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Masculine Feminine

Original title: Masculin féminin
  • 1966
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Masculine Feminine (1966)
A romance between young Parisians, shown through a series of vignettes.
Play trailer2:02
1 Video
94 Photos
Teen DramaDramaRomance

A romance between young Parisians, shown through a series of vignettes.A romance between young Parisians, shown through a series of vignettes.A romance between young Parisians, shown through a series of vignettes.

  • Director
    • Jean-Luc Godard
  • Writers
    • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Guy de Maupassant
  • Stars
    • Chantal Goya
    • Marlène Jobert
    • Catherine-Isabelle Duport
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Writers
      • Jean-Luc Godard
      • Guy de Maupassant
    • Stars
      • Chantal Goya
      • Marlène Jobert
      • Catherine-Isabelle Duport
    • 54User reviews
    • 67Critic reviews
    • 93Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:02
    Trailer

    Photos94

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    Top cast17

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    Chantal Goya
    Chantal Goya
    • Madeleine Zimmer
    Marlène Jobert
    Marlène Jobert
    • Élisabeth Choquet
    Catherine-Isabelle Duport
    Catherine-Isabelle Duport
    • Catherine-Isabelle
    Jean-Pierre Léaud
    Jean-Pierre Léaud
    • Paul
    Michel Debord
    • Robert Packard
    Evabritt Strandberg
    Evabritt Strandberg
    • Elle (la femme dans le film)
    • (as Eva-Britt Strandberg)
    Birger Malmsten
    Birger Malmsten
    • Lui (l'homme dans le film)
    Yves Afonso
    Yves Afonso
    • L'homme qui se suicide
    • (uncredited)
    Henri Attal
    Henri Attal
    • L'autre lecteur du bouquin porno
    • (uncredited)
    Mickey Baker
    • Record producer
    • (uncredited)
    Brigitte Bardot
    Brigitte Bardot
    • Brigitte Bardot
    • (uncredited)
    Antoine Bourseiller
    • Le partenaire de Brigitte Bardot
    • (uncredited)
    Chantal Darget
    • La femme dans le métro
    • (uncredited)
    Françoise Hardy
    Françoise Hardy
    • La compagne de l'officier américain
    • (uncredited)
    Med Hondo
    Med Hondo
    • L'homme dans le métro
    • (uncredited)
    Elsa Leroy
    • Mlle 19 ans de 'Mademoiselle Age Tendre'
    • (uncredited)
    Dominique Zardi
    Dominique Zardi
    • Le lecteur du bouquin porno
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jean-Luc Godard
    • Writers
      • Jean-Luc Godard
      • Guy de Maupassant
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews54

    7.418.3K
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    Featured reviews

    6dbdumonteil

    The other side of "Salut Les Copains"

    It's strange this movie has not a single French comment.More than any Godard movie (I must confess I'm not a Godard fan,by a long shot),this one depicts a world now gone ,the world of the French sixties youth ,of the "Mademoiselle Age Tendre" magazine ,the world where a "pop" singer Chantal Goya used to sing "Si Tu Gagnes Au flipper" ("Should you win if you play pinball,then you've lost my heart ,'cause I know you've dated my best friend" exciting huh?).Every year the trendy girls used to elect their "Mademoiselle Age Tendre" and the winner had tons of presents and had the privilege of dining with Johnny Hallyday,Françoise Hardy and other "pop" stars of the era.Godard shows one of the lucky recipients and for once he displays some humor.Abortion and suicide did not exist in the sixties youth world they (magazines and radios) built for them,but in Godard's flick,they loom in the background.The director makes a tricky use of the words "féminin" and "fin".It's Marlene Jobert's first important part.

    You had to be here ,I guess.For people who did not live in France in the sixties ,it is an honest time capsule
    ahmadniazrahman

    B O R I N G

    This film was a chore to watch. I've never had to pause a movie so many times, taking me three days and a significant amount of perseverance to get through it. The primary issue lies in the fact that the film offers little more than dialogues between boys and girls, which, for the most part, came across as uninteresting and irrelevant.

    In dialogue-driven films, it is crucial to have an engaging story in the background to maintain the audience's interest. This film, however, fails in that regard. The background story is not only incoherent but also ambiguous, making it hard to follow and even harder to care about. The discussions among characters fail to strike a chord, often feeling out of touch and unrelatable.

    The dialogues in this film lack the ability to transcend their era, feeling stuck in the sixties without offering any timeless insights or universal themes. As a result, the conversations feel dated and fail to engage a contemporary audience. This detachment from current relevance makes it difficult for viewers to connect with the film on a deeper level.

    A successful dialogue-driven film needs more than just conversations; it requires a compelling narrative that gives context to those dialogues, characters that are well-developed and relatable, and themes that resonate across different times and cultures. Unfortunately, this film falls short on all these fronts. The dialogues are flat and fail to develop the characters or advance the plot in a meaningful way. The characters remain one-dimensional, and their interactions do little to reveal any depth or complexity.

