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Trafic - Criterion Collection (1972)

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Trafic - Criterion Collection
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Directed byJacques Tati
CastHonore Bostel, Marcel Fravel, Maria Kimberly, Tony Knappers and Francois Maisongrosse
Theatrical ReleaseDecember 11, 1972
DVD ReleaseJuly 15, 2008
Running Time97 minutes
MPAA RatingG (General Audience)
UPC Code715515030328
Buy this item$31.99 at Amazon.com
As of Aug 30 12:57 EDT (details)
2 DVD, Image Entertainment, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, DVD-Video, Special Edition, Subtitled, NTSC
Languages: Dutch (Original Language), English (Original Language), French (Original Language), English (Subtitled)
Or 37 new from $28.09, 9 used from $28.10
 

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User Reviews

Average user review: 4.0 (12 reviews)

rating: 4 QuoteMore fun from Tati - not spectacular, but solid.Quote
Good fun, not a masterpiece like Mon Oncle or Playtime, but if you like Tati's other stuff, it's a must have. August 16, 2008

rating: 5 QuoteTrafic finally gets the presentation it deservesQuote
If you have made it this far, you will want to own this DVD. While not one of Tati's best, it is still an entertaining and charming movie. The extras alone are worth the DVD price: interviews with the cast and a fascinating interview with Tati himself, who reprises some of his best mime routines. Regarding the movie itself: I was stunned at not only the quality of the picture (sharp with bright colors), but the fact my VHS tape was missing about 15% of the frame on all four sides, not to mention having a horizontally stretched picture. So, aside from the much-improved picture quality, there is actually 15% more movie to see! Buy this DVD (and the others from Criterion, if you don't have them), and show Criterion that their efforts with regard to Tati are appreciated. July 19, 2008

rating: 5 QuoteMonsieur Hulot at odds with The Gimmick-Crazed Car Culture.Quote
Best known for Mon Oncle (1958), Playtime (1967), and Trafic (1971), French comic genius Jacques Tati's Monsieur Hulot comedies depict a socially-inept, Quixotic character always in his rumpled raincoat and tattered brown hat, at odds with the mechanistic and materialistic modern world. In fact, Hulot's life is one big misadventure in the modern world. Trafic (Traffic) was Tati's last Hulot film, and followed themes established in his earlier films. In Trafic, Monsieur Hulot (Tati) invents a Rube-Goldberg camper van fully loaded with modern features (equipped, for instance, with a shaver in the steering wheel), and then travels to an auto show in Amsterdam with a tres-trendy marketing exec named Maria (Maria Kimberly), to introduce the car for their Parisian employer, Altra Motors. Along the way, they encounter many of the everyday frustrations that seem to plague modern existence: a flat tire, an accident, an encounter with the police, car repairs, and several traffic jams. There is something hilarious just in the notion of a Luddite like Hulot working as an auto designer. Tati's Trafic is a true comic masterpiece, and the perfect antidote for these harried times.

Special features included in the double-disc edition of Trafic include a newly restored high-definition transfer; "In the Footsteps of Monsieur Hulot" (1989), a two-hour documentary tracing the evolution of Jacques Tati's beloved alter ego; an interview from 1971 with the cast of Trafic, from the French television program Le journal de cinéma; "The Comedy of Jacques Tati," a 1973 episode from the French television program Morceaux de bravoure; the theatrical trailer; and a new essay by film critic Jonathan Romney.

G. Merritt May 18, 2008

rating: 4 QuoteAt last! Trafic on DVD!Quote
At last! This little gem gets the release it deserves, from Criterion no less. Regarded by many and perhaps rightly so as the weakest of the Jacques Tati 'Hulot' films. Don't let this put you off as, even though its the weakest, its still the work of genius. It's a surprise it even got made as it was fraught with finance problems, production being shut down due to lack of money was not rare. Unfortunately Tati did not receive the critical acclaim he was due until many years after his death. The rights of his films landed in the hands of strangers due to bankruptcy and then Tati died. Trafic has never seen a proper DVD release in the English language territories. I own a German edition that sports a good picture and little else. Criterion I'm sure will deliver the goods! April 22, 2008

rating: 5 QuoteAnother Tati ' s pearl!Quote
As you know, Monsieur Hulot is one of the designers of the Automobile Factory ALTRA, that intends to present its new model in the announced fair. All the film I around Hulot ' s voyage accompanied of a truck driver and a lovable young female Executive. But as you can guess this voyage will be seriously troubled funnily talking.
Another jewel of Monsieur Jacques Tati.
Voilá! September 14, 2005

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