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Paris Belongs to Us

Play trailer Poster for Paris Belongs to Us 1961 2h 18m Drama Mystery & Thriller Play Trailer Watchlist
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86% Tomatometer 14 Reviews 71% Popcornmeter 500+ Ratings
A young woman joins a theatrical troupe where she slowly believes that the director is involved with a secret group, and that he is in grave danger.
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Paris Belongs to Us

Critics Reviews

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Richard Brody The New Yorker 12/07/2015
Rivette's tightly wound images turn the ornate architecture of Paris into a labyrinth of intimate entanglements and apocalyptic menace; he evokes the fearsome mysteries beneath the surface ... Go to Full Review
Variety Staff Variety 11/12/2007
All this is overblown, making it pretentious, slow-moving and fairly confused. It takes much too long to tell its over-complicated story. Go to Full Review
Keith Uhlich Slant Magazine 11/18/2006
3/4
Rivette was perhaps more of a prognosticator than he realized, anticipating the downfall of the very movement he was involved in before it had effectively begun. Go to Full Review
Nicholas Bell IONCINEMA.com 10/09/2020
3/5
Though it's not ultimately as durable as Rivette's most iconic titles, Paris is Burning is a must for the auteur's fans. Go to Full Review
Isabel Quigly The Spectator 09/27/2020
Some pretty yawn- provoking detail, as well as its basic, though not necessarily insurmountable, disadvantages of ambiguity, woolliness and apparent triviality. Go to Full Review
Witney Seibold CraveOnline 06/03/2016
[Rivette] doesn't as fervently abandon conventional narrative in the same way Godard was so fond of, making for New Wave-flavored thrillers that are far more casual and certainly more watchable. Go to Full Review
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Audience Reviews

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01/31/2021 George Sanders in his analysis of Checkov's "In the Cart" highlights the duty of the author to bring the reader along like a sidecar to a motorbike. Here, we are that sidecar to Anne, a fabulously flawed narrator inadvertently introduced to and then a tourist in a confused, conspiratorial post war pseudo intellectual world with all the suspicious terror of the McCarthy trials. She is our Dorothy, our Alice discovering a micro community obsessed with murder, intrigue and half truths that are less than they appear. Film noir at its best and a template of what a spy film should be, where our protagonist is always the last to know. Maxi bon. See more 04/19/2016 A black and white movie is a felony See more 07/29/2014 Filmed over the course of three years, and considered as one of the pioneering efforts in the Nouvelle Vague, Rivette's absorbing debut is a mystery film that refuses to be conventional, even if the three-year time span rises some inconsistencies to the surface. Since the very beginning, Rivette asks us to make a leap of faith. What is introduced as a suicide slowly escalates into the investigation of an international conspiracy, where the lives of a group of Spaniards seems to be in danger. The style alone and the events discussed, even if misunderstood for a considerable amount of time during the first half, are interesting enough thanks to the performances and some impressionistic glances at the city of Paris interacting with this bunch of mysterious souls. Nothing is as clear as it seems, and yet, you want to keep figuring out more. In this sense, Betty Schneider's character, Anne Goupil, becomes the easiest one to empathize with. The rest of the characters are strange Hitchcockian derivatives with unclear and maybe paranoiac personal issues. Beyond the performances and how events are presented in fragments, which may frustrate some viewers as it takes a lot of time to explain those pieces of story, the style is the one that keeps your eyes glued to the screen. For a debut, it is an interesting effort, showing close-ups and wide vistas of Paris as if it wasn't a first directorial effort. Ironically, the film presents this conspiracy plot with a theatrical backdrop, where a key character directs a play adaptation of Shakespeare's Pericles, maybe signaling some possible past, present or future tragedy, with the intensity of classic Greek theater. This brings me to mention the parallelism between the scenes of the play and how overtly theatrical the performances are by the actors in the movie, maybe intentionally(?), which I found something difficult to grasp given the seriousness and scope of imagined-vs.real paranoia and international conspiracies. Although the effort is uneven and unnecessarily time-consuming - unlike the other gigantic films by Rivette in terms of running time - and it doesn't always consummate its entire web of secondary subplots and malevolent intentions, <i>Paris Is Ours</i> is an interesting exercise in style and the mystery genre with good performances, experienced visuals and a film that transmits that Paris, indeed, doesn't belong to anyone. 75/100 P.S. Be on the lookout for cameos by Rivette himself, Chabrol, Demy, and finally Godard, the latter ridiculously attempting to be as cool-looking as the cameo of Melville in his debut <i>Breathless</i> (1960). Godard simply cannot feel confident without a pair of shades... See more 04/22/2014 Ambiguous: The Movie! See more 02/04/2014 Rivette's contribution to the New Wave took longer to put together (filming stretched over two years) and is more opaque than the more famous films of Truffaut, Godard, and Chabrol. It is also darker, more portentous and full of mystery, as well as being a first showing of the kinds of themes that Rivette would return to in his 12 hour epic Out 1. A powerful conspiracy (fascist, nationalist, related to HUAC?) is threatening the characters who know about it, including two expatriate Americans. A Spanish guitarist commits suicide - or does he? A young girl gets involved in the intrigue through her older brother, becomes infatuated with a theatre director who feels overwhelmed by events, and seeks a missing tape of guitar music to assist his production of Pericles. However, all (or some) of this may be a fiction. Paris looks bohemian and seedy and makes you wish you were there, despite the (real or imagined) danger. See more 05/03/2010 [font=Trebuchet MS]Full review to come.[/font] See more Read all reviews
Paris Belongs to Us

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Movie Info

Synopsis A young woman joins a theatrical troupe where she slowly believes that the director is involved with a secret group, and that he is in grave danger.
Director
Jacques Rivette
Producer
Roland Nonin
Screenwriter
Jacques Rivette, Jean Gruault
Genre
Drama, Mystery & Thriller
Original Language
French (France)
Release Date (Streaming)
Mar 8, 2016
Runtime
2h 18m
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