    In essence, this film exemplifies how a dialogue-driven movie can go wrong. Without engaging dialogue, a coherent background story, well-developed characters, and relevant themes, it becomes a tedious experience. The film's failure to connect with the audience on any significant level results in a viewing experience that is more frustrating than enjoyable.

    To summarize, this film is an example of missed opportunities and poor execution. Its dialogues are neither engaging nor relevant, the story is muddled and unclear, and the characters lack depth. The themes do not resonate with modern viewers, and the pacing makes the film feel interminable. Watching it felt more like a test of endurance than a form of entertainment. For a dialogue-driven film to succeed, it must excel in areas where this film has unfortunately fallen flat.
    9framptonhollis

    very 1960's, very godard, VERY good!

    "Masculin Feminin" is a definitive example of French New Wave filmmaking. It is experimental, comic, risky, wild, and fun, a spectacle that find cinematic magic within even the most subtle and mundane of situations. Although it is often listed as nothing more than a drama, this is also an extremely funny movie, perhaps one of Jean-Luc Godard's very funniest. From the opening moments, bizarre comic mischief is springing left and right. Through unexpected surrealism and occasional violence, Godard masterfully weaves dark humor into this often tragic love story.

    The performances are also quite exceptional. Jean-Pierre Léaud further stabilizes his spot among the greatest French actors, and Chantal Goya is no less than absolutely charming and delightful. The characters are well developed-often likable, but sometimes despicable, like most human beings. There are times in which you, as an audience member, agree with their actions and beliefs, and there are times in which you must disagree. Through their ups and downs, "Masculin Feminin" explores a youthful couple's relationship in a unique and hysterical way. Fusing satire, sadness, fantasy, and comedy, "Masculin feminin" is very much a Jean-Luc Godard love story, meaning that it is heavily stylized, but also heavily realistic, just not in the conventional sense.
    crow-50

    Not so much a film about women and men than a film about youth rebellion.

    Godard's film Masculine Feminine filled with random scenes sounds off like the gun shots that appear at the beginning of each of the fifteen scenes. Although the film briefly explores the differences between women and men, Godard spends more time exploring the social problems of the 1960's and the difference between Capitalism and Communism, not to mention his endorsement against the Vietnam War.

    Violence plays a role here, but a detached one. Two suicides, two homicides and an accidental death occur, but the characters act matter a fact about these occurrences. In fact, the characters react more strongly to events in a movie. It's almost as if the filmmaker is saying that people react emotionally to characters in movies, but remain detached at real life events.

    On one hand, the pop vocalist character proclaims that she is a member of the Pepsi Generation, but her boyfriend, Paul who is a bit of a revolutionary makes the statement that if a person murders someone it's a crime, but if an army kills 1,000's of people, they're heroes. These two characters get along because they both live in his or her own world and neither tries to pursuade the other to see his or her views. So there is no outer conflict between the two characters.

    What's most interesting about Masculine Feminine is the way the director shot his actors in single shots creating a documentary style as the characters interview each other about their views on sex, love and politics. Unfortunately only the men had interesting comments about politics while the women leaned towards Capitalism and materialism. I find this a bit sexist.

    This film was part of the French New Wave and so it is respected for it's innovative departure from films that actually tell stories. However, by taking the camera and sound equipment to the streets, interesting ideas are presented here.

    I respect Godard for making the films that he wanted to make and for leading the French New Wave Movement, but I wish that I knew the point to this film. I expected a more profound film.
    ThreeSadTigers

    An ironic examination into the youth of 60's Paris, captured in Godard's typically subversive approach

    ACTION: In many respects, Masculin / Féminin (1966) is a precursor to Godard's subsequent film, the radical and highly satirical La Chinoise (1967), with the spirit of political unrest, reaction and revolution suggested through a series of random and disconnected acts of violence that are contrasted throughout by a series of dialogues and discussions on the nature of everything from music and movies, to the battle of the sexes. It came from a period in Godard's career when he was moving further away from the ironic referentialism and playful subversion of American genre conventions that had featured so heavily in his earlier and more iconic works - from establishing films such as À bout de soufflé (1960) and Une Femme est une femme (1961) - and more towards the deconstructive, essay-based cinema of reaction that would follow on from the creative year-zero of the difficult masterpiece, Week End (1967). As ever, it is a film about ideas and a satirical look into the notion of "youth" within the context of mid 1960's Paris - with the hopes, dreams and aspirations of the characters cast against a backdrop of Dylan and The Beatles and the war in Vietnam - presented in such as a way as to question the integrity of this generation, without ever drawing any obvious conclusions.

