Weekend Movie Review
Weekend Review
"Weekend" Overview

Rating: NR
1967
Cast and Crew
Director : Jean-Luc GodardProducer : Jean-Luc Godard
Screenwiter : Jean-Luc Godard
Starring : Mireille Darc,Jean Yanne,Jean-Pierre Kalfon,Valérie Lagrange,Jean-Pierre Léaud,Yves Beneyton,Paul Gégauff
Weekend is probably Jean-Luc Godard's most renowned, disturbing, and
controversial film finally comes to DVD, where old school fans can rediscover
it, and modern filmgoers can give it a spin and say, "What the hell!?"
The film is a broad indictment of consumerism, politics, and pretty much
everything about humanity in general. In essence it's a story about a couple
who try to take a weekend vacation in France, only to be stymied at every turn
by traffic, revolutionaries, and ultimately murder in the woods. It's basically
a comedy, inasmuch as any film in which a civil war erupts and people get eaten
by each other can be considered comedy.
Forget the plot, though -- which is just as long on speeches about sex and
violence as it is on lingering scenes with no dialogue at all. This is the kind
of movie that Monty Python got off on making fun of -- the kind where a band of
peoples traipsing through the woods could, quite naturally, encounter one man
playing a drum kit and another man barbecuing. The film is separated by title
cards -- some simply documenting the time, some complete non-sequiturs ("A week
of four Thursdays"). They come during breaks in the action, and right in the
middle of it. They're just as spastic as the movie.
Godard's criticisms on and observations of (then-) modern society are nothing
unique -- and one could say that countless Buñuel movies have done it better --
but give the man credit for bitching about the human condition in style. If
nothing else, Weekend is worth seeing for one of cinema's greatest tracking
shots: An epic traffic jam on a small country road, interrupted by people
playing chess between the cars, people making out, and countless other
absurdities -- only to find a collection of severed bodies waiting at the end
of the line, blocking the way. When an early monologue about a tawdry sex
session gets interrupted by the question, "Is this real or a nightmare?,"
Godard would simply answer, "What's the difference?"
The DVD includes a critic's commentary, plus a few interviews and featurettes
about the film.
Aka Week End.
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Review by Christopher Null
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