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Belle de Jour

Original title: Belle de jour
  • 1967
  • Approved
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
52K
YOUR RATING
Catherine Deneuve in Belle de Jour (1967)
Three Reasons Criterion Trailer for Belle de Jour
Play trailer1:34
1 Video
99+ Photos
Steamy RomanceDramaRomance

A frigid young housewife decides to spend her midweek afternoons as a prostitute.A frigid young housewife decides to spend her midweek afternoons as a prostitute.A frigid young housewife decides to spend her midweek afternoons as a prostitute.

  • Director
    • Luis Buñuel
  • Writers
    • Joseph Kessel
    • Luis Buñuel
    • Jean-Claude Carrière
  • Stars
    • Catherine Deneuve
    • Jean Sorel
    • Michel Piccoli
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    52K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Luis Buñuel
    • Writers
      • Joseph Kessel
      • Luis Buñuel
      • Jean-Claude Carrière
    • Stars
      • Catherine Deneuve
      • Jean Sorel
      • Michel Piccoli
    • 158User reviews
    • 165Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 7 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos1

    Belle de Jour: The Criterion Collection [Blu-Ray]
    Trailer 1:34
    Belle de Jour: The Criterion Collection [Blu-Ray]

    Photos165

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Catherine Deneuve
    Catherine Deneuve
    • Séverine Serizy…
    Jean Sorel
    Jean Sorel
    • Pierre Sérizy
    Michel Piccoli
    Michel Piccoli
    • Henri Husson
    Geneviève Page
    Geneviève Page
    • Madame Anais
    Pierre Clémenti
    Pierre Clémenti
    • Marcel
    • (as Pierre Clementi)
    Françoise Fabian
    Françoise Fabian
    • Charlotte
    Macha Méril
    Macha Méril
    • Renee
    • (as Macha Meril)
    Muni
    Muni
    • Pallas
    Maria Latour
    Maria Latour
    • Mathilde
    Claude Cerval
    Claude Cerval
    • Le chauffeur
    Michel Charrel
    Michel Charrel
    • Footman
    Iska Khan
    Iska Khan
    • Asian Client
    Bernard Musson
    Bernard Musson
    • Majordomo
    Marcel Charvey
    • Prof. Henri
    François Maistre
    François Maistre
    • L'enseignant
    Francisco Rabal
    Francisco Rabal
    • Hyppolite
    Georges Marchal
    Georges Marchal
    • Duke
    Francis Blanche
    Francis Blanche
    • Monsieur Adolphe
    • Director
      • Luis Buñuel
    • Writers
      • Joseph Kessel
      • Luis Buñuel
      • Jean-Claude Carrière
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews158

    7.651.9K
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    Featured reviews

    10alainbenoix

    Wishing, Wanting And Longing

    Sèverine is perfect, she's Catherine Deneuve. She consciously inhabits her subconscious and the comings and goings are tinted with pristine, erotic decadence. Her perfection includes outrage without rage, panic without fear. Having or not having is the question she never asks. Her husband Pierre, the exquisite Jean Sorel, is like one of her garments. There, stunning, understated, reliable, existing without existing. Marcel, in the other hand, the riveting Pierre Clementi, seems determined to provoke. Provoke what? Where is that need creeping from? I love to meander through "Belle de Jour" allowing Luis Bunuel to have his fun. He deserves it. His puzzle is just that, a puzzle and his genius, challenge us to find the non existent pieces. The pieces are ours coming from our own wishes, wantings and longings.
    Infofreak

    Genuinely haunting Bunuel classic.

    'Belle De Jour' is a movie which requires multiple viewing to fully appreciate. We live in an era of explicit sex and violence in movies are commonplace, and where we are very rarely required to think. 'Belle De Jour' is not like this. What you don't see is more important than what you do. It is a movie which needs a little effort on the viewers part. Persevere, you will be rewarded.

    The basic plot is easy to understand. Severine (Catherine Deneuve in a superbly understated performance) is a beautiful, sexually repressed young bride. Her husband Pierre (Jean Sorel) adores her, but their marriage remains chaste. Severine suffers from dreams and hallucinations of debasement. She eventually is employed in a brothel during the day under a pseudonym, while continuing to live a bourgeois life with her unsuspecting husband. I won't reveal what happens after that.

    That is the bare bones of the story, but it gives you no idea of HOW Bunuel tells it, which is what makes 'Belle De Jour' such a gem. I think this movie is one of the landmarks of 1960s cinema, and has aged wonderfully. In fact it gets better and better as most contemporary movies about sex get poorer and poorer. A movie that will haunt you. Superb!
    9Eumenides_0

    Buñuel Never Disappoints

    'Belle de Jour' is Buñuel at his weirdest: the Spanish master builds this movie on the relationship between the fantasy of conscious and unconscious dreams and reality. The dreamer is the beautiful Séverine (the magnificent Catherine Deneuve) a petite bourgeois woman trapped in a dull marriage which leads her to strive for something else, first in fantasy, and then in outright real life. Séverine's dreams are vividly sexual: the opening scene marks the tone of the movie and the character as she dreams with being raped, spanked and humiliated while her angered husband watches. Throughout the rest of the movie, Séverine will be trying to make these fantasies come true in a brothel she starts working at… or is she? This is what's fun in Buñuel's movie: it's impossible to tell fiction from fact.

