Monthly Archives: May 2019

A Man and a Woman (1966)

A Man and a Woman (Un homme et une femme)
Directed by Claude Lalouch
Written by Pierre Uytterhoeven
1966/France
Les Films 13
Repeat viewing/Amazon Instant

 

Jean-Louis Duroc: Some Sundays start well and end badly. It’s hard to believe- It’s crazy to refuse happiness. If I had to go through this again, What would I do? Is there anything else I could do? To see her for months on end as a pal. What happens? You end up being pals, maybe. She wired, ‘I love you.’ Admit it boy, you just don’t understand women.

Always a treat to see true love develop between two beautiful people accompanied by a great soundtrack.

Anne Gautier (Anouk Aimee) is a script supervisor with a young daughter.  Jean-Louis Duroc (Jean-Louis Trintignant) is a race car driver with a young son.  Both have lost a spouse. Their children attend the same boarding school and are already friends..  One Sunday, Jean-Louis offers Anne a ride home from the school.  The two hit it off immediately.

Anne seems still to be in love with her dead husband.  Gradually and tentatively, the two try to get closer.

This grown-up romance is beautiful to look at and Francis Lai’s score is iconic.  Love the actors.  It left me with a warm feeling.

I kept wondering what the constant transitions between B&W and color symbolized.  Turns out Lalouch simply couldn’t afford to shoot the whole thing in color!

A Man and a Woman won Academy Awards for Best Foreign-Language Film and Best Writing, Story and Screenplay – Written Directly for the Screen.  It was nominated in the categories Best Director, Best Original Score and Best Original Song.

 

The Projected Man (1966)

The Projected Man 
Directed by Ian Curteis and John Croydon
Written by John Croydon and Peter Bryan; story by Frank Quatrocce
UK/1966
Compton Films
First viewing/YouTube

[box] Tagline: Born a Man…Turned Into a Living Laser Beam By Science’s Most Gruesome Experiment![/box]

This movie has a many things in common with The Fly (1958).  Quality is not among them.

Scientists are experimenting with transmitting matter through space by means of laser beams.  The process works well on inanimate objects but there are a few glitches in transmitting living things.  The sinister head of the institute is trying to halt the experiments, discredit the scientist, and secretly sell the research to an unseen figure.  Dr. Paul Steiner, chief scientist, decides he will prove his process works by transmitting himself his boss’s dining room.  This works just about as well as could be expected. We get a love triangle for good measure.

This one got the MST3K treatment and the riff track provides some laughs.  Unfortunately, the original is just tedious.