2 ou 3 Choses que je Sais d'Elle (Two or Three Things I Know About Her)

94% of critics liked it

72% of users liked it

In theaters Mar 17, 1967
Unrated, 1 hr. 30 min.

Movie Info

Director: Jean-Luc Godard
Rated: Unrated
Running Time: 1 hr. 30 min.
Genre: Art House & International, Drama
Theater Release: Mar 17, 1967
DVD Release: Jul 21, 2009
Synopsis: The feminine pronoun in the title of this film from Jean-Luc Godard refers to both a French housewife and the city of Paris, as each are changed in fundamental ways by the growth of consumer culture in Europe. Juliette Janson (Marina Vlady) lives with her husband and two children in a high-rise apartment block in Paris. Juliette and her family used to live in a working class community on the outskirts of town, but they've been drawn into the city in search of a higher standard of living,

Critic Reviews

  • Two or Three Things I Know About Her is one of the most beautiful films of the young Jean-Luc Godard, a great French cineaste, poet and frustrated lover. More...
  • Based on a series of magazine articles, the movie was made around the time Godard abandoned conventional narrative almost entirely for what he dubbed the cinematic essay. More...
  • he her in the title of Jean-Luc Godard's 1967 film is meant to be Paris. There is, however, another 'her.' More...
  • Despite an aura of wistfulness, and a certain power that accrues from the disjunction between the story of a vulnerable, life-hardened woman, the chaotic collision of sound and image, and the ham-handed political lessons, this film never moves me. More...
  • Raoul Coutard's Techniscope cinematography contemplates an espresso, filling the screen in monumental close-up with a rotating vortex of bubbles and foam. More...
  • Too good to miss. More...
  • There is certainly enough of wit and beauty, though, to keep the film afloat. More...
  • Godard is as relaxed in the film as in the title. More...
  • Though poorly received on its first release, this 1966 film seems in retrospect one of Godard's most stimulating investigations of images and surfaces -- the meanings they convey and the webs they spin. More...
  • The pinnacle of Godard's art. Probing, uncertain, hesitant, humble, lyrical and profound More...