Stream Contempt - Criterion Collection Movie Online
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Stream Contempt - Criterion Collection Movie Online.
Movie Title: Contempt - Criterion Collection Contempt - Criterion Collection is available for streaming or downloading. Click Here to Stream or Download Contempt - Criterion Collection |
Criterion does it again. A unbelievable, keen 1963 film rescued from dreadful, old prints and sad video transfers and made to survey - like Criterion’s equally outstanding refurbishment of Fellini’s “Juliet of the Spirits” - almost like a brand-new movie; as spruce and as shapely as I have ever seen it. Not everyone will “come by” what Jean-Luc Godard is up to with “Contempt”, and some will find it but detached not care for it - aesthetic enough. He never claimed to be making movies for every audience any more than he claimed to be making them for rarefied elites, nevertheless a enormous spectrum of us do understand and be pleased his artistic project (of which this is one sublime outcome), and if you can suspend for two hours the narrow, outmoded expectations Hollywood product has cultivated in many of us, that number may include you. Robert Stam’s alternate-channel audio commentary provides many racy insights regarding the significance and filmmaking innovations of “Contempt”, along with righteous analysis of the sources of the myth (in Homer and modern Italian literature) and the performances, and some information regarding how the movie came to be cast and produced, which goes a long scheme toward explaining why Godard made the movie he eventually made. “Contempt” may be Godard’s most “mature” film, but then art is not only about innovation, but also about mastery. If the performances are not always so subtle they are nevertheless wonderfully nuanced, including that of the mountainous director (and non-actor) Fritz Lang, and Brigitte Bardot - unruffled at the apogee of her Gallic voluptuousness - reveals a depth unimagined by those rapid to dismiss her bathtub sex kitten persona - not to mention, most of her legendarily splendid naked body, in Technicolor and CinemaScope. It’s as powerful about how things don’t work in a relationship as it is about how they don’t work (for the purposes of art) in the movie business, and is as relevant to both subjects today as forty years ago. The second disc supplements include spellbinding and delightful interviews (especially the conversation between Jean-Luc Godard and Fritz Lang), and a short subject about Bardot and the photographers who followed her around relentlessly (”Paparazzi”) that’s unprejudiced fun. Disc two also features the perfect antidote to today’s movie trailers that go on and on and spoil everything: the one for “Contempt” shows you images from the film but manages to shriek almost nothing about it! This was a home rush, Criterion - thank you, thank you, thank you!
No one has captured the extinguish of a relationship on film better than Godard in Contempt. In between the excrutiatingly moral scenes between Piccoli and Bardot are musings on the nature of cinema, Homer’s Odyssey, Godardian polemics and a practical treatise on the expend of color in film by Raoul Coutard. And those tracking shots of Godard! This is a terrific DVD - the image and color are top-notch, sound crystal certain. Another huge presentation from the Criterion Collection. But what I really appreciated was that on the disc’s menu hide there was a elephantine rendition of George Delerue’s graceful main theme, easily one of the most pretty motif’s ever written for film. Worth the effect of the DVD for that alone.
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