cinema: Luis Buñuel's 'Journal d'une femme de chambre .' |
Luis Buñuel was merciless in exposing bourgeois moral decay and sexual inhibitions. Based on Octave Mirbeau's novel of the same name (The Diary of a Chambermaid), and filmed in stark black-and-white, Buñuel's 1964 adaptation is perhaps his most linear film, lacking the surrealist imagery of his other films (L'Age d'Or, Un Chien Andalou, Belle de Jour). The great French actress Jeanne Moreau stars as Célestine, a beautiful chambermaid who who leaves Paris to work at a country manor, only to discover her ability to influence the lives of her bourgeois employers. Madame Monteil (Françoise Lugagne)--a bored housewife--is obsessed with cleanliness, and does not satisfy her husband (Michel Piccoli) sexually. For this reason, he quickly becomes interested in Célestine. Although she rejects Monsieur's sexual flirtations, she nevertheless leads him to believe she possesses all the sexual experience he imagines. Buñuel portrays his characters as children living in adult bodies, uncomfortable with their sexuality. Instead they hunt, philosophize, obsess, act cruelly, fantasize over feet and shoes, and explore their peculiarities behind locked doors. Moreau's performance as Célestine is truly celestial. Diary of a Chambermaid is an excellent introduction to Buñuel's work. (Those who enjoy this film might also be interested in Renoir's earlier version, The Diary of a Chambermaid.)
The Criterion edition of this film offers a widescreen transfer with digitally ehanced image and sound for television, a video interview with screenwriter and longtime Buñuel collaborator, Jean-Claude Carrière, a transcript of a 1970s' interview with Buñuel, and the original theatrical trailer narrated by Jeanne Moreau.
G. Merritt September 27, 2007
| Half-Right |
All this talk we hear in America of suave French sexes and their smooth, sophisticated approach to natural forces, after viewing Bunuel many times, Truffaut and Goddard as well, I say phsaw! The French of all classes seem to skip dating and go right to groping or raping. The brash male demands favors and the demur Jean Moreau merely nods her head, manipulating men without passion. The raped child or servant, hey that's real sex - I guess. The kindest man in the film is senile and a foot fetishist. You get the idea: French society is rotten to the core and in the 1930's blindly charging towards Jew killing and goose-stepping. That's half-right.
January 17, 2007
| Stunning character study! |
The personal dilemma of maid trapped in the nasty grips of the fascism in 1939 France. But meanwhile Bunuel takes the opportunity to make a demolishing existential exploration of the bourgeoisie at those times. Maybe I am speculating but to my view this film was the seminal seed for the discrete charm of the bourgeoisie, eight years after.
"There is not any serious issue that may not be expressed through the comedy" Alejandro Casona
Extraordinary film. Don' t miss it !
December 31, 2006
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