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(aka 'My Night at Maud's')
Jean-Louis, a devout, unmarried engineer, has a very specific profile in
mind for his ideal wife: attractive, blonde, intelligent, and above all, a
practicing Catholic. He believes that he has found his soul mate when he spots
a young student named Francoise in a crowded church during Sunday mass, and
resolves to make her his wife. He attempts to catch up to Francoise, but loses
sight of her behind a slow moving vehicle. One evening, he encounters a
childhood friend at a restaurant, a philosophy professor named Vidal, and the
two begin to discuss the nature of religion and politics as a logical
consequence of Pascal's "wager": If a man bets on God's existence, and God
DOES NOT exist, then a man loses nothing; but if a man bets on God's
existence, and God DOES exist, then his reward is infinite. Vidal is
fascinated by the modernism of Pascal's theories - a fusion of religion and
mathematics - and believes that the philosophy applies to all aspects of life,
even the rise of communism. In contrast, Jean-Louis takes exception to the
"severity" of Pascal's theories, but ironically accepts the strict moral code
of the Catholic church. Vidal invites Jean-Louis to meet the beautiful,
sophisticated Maude, and soon the conversation, once again, turns into a
philosophical discussion. Jean-Louis insists that despite youthful
indiscretions, he is ready for marriage, and cannot be tempted into having a
meaningless affair. However, when Jean-Louis becomes stranded in Maud's house
during a snow storm, can he resist her beguiling charm and liberating honesty,
and remain "faithful" to Francoise - the "wife" whom he has not met?
Eric Rohmer presents a fascinating, clever, and insightful film on principles, faith, and love in "My Night at Maud's", the third film (first full length feature) in Rohmer's remarkable examination of morality in contemporary society, "Six Moral Tales". Rohmer abandons reverse angles and panning shots in favor of filming individual characters through extended takes, composed of medium shots. The result is a visual sense of dialogue between the actor and the audience. "My Night at Maud's" is a refreshingly simple, yet profound observation on the exhilarating process of love - from the first glance to the destined meeting - and, in between, all the wonderful distractions that derail its inevitable course. |
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Theatrical Release: October 12th, 1969
Reviews More Reviews DVD Reviews
Comparison
:Fox Lorber - Region 0 - NTSC vs. Potemkine Films - Region 'B' - Blu-ray
1) Fox Lorber - Region 0 - NTSC LEFT2) Potemkine Films Region 'B' - Blu-ray RIGHT
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Box Cover |
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Distribution | Fox Lorber - Region 0 - NTSC |
Potemkine Films Region 'B' - Blu-ray |
Runtime | 1:45:24 | 1:45:46.280 |
Video | 1.33:1
Original Aspect Ratio Average Bitrate: 4.29 mb/s NTSC 720x480 29.97 f/s |
1080i Dual-layered Blu-ray Disc Size: 34,224,368,565 bytesFeature: 24,170,035,200 bytes Video Bitrate: 27.99 MbpsCodec: MPEG-4 AVC Video |
NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes. |
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Bitrate: Blu-ray |
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Audio | French (Dolby Digital 2.0) | DTS-HD Master Audio French 945 kbps 1.0 / 48 kHz / 945 kbps / 16-bit (DTS Core: 1.0 / 48 kHz / 768 kbps / 16-bit) |
Subtitles | English (burned-in) | English and none |
Features |
Release Information: Edition Details: • Production
Credits (text screens)
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Release Information: Studio: Potemkine Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 1080i Dual-layered Blu-ray Disc Size: 34,224,368,565 bytesFeature: 24,170,035,200 bytes Video Bitrate: 27.99 MbpsCodec: MPEG-4 AVC Video
Edition Details: • Interview with Françoise Fabian (12:29)
• Telecinema
February 25th, 1974 (33:50) Chapters 14 |
Comments: |
NOTE: The below Blu-ray captures were taken directly from the Blu-ray disc. ADDITION: Potemkine Films - Region 'B' - Blu-ray (January 2014): I have already stated- I now own the Coffret Rohmer intégral combo blu ray + livret + pochette photos [Blu-ray] - it is 25 Rohmer films and 52 discs, book and more! So it will take a while to go through. My take so far is very positive. I will continue and, hopefully, at one point do a page on the entire set including the bonus discs (although extras don't seem to be English-friendly the features I have checked so far have optional English subtitles).! So it will take a while to go through. My take so far is very positive. I will continue and, hopefully, at one point do a page on the entire set including the bonus discs.For simplicity's sake I didn't bother comparing to the Criterion picture-boxed DVD version in Their Six Moral Tales Boxset reviewed HERE, since this is more dramatic :) Similar sentiments from observations on the previously reviewed Rohmer Blu-rays from Potemkine. This is also 1080i ('50i' transfer) and in the PAL running time but is so superior to the, artifact-ridden, SD - in terms of detail, layered contrast, more information in the frame etc. . They have kept the 1.33:1 aspect ratio and the visuals even exhibit some depth. For those familiar with the Fox-Lorber, from over a decade ago. Audio is lossless but still flat as a board and there are optional English subtitles with a strong translation. Extras contain a Rohmer short, interview with Françoise Fabian and a 1/2 hour episode of Telecinema from 1974 - all in French with no subtitles.Part of the Six Moral Tales and can be bought in that Potemkine Box as well as in the larger Rohmer set. It was so pleasing to revisit this film in such an improved, more film-like, presentation. ***
ON THE DVD: Bad, Bad, Bad... My only real positive about these early Fox/Lorber DVDs are that they gave me an outlet to see some outstanding films prior to going "region-free". But as far as DVDs go they are bordering on criminally poor. Analog transfer, most likely from an unconverted PAL source, non-progressive, slightly skewed frame, non-removable subtitles, No worthy extras... there are two places early in the film (at the church) where there is a video "noise bar" near the top of the screen. Is there a better English subbed version somewhere? Please let me know. |
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1) Fox Lorber - Region 0 - NTSC LEFT2) Potemkine Films Region 'B' - Blu-ray RIGHT
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CLICK EACH BLU-RAY CAPTURE TO SEE ALL IMAGES IN FULL 1920X1080 RESOLUTION
Subtitle Sample
1) Fox Lorber - Region 0 - NTSC TOP2) Potemkine Films Region 'B' - Blu-ray BOTTOM
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Screen Captures
1) Fox Lorber - Region 0 - NTSC TOP2) Potemkine Films Region 'B' - Blu-ray BOTTOM
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1) Fox Lorber - Region 0 - NTSC TOP2) Potemkine Films Region 'B' - Blu-ray BOTTOM
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1) Fox Lorber - Region 0 - NTSC TOP2) Potemkine Films Region 'B' - Blu-ray BOTTOM
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More Blu-ray Captures
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Box Cover |
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Distribution | Fox Lorber - Region 0 - NTSC |
Potemkine Films Region 'B' - Blu-ray |
Recommended Reading in French Cinema (CLICK COVERS or TITLES for more information)
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