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Synopsis

Jean-Luc Godard’s subversive foray into commercial filmmaking is a star-studded Cinemascope epic. Contempt (Le Mépris) stars Michel Piccoli as a screenwriter torn between the demands of a proud European director (played by legendary director Fritz Lang), a crude and arrogant American producer (Jack Palance), and his disillusioned wife, Camille (Brigitte Bardot) as he attempts to doctor the script for a new film version of The Odyssey. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Jean_luc_godard

Jean-Luc Godard

The lynchpin of the French New Wave, Jean-Luc Godard was arguably the most influential filmmaker of the postwar era. Beginning with his groundbreaking 1959 feature debut A Bout de Souffle, Godard revolutionized the motion picture form, freeing the medium from the shackles of its long-accepted cinematic language by rewriting the rules of narrative, continuity, sound, and camera work. Later in his career, he also challenged the common means of feature production, distribution, and exhibition, all in an effort to subvert the conventions of the Hollywood formula to create a new kind of film.

Godard was born in Paris on December 3, 1930, the second of four children. After receiving his primary education in Nyon, Switzerland – during World War II, he became a naturalized Swiss citizen – he studied ethnology at the Sorbonne, but spent the vast majority of his days at the Cine-Club du Quartier Latin, where he first met fellow film fanatics Francois Truffaut and Jacques Rivette. In May… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 14 wall posts.

Kurt Walker

23Jan10

One year ago I discovered Le Mepris. As soon as the credits rolled, I returned to the main menu in order to start the film over again. The second time the film was finished, a cinephile was born. I know that Godard is source of many (heck, MOST) arguments here on The Auteurs, but one importance that cannot be argued-- is that of love. In this case, my love for cinema, and thus the world I now live in, was born.  
Picture of Alex Lenzi

Alex Lenzi

12Jan10

Monumental in scope with some of the best directing i've ever seen in a film.  
Picture of GodardNut

GodardNut

11Jan10

Intellectually stimulating, bitingly satirical, consistently inventive, beautifully shot, endlessly relevant, FRITZ FUCKING LANG, this film has a lot of things going on in it. Its subtle approach but heartbreaking climax is played out by perfectly by Godard.  
Picture of Danny Derakhshan

Danny Derakhshan

10Jan10

Enjoyable, sexual, exciting, but boring and ugly at the same time.  

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 5 of 1474 fans.

Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.
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Topics/Questions/Exercises Of The Week—13 November 2009

By Glenn Kenny on November 13, 2009
On The Evolution Of CinemaScope: Or, of you're going to be a stickler about names of formats and such, "The 2.35:1 Or So Aspect Ratio." Above: The Robe (Henry Koster, 1953). Above: Bonjour Tristesse
read article
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The Auteurs Daily: NYFF. Everyone Else

By David Hudson on October 8, 2009
Updated through 10/31. "Following her 2003 debut The Forest for the Trees, 32-year-old German writer-director Maren Ade's trenchant, funny, and sensitive Everyone Else (Alle Anderen) cuts deeper than
read article
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Some notes on "Made in USA": Detective

By David Phelps on January 7, 2009
One of the greatest mysteries of Jean-Luc Godard’s Made in USA (1966) is just what the mystery is. Ex-journalist Anna Karina slinks around in a trenchcoat asking about an old lover who’s disappeared, is
read article

Lists

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Reviews

Displaying 4 of 11

Contempt

By gino on January 10, 2010

I can see where Godard was coming from in making Contempt, but it seems as if he was lost in the process of creating it. Maybe I’m wrong though- maybe he knew what he was doing all along. I can definitely…  read review

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By Rocco on November 30, 2009

I’m not equipped to write a full review but I must express my contempt for this film. I’ve attempted to watch it on three or more occasions and cannot get past the hour mark. The film’s pacing is so…  read review

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By timotay​o on September 6, 2009

In short, a contemplative, contemporary and curious look at…contempt.

Jean-luc Godard is fascinating. I am drawn to his audacity. To deliberately go against whatever…in the medium of film…  read review

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By HUSKY CZECH on September 2, 2009

Honestly, in a movie this drawn-out, I don’t care how important the message is. It was okay for the first ~45 minutes, and yes, the casa malaparte is amazing, brigitte is beautiful, the music is catchy…  read review

Forum

Displaying 4 discussion topics.

Blu-ray release

14 posts by 12 people 3 days ago

Font in Comtempt

2 posts by 2 people 6 months ago

LIst your top 10 threads...

8 posts by 5 people 9 months ago

DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.