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Love on a Pillow

Original title: Le repos du guerrier
  • 1962
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
798
YOUR RATING
Brigitte Bardot and Robert Hossein in Love on a Pillow (1962)
FrenchDramaRomance

A young girl rescues a man from a suicide attempt. He turns out to be a sociopath, who begins to take over her life, abusing her both verbally and emotionally, yet she can't seem to tear her... Read allA young girl rescues a man from a suicide attempt. He turns out to be a sociopath, who begins to take over her life, abusing her both verbally and emotionally, yet she can't seem to tear herself away from him.A young girl rescues a man from a suicide attempt. He turns out to be a sociopath, who begins to take over her life, abusing her both verbally and emotionally, yet she can't seem to tear herself away from him.

  • Director
    • Roger Vadim
  • Writers
    • Roger Vadim
    • Christiane Rochefort
    • Claude Choublier
  • Stars
    • Brigitte Bardot
    • Robert Hossein
    • Jean-Marc Bory
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    798
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Roger Vadim
    • Writers
      • Roger Vadim
      • Christiane Rochefort
      • Claude Choublier
    • Stars
      • Brigitte Bardot
      • Robert Hossein
      • Jean-Marc Bory
    • 17User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos33

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    Top Cast20

    Edit
    Brigitte Bardot
    Brigitte Bardot
    • Geneviève Le Theil
    Robert Hossein
    Robert Hossein
    • Renaud Sarti
    Jean-Marc Bory
    Jean-Marc Bory
    • Pierre Leroy
    Michel Serrault
    Michel Serrault
    • Maître Varange
    Jacqueline Porel
    • Madame Le Theil - la mère de Geneviève
    Jean-Marc Tennberg
    • Coco
    Robert Dalban
    Robert Dalban
    • Le brigadier
    Ursula Kubler
    Ursula Kubler
    • L'infirmière
    Christian Melsen
    • L'inspecteur de police
    Macha Méril
    Macha Méril
    • Raphaële
    • (as Macha Meril)
    James Robertson Justice
    James Robertson Justice
    • Katov - un sculpteur
    Georges Aminel
    • Katov
    • (voice)
    Yves Barsacq
    Yves Barsacq
    • Le patron de l'hôtel
    • (uncredited)
    Hélène Dieudonné
    Hélène Dieudonné
    • Madame Pia - la concierge
    • (uncredited)
    Jean Lefebvre
    Jean Lefebvre
    • Armand
    • (uncredited)
    Paul Mercey
    Paul Mercey
    • Le gros serveur
    • (uncredited)
    Max Montavon
      Robert Seller
      • Le vieil homme dans le train
      • (uncredited)
      • Director
        • Roger Vadim
      • Writers
        • Roger Vadim
        • Christiane Rochefort
        • Claude Choublier
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews17

      5.5798
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      Featured reviews

      5roland-scialom

      Le repos du guerrier didn't resist to time

      This film had some charm by the time it was made. BB was in a great shape. The youth in occident were strongly influenced by a fashion based on a vulgar reading of existentialist philosophy. The first time I saw this film, during the sixties, I was 17 or 18, and a kind of a "rebel without a cause", fond of existentialist literature. So the film impressed me.

      Today, seeing the film again, I found it almost stupid. I explain.

      1. The revolt of Renaud is not explained in a context, so we don't know exactly why he is bitter, cynic, self destructive and iconoclast.

      2. The author of the story tries to glamorize Renaud revolt, but, what I see can't be glamorized. For instance, Renaud wears the same unwashed clothes during several weeks (which seems to be the time the story lasts) doesn't take a bath and doens't shave his beard. He smokes all the time and drinks heavily since the time he wakes up. So, his clothes and his breath certainly stink disgustingly. He messes seriously Geneviève's apartment spreading all around dirty dishes and ash trays stuffed with smoked cigarettes. All this mess and dirtiness for nothing... or to punish unjustly Geneviève?

      3. Geneviève looks rather as stupid blonde female because she falls in love with a stinking revolted pseudo-existentialist who does't do anything useful to anyone and criticize hardly the middle class life style, middle class of which he is actually a parasite.

      The film deserves to be seen because of the presence of BB. She was marvelous by that time and a real icon of a generation. A queen of many dreamers as me.
      8eldoradofilm2

      Far ahead for its time

      One of the few mainstream films I ever saw dealing with a manic-depressive. Which is a disease, the guy is not "just crazy" or "abusive". Anybody who knows about depressions (clinical) will appreciate the film. Of course it is not perfect, her falling in love with him could have been done a bit more believable, Vadim is no Antonioni, but still I like it a lot.

      In the USA Easy Rider was one of the first films where people smoked pot ("without raping a nurse" as Dennis Hopper stated), Vadim showed it almost 6 years earlier! He was quite hip and brave to make the film, dealing with a mental disease which is still under the carpet 50+ years later, in the first place. Not many people care for depressive persons. His ex-wife BB had some understanding as well of course, she tried to kill herself a year before the film was made.
      8rooprect

      Philosophers only

      The title of my review ought to be enough to scare off the folks who are expecting a plot-driven, digestible story. You'll get none of that here.

      Although there is indeed a plot (a rather interesting one, if you ask me), the power of this film lies not in the story but in the script and in the subtle, almost indecipherable fragments of philosophy we experience through these two highly complex characters.

      Geneviève (Bardot) is the the romantic. Her counterpart Renaud (Hossein) is the cynic. The collision of their worlds causes a catastrophic upheaval in both of their lives. But it is undeniable that they need each other, just as the two opposing philosophies rely on each other. Sort of a yin-yang thing. At times they are at war with each other; at times they cling to each other for life; at times they threaten to annihilate the other absolutely. This is some really heavy stuff that cannot possibly be summarized in a few paragraphs, so I won't even try.