    Séverine is the heart and soul of 'Belle de Jour:' her journey through her own sexuality is riveting; she starts with as a repressed woman who's having marital problems, probably due to sex. As a way to get out of her dull life she starts working at a brothel during daytime, hence her nickname 'beautiful by day.' Some of the episodes at the brothel are funny: her first attempt at playing a dominatrix is an embarrassing experience for the poor Séverine who's not accustomed to the relationship between dominator/dominated; her experience with a creepy Asian client is highly enigmatic, mainly because of the famous and mysterious box the client brings… whatever it is, it seems to bring Séverine a lot of pleasure. Her she participates in a role-playing situation with a rich enigmatic man who asks her to perform a dead woman in a bizarre ritual/funeral scene… the level of insinuations this scene creates in one's mind is outstanding! Meanwhile, amidst all the pleasure, Séverine is haunted with a sense of guilt and shame as she keeps imagining herself being punished by her husband and his best friend. She ponders leaving the brothel until a new client, arrives and she's immediately attracted to him.

    Pierre Cleménti was an outstanding revelation: although I had unknowingly seen him once before in Bertolucci's 'The Comformist' as the homosexual driver Lino, I certainly noticed him in this movie: he's a fascinating combination of style and substance with his amazing performance, playing the sophisticated, leather-wearing, cane-wielding, gold-toothed young criminal, Marcel, meeting Séverine when celebrating a successful bank heist. His obsession for her grows to fantastic proportions culminating in the unexpected tragedy of the third act. The end of the movie is perhaps the weirdest part of the narrative, the one where all interpretations become valid; it's also a great send-up on happy endings, and a fine conclusion to a thriller if this movie were a thriller… Buñuel is just genius!

    "Belle de Jour" is a funny, tragic, and ultimately unique movie. I had the opportunity to watch it at a theatre room last year and obviously I felt the pleasure of seeing this bizarre masterpiece as all movies should be seen: on the big screen. I'll certainly feel the lack when I have to watch it on TV one day.
    10gftbiloxi

    Unique, Strange, and Memorable

    The premise of BELLE DU JOUR is well known. A young, beautiful, and slightly frigid doctor's wife (Catherine Deneuve) secretly harbors fantasies of being dominated, humiliated, and abused by her husband (Jean Sorel.) When these fantasies can no longer be denied, she becomes a prostitute under the sponsorship of a possibly lesbian madam (Geneviève Page), working during the afternoons while her husband is at his own work. Her sexuality is awakened by the sometimes brutish clients, who soon discover that "she likes it rough," and she is ultimately caught up a relationship with a truly dangerous client (Pierre Clémenti) whose possessiveness threatens to destroy both her and her husband.

    Throughout the film Deneuve slips in and out of memory and fantasy, sometimes recalling herself as a possibly molested child, sometimes imagining herself as the victim in a series of sexual assault fantasies. Director Bunuel, whose masterpiece this is, so blurs the line between memory, reality, and fantasy that by the film's conclusion one cannot be sure if some, most, or everything about the film has been Deneuve's fantasy.

    Although it includes a number of impressive performances (particularly by Geneviève Page, her girls, and their clients), BELLE is essentially Deneuve's film from start to finish, and she gives an astonishing performance that cannot be easily described. Like the film itself, it is a balancing act between fantasy and a plausible reality that may actually be nothing of the kind. Bunuel presents both her and the film as a whole in an almost clinical manner, and is less interested in gaining our sympathy for the character than in presenting her as an object for intellectual observation.

    Ultimately, BELLE DU JOUR seems to be about a lot of things, some of them obvious and some of them extremely subtle. And yet, given the way in which it undercuts its realities by blurring them with fantasy, it is also entirely possible that the film is not actually "about" anything except itself. Individuals who insist on clear-cut meanings and neatly wrapped conclusions will probably loathe it--but those prepared to accept the film on its own terms will find it a fascinating experience. Recommended.

    Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
    10bix171

    A Masterful Collaboration

    Catherine Deneuve is perfectly cast as an upper-class Parisian housewife who decides to spend her afternoons working in a brothel in Luis Bunuel's subversive masterpiece which proves that intimation can be just as effective as exploitation. Just about everything here--especially the shocking conclusion--is open to interpretation, from impulse to rationalization, and it's to Bunuel's genius that he is able to stand back, letting his audience fill in the gaps in their imagination and, if necessary, implicate themselves. And in Deneuve, Bunuel has found a brilliant blank canvas for the audience to express themselves upon; never fully clear on her motivations (though some tantalizing flashbacks offer hints), she alternates between classic French coldness and classic French passion and though she's intentionally unreachable, she's always fully aware of how to manipulate the spell she's cast over you. A great example of a master of cinema in deep collaboration with a master actress--their exploration of the female psyche runs the gamut of every possible emotion while never being crass or lowering themselves to merely reducing and simplifying.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      There is no music whatsoever in the film.
    • Goofs
      Marcel breaks the glass and oval frame to vent his anger. The same frame and picture are unbroken later.
    • Quotes

      Madame Anais: I have an idea. Would you like to be called "Belle de Jour"?

      Séverine Serizy: Belle de Jour?

      Madame Anais: Since you only come in the afternoons.

      Séverine Serizy: If you wish.

    • Connections
      Featured in Uliisses (1982)

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    FAQ21

    • How long is Belle de Jour?Powered by Alexa
    • What is 'Belle de Jour' about?
    • Is 'Belle de Jour' based on a book?
    • How does the title translate into English?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 10, 1968 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • French
      • Kalmyk-Oirat
      • Spanish
      • Latin
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bella de día
    • Filming locations
      • Chalet de la Grande Cascade, Allée de Longchamp, Bois de Boulogne, Paris 16, Paris, France(Séverine picked up by the Duke)
    • Production companies
      • Robert et Raymond Hakim
      • Paris Film Productions
      • Five Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $4,063,348
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $6,462
      • Mar 25, 2018
    • Gross worldwide
      • $4,162,697
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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