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Cleo from 5 to 7
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Directed by Agnès Varda.
Cleo From 5 to 7 (Cleo de cinq a sept), per its title, concentrates on two hours in the life of a woman. Those hours are desperate ones, in that Cleo, a pop singer, awaits the results of her tests for cancer. Director Agnes Varda stages the film in "real" rather than subjective time, its various episodes divided into chapters, using significant Tarot cards. During the allotted time, Cleo visits her friends, tries to sing her worries away, spends money, and cries. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Cleo from 5 to 7 (1962, France, ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
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"Cleo from 5 to 7 is one of the best films of the New Wave, a masterpiece to stand alongside of Jules and Jim and My Life to Live. This is a film of limitless invention, energy and fun, as well as one of the most densley packed with thematic material and ideas that I have seen. You know a film is going to be quirky if it proposes to show two hours in someones life but is only ninety minuets long. The film opens at 5:00 pm on a summer's day as Cleo (Corrine Marchand) a French pop singer waits for the results of biopsy that will determine if she is gravley ill. In an attempt to pass the time, she visits or is visited by a variety of people, including a fortune teller with protestations of doom, her manager, two of her songwriters, her best friend (a nude model), another friend who runs a movie theatre and finally a soldier who she begins to fall for- only minuets before she may be told her time on Earth is very short. No description can really do this movie justice, as it's not rea ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Writer/director Agnes Varda's Cléo de 5 à 7 is one of the more unassuming works in the French New Wave -- it has neither the historical gravity of, say, Alain Resnais's Hiroshima Mon Amour nor the shock value of Jean-Luc Godard's À Bout de Souffle -- but in its own quiet way, it offers offers a meticulous record of one woman's capacity to observe, dream, and feel. In near real-time, we follow pop singer Cléo (Corrine Marchand) as she waits for her doctor's verdict on a cancer test; though the subject matter is heart-rending, Varda's athletic direction prevents the film from becoming a cloying weepie. In true New Wave fashion, she incorporates any technique that suits her needs: a meandering soundtrack that picks up ancillary characters' conversations; subjective point-of-view shots; titles that separate the film into "chapters"; and documentary-style snatches of street life. Instead of cluttering the film, Varda's flourishes have a breezy, existential quality that underscores Cléo's impending news without trivializing her predicament. Marchand aids the director immensely; her intuitive performance suggests a brainier Marilyn Monroe afflicted with spiritual malaise. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
 



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