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Pickpocket

France

1959

75 Min
Black and White
French
  • Currently 4.2/5 Stars.
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DIR Robert Bresson

PROD Agnès Delahaie

SCR Robert Bresson

DP Léonce-Henri Burel

CAST Martin LaSalle, Marika Green, Pierre Leymarie, Dolly Scal, Jean Pélégri

ED Raymond Lamy

PROD DES Pierre Charbonnier

SOUND Antoine Archimbaud

Synopsis

Robert Bresson’s incomparable tale of crime and redemption follows Michel, a young pickpocket who spends his days working the streets, subway cars, and train stations of Paris. As his compulsion grows, however, so too does his fear that his luck is about to run out. Tautly choreographed and crafted in Bresson’s inimitable style, Pickpocket reveals a master director at the height of his powers. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Robert_bresson

Robert Bresson

Often described as a “painter” of films, French director Robert Bresson was one of cinema’s greatest anomalies. He directed only 13 films over the course of 40 years, but these films were in a category all their own, minimalist works that tended towards radical (and sometimes controversial) reinterpretations of such classical sources as Diderot, Dostoyevsky, and Tolstoy. An expert manipulator of narrative incident, Bresson focused on seemingly incidental details of the stories he told and used amateur actors (whom he called ’models’) lacking any trace of theatricality, creating searching meditations on the quality of transcendence, spirituality, and alienation. Of the artistic influences inherent in his work – perhaps most apparent in his belief that the cinema is a fusion of music and painting, not the theatre and photography – Bresson once said “Art is not a luxury, but a vital necessity.”

The year of Bresson’s birth has often been subject to debate; his biographer, Philippe… read more

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Henry Krinkle

14Jan10

Very disappointing, dull and overly intellectualized film. Bresson seems to have things to say here, but all that's obvious, between the sleepwalking actors and the tension-killing voice over, is that Bresson has no faith in his characters or his audience. Lacks the insights into humanity that distinguishes Bresson's cinematic genius.  
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adam

14Jan10

I'm fed up of writing about this.   
Picture of Rebecca

Rebecca

18Nov09

what did everyone make of michel's door always being ajar? open doors usually symbolize opportunities, but i'm not sure if that's what was meant. this film is a true masterpiece and the ending is beautiful. a parody of the classic hollywood "happy ending".   
Picture of Emre Ubu

Emre Ubu

20Oct09

Loosely adapted from a Dostoevsky masterpiece, The Crime and Punishment; it is one of the most brilliant of Bresson's.  

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Articles

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Movie Poster of the Week: "Le feu follet"

By Adrian Curry on October 9, 2009
This suitably autumnal poster for Louis Malle’s Le feu follet (The Fire Within) was the creation of the brilliant German designer Hans Hillmann. Now 83 years old, Hillmann was a major film poster designer
read article

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Reviews

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By Sean Malloy Product​ions on September 15, 2009

Just checked out “Pickpocket” last night, featuring strong direction from Robert Breeson. This is such a small movie it was passed over for 10 years in America. This never got a proper distribution…  read review

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By J.R. Martin on February 19, 2009

Due to the popularity and accessibility of Godard’s ‘A Bout de Souffle’ (being filmed on the streets of Paris at the same time as ’Pickpocket’) Bresson’s film’s importance to the nouvelle vague is…  read review

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DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.