    REVOLUTION: In the hands of any other filmmaker, Masculin / Féminin could have easily descended into your average, run of the mill, teenage love story; focusing on two characters from the opposite ends of the social spectrum, thrown together in a courtship that is continually threatened by a number of external concerns, from political differences, career ambitions, jealousies and social divergence, and all devised within the environment of swinging 60's Paris, again, post-Beatles/post-Dylan. Nevertheless, the ever iconoclastic Godard does deliver these elements, but in his typically subversive approach, in which every element becomes a comment on the ideas and interpretations behind it. ...THE CHILDREN OF MARX AND COCA COLA: Even the subtitle of the film - which doesn't appear until right towards the very end - is a perfect summation of Godard's approach here; with his comment on the contemporary youth of 60's France being both celebratory, but also critical; in the way that he renders these characters as buffoons that spout and pontificate - as characters in Godard's films often do - to illustrate that behind the ideas and the ambitions there's an emptiness that is simply cosmetic.

    VÉRITÉ: As with Godard's 1967 trilogy - comprising of the aforementioned La Chinoise, 2 or 3 Things I Know About Her and Week End - Masculin / Féminin invites us to spend time with these characters, to think about the things they say and do, and then to cast judgement on them. Once again, I think the problem that many people have with this film, and with many of Godard's work in particular, is that they assume the director is sympathising with his characters; presenting them as people that we should care about or identify with, when in actuality he seems to be showing them up as the fools that they clearly are. Again, recalling the presentation of Guillaume in La Chinoise, young actor Jean-Pierre Léaud portrays Paul as a likable enough young man, though one whose pretence of political action and Marxist belief is eventually revealed to be nothing more than pseudo-intellectual pontification and playful theatricality. Unlike his more motivated friend Robert, Paul is simply playing at political activism like he plays at being a lover; throwing out carefully rehearsed slogans and ruminating on segregation and Vietnam, while his true thoughts and feelings are wrapped up in idealised notions of marriage and romantic fulfilment, represented as sex.

    POLITICAL FILM: You could perhaps argue that it isn't one of Godard's clearest of socio-political statements; with the film often going around in circles, suggesting questions that are never answered - or giving answers to questions that were never asked - as the director continually conspires to satirise and critique his subjects in a manner that goes against the usual preconceived conventions of narrative based cinema. DEFIANCE: If you're familiar with Godard then you'll expect such presentation, though even then, the end of the film, which wraps things up with a cruel joke, might seem contrary to the point of flippancy by many viewers who have taken the time to view the film and invest some thought into Godard's uncompromising ruminations. However, it's completely typical of the director to end his film in such a way; mocking his characters as shallow chancers ready to shrug off any situation, no matter how horrific, while never once leading the audience in their opinions. As the film ends, we're allowed to think about the actions that these characters have taken throughout the film, and make up our own mind as to whether or not these are negative attributes, or positive ones.

    CINEMA: The presentation is familiar, with Godard shooting in low-quality black and white, with the early new wave reliance on disarming jump-cuts and Godard's continual interest in ironic inter-titles still used throughout. The camera is mostly stationary, or we have Godard using the tracking shots that his colour films were famous for; while a number of scenes are presented with documentary-like elements in the way that characters address the camera or are framed in order to undercut the action ironically. The machine-gun sound effects that punctuate the inter-titles would be used again in the more entertaining Made in USA (1966), while there's that similar feeling of rehearsed spontaneity familiar from all Godard's 60's films, giving us the impression of improvisation, when we now know how carefully planned the project actually was. GOD(AR'): If you're already an admirer of Godard's cinema then Masculin / Féminin is an essential, if not entirely successful work, from his most interesting cinematic period; even although it could be argued that it lacks the finesse or ingenuity of his more iconic films, it is still worthy of experiencing.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Due to the portrayal of youth and sex, the film was prohibited to persons under 18 in France - "the very audience it was meant for," griped Jean-Luc Godard.
    • Quotes

      Paul: We control our thoughts which mean nothing, and not our emotions which mean everything.

    • Crazy credits
      Contrary to what Paul and his friend decide in the laundry mat sequence, Godard points out just before the credits that the word "féminin" does in fact contain another word: "fin" [end].
    • Connections
      Edited into Bande-annonce de 'Masculin féminin' (1966)
    • Soundtracks
      Laisse-Moi
      Music by Jean-Jacques Debout

      Lyrics by Jean-Jacques Debout

      Performed by Chantal Goya

      Editions de RCA

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 22, 1966 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Sweden
    • Official site
      • Rialto Pictures
    • Languages
      • French
      • Swedish
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Muski rod zenski rod
    • Filming locations
      • Scandic Hotel Continental, Norrmalm, Stockholm, Stockholms län, Sweden(sequence of film seen at the cinema)
    • Production companies
      • Anouchka Films
      • Argos Films
      • Sandrews
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $200,380
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $26,855
      • Feb 13, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $205,543
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 43 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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