La Belle Nosieuse is fours long, slow moving and mezmerizing. I wish I knew how Jacques Rivette pulls that off. The story of a blocked elderly genius artist Frenhofer (Michelle Piccoli) who is brought back to creative life by a young fiery woman Marianne (Emmanuelle Beart in her... read more
Michel Piccoli,
Emmanuelle Béart,
Jane Birkin,
David Bursztein,
Marianne Denicourt
... see more
In this fascinating and unconventional examination of the creative process, an artist near the end of his career finds new inspiration in a young model. Edouard Frenhofer (Michel Piccoli) is a famous ... read more
DVD Release Date: July 6, 2004
Stats: 178 reviews
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Flixster Reviews (178)
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May 9, 2012
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October 4, 2008fb1144932598Action? None. Plot? No. Dialogue? Not much. And yet, I found it fascinating to watch the creative process. I enjoyed watching the two main characters interact. As Edouard (Piccoli) exerted his will over Marianne (Beart), and her resistance gave way to entering into the collaborat... read more
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March 28, 2005
[font=Century Gothic]"La Belle Noiseuse" and "L'Enfer" are two French movies starring Emmanuelle Beart, directed by two very different directors who emerged from the French new wave, Jacques Rivette and Claude Chabrol, respectively.[/font]
[font=Century Gothic][/font]
[font=Cent... read more -
February 18, 2010
La Belle Noiseuse took me 2 days to finish it. Simple it was a 4 hour movie and wanted to take my time to watch it complete and take every detail the movie brought with it. The main point of the movie was to provide a sight of the burdens of an artists as he created art. The cha... read more
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December 22, 2008
Unique experience,transparent penetration to the painter's workshop....Rivette on top of the worldwide mindfuck coalition.
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July 15, 2007
the realistic scratchy sound of a paintbrush repeated ad noiseuseum grows on you, especially considering what, i mean who, the subject is
Critic Reviews
Some movies are worlds that we can sink into, and La Belle Noiseuse is one of them. Full Review
The underlying ideas may be a little droopy, but they're staged in such exacting, private terms that they are redeemed. Full Review
What's good about the film is the sense of real evolution, of believable character change, instead of the Speedy Gonzalez transformations movie characters usually experience. What's also good is a rea... Full Review
Like all great works of art, the film has a purity of line and structure as it plays out its theme. Full Review
Jacques Rivette's much praised Cannes Grand Prize winner vacillates between genuine insight and didactic mystique-of-the-artist bull****. Full Review
As impeccably shot as its subject deserves, the film is more accessible than most of Rivette's work, with characteristically playful passing nods to the relationship between life and performance. Full Review
I won't explain what happens with the masterpiece; even at four hours, the film cooks up a certain amount of suspense and surprise. Full Review
In this molasses-slow four-hour drama, Jacques Rivette proves that he's got an understanding of fine art, but a minimal one of the art of movies. Full Review
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