      There are several monologues which are so stirring I want to learn them by heart. Particularly the last two speeches in the final 10 mins of the film. Pay close attention to those words, because they sum up the entire theme of the film. Powerful. Powerful.
      6Bunuel1976

      LOVE ON A PILLOW (Roger Vadim, 1962) **1/2

      While their short-lived marriage was long gone, this is the fourth of five Roger Vadim/Brigitte Bardot collaborations and only the second I've watched myself. After opening in a light comedy vein, this rather scrappy film turns into an unappetizingly ponderous melodrama on the lines of LA DOLCE VITA (1960), complete with a risibly "beat" orgy sequence and a surfeit of pretentious chat; nevertheless, the whole is somewhat redeemed by the attractive Italian locations in its second half and the nice musical score throughout.

      For what it's worth, it tells of a bourgeois girl (Bardot) – shortly to be married to an unassuming young man – travelling from Paris to Dijon to hear the will of her late aunt, who accidentally stumbles on the suicide attempt of a bohemian, pulp-thriller-loving misanthrope (Robert Hossein) who, upon recovering, literally turns her life upside down. The cast is completed by James Robertson Justice (as Hossein's sculptor friend), Macha Meril (as Robertson's tramp companion) and, in one sequence, Michel Serrault as a notary.

      In the end, the original title of THE WARRIOR'S REST sounds far more interesting that what's on offer here and the fact that I was misinformed about the film's running time – I thought it was a good 22 minutes shorter! – did not help to earn it much affection from my end. But, then, the sight of Bardot in her prime (and, Vadim being Vadim, in various stages of undress as well) is always welcome...
      7DennisLittrell

      One of Bardot's best

      A young woman named Genevieve Le Theil (Brigitte Bardot) while on a trip to Dijon to claim an inheritance accidentally opens the wrong hotel door and finds a man named Renaud Sarti (Robert Hossein) lying unconscious on a bed. He has attempted suicide by taking an overdose of sleeping pills. Her intervention saves his life.

      One would think he would be grateful and perhaps fall in love with his beautiful benefactress. What happens is just the opposite. She falls into a kind of obsessive, almost masochistic, love with him, but all he feels for her is indifference. He spends her money, drinks to excess, abuses her verbally and emotionally. But she can't let him go regardless of what he does. Yes, this is a familiar premise, and frankly I would not have stuck around long enough to see how it plays out except for Brigitte Bardot.

      If you haven't seen her, you might want to watch this just to take a look at her. She is strikingly beautiful and amazingly sexy. She has pretty, almost perfect features and a soft and sweet way about her; but perhaps the most arresting thing about her is her figure. It is absolutely exquisite. She was a sensation in the fifties not only in France but in the US as the quintessence of the "sex kitten," in some ways even more so than, say, Marilyn Monroe or Tuesday Weld.

      Roger Vadim, who would later direct Jane Fonda in Barbarella (1968) was married to Bardot at the time this movie was made. (He would later marry Jane Fonda.) Like some other French directors, Vadim liked to make movies which amounted to adorations of the beautiful young star. See Roman Polanski with, e.g., Nastassja Kinski in Tess (1979); Krzysztof Kieslowski with Irene Jacob in La Double vie de Véronique (1991) and Trois couleurs: Rouge (1994); and Andre Techine, with Juliette Binoche in Rendez-vous (1985) for some comparisons. Naturally if you make movies in which the camera adores the young actress and shows her in her best light, you are going to attract young actresses! Here Vadim directs in a studied manner designed to not only show off Bardot's exquisite beauty but to highlight her ability as an actress. Although not among the first rank as actresses go, Bardot performs well here. Perhaps this is her best film. She is elegantly dressed and coiffured, and Vadim treats us to many close ups of her lovely face. (If there is a more beautiful woman in filmdom, I haven't seen her.) But don't expect to see much of her equally lovely body or any kinky sex. This film could easily pass for PG-13.

      Vadim creates an early sixties French atmosphere as he recalls the jazz/beat scene from that era, but he does so in a superficial, almost euphemistic way. In the elaborate scenes at Katov's apartment and then at his estate, we are given a hint of the decadent indulgence of a certain class of French society in which privilege, jazz, heroin, pot and easy sex are the rule, but Vadim keeps it all off camera except for one scene in which a joint is passed around.

      Vadim's most famous film starring Brigitte Bardot is Et Dieu... créa la femme (And God Created Woman) (1956). This is not to be confused with Vadim's American version of the film from 1988 starring Rebecca De Mornay, which was not very good.

      Bardot retired fairly young and devoted her life to helping animals.

      (Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it at Amazon!)

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      Related interests

      Jean-Pierre Léaud in The 400 Blows (1959)
      French
      Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
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      Romance

      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        The encore for this film, composed by Michel Magne, was later used in 1968 by Frida Boccara in her single "Cent Mille Chansons". This version, now with lyrics, was written by Eddy Marnay.
      • Quotes

        Renaud Sarti: Our lives on this earth are pointless.

        Geneviève Le Theil: Speak for yourself.

        Renaud Sarti: I am.

      • Connections
        Featured in Le mystère Bardot (2012)

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      FAQ14

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • September 5, 1962 (France)
      • Countries of origin
        • France
        • Italy
      • Language
        • French
      • Also known as
        • Das Ruhekissen
      • Filming locations
        • 17 Avenue Maréchal Foch, Dijon, Côte-d'Or, France(hotel)
      • Production companies
        • Francos Films
        • Incei Film
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 42m(102 min)
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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