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1964 [FRENCH]

Action / Comedy

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Catherine Deneuve Photo
Catherine Deneuve as Denise Heurtin
Jean-Paul Belmondo Photo
Jean-Paul Belmondo as Fernand
Françoise Dorléac Photo
Françoise Dorléac as Françoise Bicart alias Sandra Rossen
Micheline Presle Photo
Micheline Presle as Isabelle Lartois
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
834.54 MB
1204*720
French 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 30 min
P/S 1 / 2
1.51 GB
1792*1072
French 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 30 min
P/S 0 / 2

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by gridoon20213 / 10

Awful French farce

Incoherent, unfunny and casually sexist; the director, Edouard Molinaro, tries some freewheeling New Wave tricks, but the comic sensibility is much closer to a Jerry Lewis film or the Carry On series. All-star cast (with all the females wasted on shallow roles) and attractive Greek scenery (in the second half) are of little help. * out of 4.

Reviewed by AlexLuan8 / 10

Délicieusement français

A superb piece of french cinema with brilliant and witty dialogues written by Michel Audiard. The film is worth seeing for its great cast mixing new figures emerged with "La Nouvelle vague" like Brialy and Belmondo, charming actresses like a young Deneuve and an always spellbinding Laforêt, and hilarious acts by Blier, Serrault and Blanche. Belmondo is asked : "Depuis quand nages-tu dans le bonheur ?" He answers : "Depuis 30 secondes !". Inimitable french "humour" which always succeed in lightening our postmodern existences.

Reviewed by pzanardo9 / 10

Delightfully funny movie, made precious by Francoise Dorleac

"La chasse a l'homme" is a delightfully funny movie, made with remarkable professionalism and accuracy by Edouard Molinaro, a director hugely gifted for comedies. The story revolves around various love/adulterine/sexy affairs, with an array of extremely comic situations. The brilliant dialogue is written with outstanding care. Much fun is based on a good-natured satire of the French cultural fashion-mania of that epoch: Existentialism, leftist "rive gauche" ideology, Sartre, Juliette Greco and so on. The cinematography is excellent, even too much for this sort of light-minded film. In fact, it seems to be an amiable mocking of the "nouvelle vague" style, another cultural icon of the early 1960s.

The audience is gratified with the dazzling beauty of 21-years-old Catherine Deneuve, at the start of her career, in a minor but remarkably sexy role. The whole cast makes an outstanding job. Jean-Claude Brialy and Claude Rich are wonderful. A young soon-to-be-superstar Jean Paul Belmondo is excellent in his trade-mark role of the nice rascal. Look at the nod he makes to invite the aged rich woman to sit down at his table, in the Greek tavern: how could a guy be nicer than Belmondo?

The first part of the film is perhaps the funniest, with a sequence of weird flashbacks to introduce the characters. But the second part is made precious by the presence of sweet Francoise Dorleac. I have a very soft eye for that poor girl. She has not the perfect beauty of her sister Catherine Deneuve, but, in my opinion, she is one of the most appealing women to have graced the screen. There she is: beautiful, nice and keen, charming, sweet, lovely, incredibly attractive and sexy (look at her eyes!),and so much talented, really a born-to-act girl. It is heart-breaking to see Francoise on the screen (always on the verge of falling in love with her...),meanwhile knowing that she was killed in a terrible car accident, at age twenty-five.

Well, that is "La chasse a l'homme": a little masterpiece, plus the jewel Francoise Dorleac.

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