Beauty of the Day (1967) France
Beauty of the Day Image Cover
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Director:Buñuel, Luis
Studio:Robert et Raymond Hakim
Writer:Joseph Kessel, Luis Buñuel
Rating:7.8 (15,347 votes)
Date Added:2012-06-05
ASIN:065935139546
Awards:Nominated for BAFTA Film Award, Another 4 wins
Genre:French films
IMDb:0061395
Duration:1:42:00
Aspect Ratio:1.66 : 1
Sound:Mono
Languages:French
Subtitles:English
LAC code:300007686
DVD or VHS:DVD
Original:original
Buñuel, Luis  ...  (Director)
Joseph Kessel, Luis Buñuel  ...  (Writer)
 
Catherine Deneuve  ...  Séverine Serizy
Jean Sorel  ...  Pierre Serizy
Michel Piccoli  ...  Henri Husson
Geneviève Page  ...  Madame Anais
Pierre Clémenti  ...  Marcel
Françoise Fabian  ...  Charlotte
Macha Méril  ...  Renee
Muni  ...  Pallas
Maria Latour  ...  Mathilde
Claude Cerval  ...  
Michel Charrel  ...  Footman
Iska Khan  ...  Asian client
Bernard Musson  ...  Majordomo
Marcel Charvey  ...  Prof. Henri
François Maistre  ...  L'ensignant
Summary: A young Paris housewife, Séverine, grows bored with her stable husband. When she learns of the presence of a high-class brothel in her neighborhood, she quietly goes to work there--but only during the day, until five o'clock in the afternoon. This sublime 1967 film is one of the latter-day masterpieces of the Spanish-born director Luis Buñuel, whose career forms one of the greatest and boldest arcs in cinema. By the time of Belle de jour, Buñuel had become almost completely deadpan in his style, which not only leaves the motivation of Séverine a mystery (despite a few flashbacks to degradations of her youth), but also casts the entire plot in doubt. An old surrealist from the 1920s (when his first classic, Un chien andalou, was made in collaboration with Salvador Dali), Buñuel suggests that what we see may be real, or simply Séverine's imagination. Because he was the least pretentious of directors, Buñuel keeps his material playful, wicked, yet cutting. As Séverine, the impossibly lovely Catherine Deneuve uses her cool demeanor to great effect--she never breaks her deadpan, either. In 1995, after having been out of official circulation for years, Belle de Jour was re-released in America and became an unexpected art-house hit. --Robert Horton