Get movie widget Recommend it Add to Favorites

Mireille Darc, Jean Yanne, Jean-Pierre Kalfon, Valérie Lagrange, Jean-Pierre Léaud ... see more see more... , Jean Eustache , Paul Gégauff , Ernest Menzer , Yves Alfonso , Yves Beneyton , Blandine Jeanson , Daniel Pommereulle , Georges Staquet , Virginie Vignon , Anne Wiazemsky , Juliet Berto , Laszlo Szabo , Yves Afonso , Jean-Claude Guilbert

French filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard's Le Weekend remains his most consistently relentless attack on the bourgeois values of his own country and the perceived imperialism of the United States. Mireille Da... read more read more...rc plays the central character, an "average" woman who is systematically radicalized during a weekend motor trip. No sooner have the woman and her husband (Jean Yanne) embarked on their journey than they become enmeshed in the mother of all traffic jams. The motorists rave, rant, burn, rape, murder, pillage and even descend into cannibalism -- all of which is treated by Godard as a natural progression of events. The prevalent theory that Jean-Luc Godard had intended Weekend as the apotheosis of his career is bolstered by the film's last two titles: "End of Film." "End of Cinema." ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Flixster Users

79% liked it

7,582 ratings

Critics

95% liked it

19 critics

Unrated, 1 hr. 45 min.

Directed by: Jean-Luc Godard

Release Date: January 1, 1967

Invite friends to see

DVD Release Date: August 23, 2005

Stats: 593 reviews

Your Rating



clear rating

Flixster Reviews (593)


  • May 10, 2012
    When was the last time you had a hell lot of fun while watching a film? And we aren't even talking escapist, commercial popcorn flicks or sitcoms! Far from it. We're talking about an avant-garde surrealist film, highly disturbing yet darkly humorous at the same time....in French ... read moreNew Wave style!

    Jean-Luc Godard's "Weekend" (sometimes written "Week End") will guarantee a delightfully macabre ride through hell, as a husband and wife cheating on each other decide to ride to the country to secure inheritance from the parents of the wife, by possibly murdering her father! Sounds crazy? Not half as crazy as what ensues next as their journey turns into an outlandish odyssey through a nightmare full of traffic jams and gruesome car accidents and terrorists and hippies and cannibals!

    [img]https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/-hItrCccR3F0/T6lY_ojd6qI/AAAAAAAAChc/HbKkFHlB1eM/s544/vlcsnap-2012-05-08-22h58m43s69.jpg[/img]

    What "Weekend" is about is difficult to pen. Perhaps it is about Godard's bizarre vision of the apocalypse; of a bleak future that's going to see the end of civilization as we know it; a world in which people will turn on one another and start raping and looting and killing and eating each other! A world in which the bourgeois society will bear the brunt of its own materialistic trappings...when people will become so insensitive, they will even steal stuff off of dead bodies rather nonchalantly!

    Or perhaps "Weekend" is merely a black comedy built around everything Godard personally hated and wanted to make fun of, through the medium he knows best...cinema! And he pulls it off like there's no tomorrow! Sometimes he also resorts to self-parody! And for that, he uses some insane yet subtle absurdist humour. Blink and you may miss some of the gems and golden lines uttered in this film. Sample this: Roland (Jean Yanne) abandons (or loses) his car and starts out on foot with his wife Corinne (Mireille Darc ). On the way there are numerous mangled bodies, victims of car accidents and the remains of their vehicles lying around, but they are just casually ignored! Roland tries to ask directions to another character in the film, gets some loony response in return and comments "What a rotten film! All we meet are crazy people!"

    [img]https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-LYhBDjKUAAk/T6lZAodH1GI/AAAAAAAACho/H2zBQtT4aWA/s544/vlcsnap-2012-05-08-22h59m49s219.jpg[/img]

    Godard, an eccentric auteur that he is, makes sure he frustrates his audiences as well as keeps them hooked with his bravura writing. Usage of intertitles isn't uncommon in a Godard film, but in "Weekend" they take on a new, entirely free form, get sprinkled arbitrarily between scenes, interrupting randomly yet trying to say something about the scene at hand. But they don't always take a serious form; sometimes some of the dialog uttered takes the form of intertitles, sometimes Godard tries to be funny by adding title cards like "A film found on scrap heap" to describe this motion picture! At other times we see some sharp political jibes.

    Then there are the typical Godard idiosyncrasies including a background score that sometimes drowns the dialog and appears out of nowhere and disappears just as suddenly as it appeared; some deliberate repetitions of scenes and dialogs as if it's some editing flaw! And let's not forget the over 8 minutes long tracking shot of a traffic jam accompanied by blaring car horns in the background and car drivers cursing each other in the foreground! This shot ends in an ironic fashion that reveals the cause of the jam! The film takes dramatic turns with one bizarre event after another, subjecting us to a savagely funny ride, with senseless political speeches, oddball camerawork and ultimately an allegorical, chaotic finale.....the aim was clearly to alarm the viewer and leave him/her in a jaw-dropped state!

    [img]https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-NlMPyk9q5dQ/T6lZARh44XI/AAAAAAAAChg/WkOZCd6GptI/s544/vlcsnap-2012-05-08-22h47m41s110.jpg[/img]

    There are notable movie references....although it is difficult to say in one case; a "Persona"-esque (Ingmar Bergman, 1966) monologue of Corinne narrating a particularly wild sexual adventure, and in a nod to Luis Bunuel, perhaps, a title card that reads "The Exterminating Angel" (1962). Speaking of Bunuel, it is not difficult to find some creative similarities between "Weekend" and Bunuel's "The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie". Nonetheless, this could be a first film of its kind for Godard (it is a significant departure compared to his earlier 60s works) and he makes sure he leaves no stone unturned in delivering a masterwork. "Weekend" could very well have been rechristened "Week End" (as it is known in some countries) owing to the fact that this was Godard's final film of his most celebrated cinematic period.

    Highly imaginative, but pure Madness; Godard's "Weekend" = Luis Bunuel on steroids!


    Score: 10/10 (Hands down!)

    [img]https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-RSu58qX9n2k/T6lZBZ_QsxI/AAAAAAAAChs/BCZSLWr6mos/s544/vlcsnap-2012-05-08-23h02m42s159.jpg[/img]
  • November 30, 2009
    An unconventional bit of storytelling that I found to be quite enjoyable. Looking at this movie with a preconceived notion of narrative would make this an extremely unpleasant and boring experience. Letting go would be the first thing I would advise someone to do. Given the prope... read morer lens, it's a beautiful film. Its hostility towards traditions are quite interesting. It attacks not only capitalism, but marriage, life, death and compassion.
  • September 6, 2009
    Bizarrely strange and beautifully done. Nice political message.
  • August 24, 2009
    radical surrealist road movie a la buñuel. political harangues get a bit tiresome. no doubt it was cutting edge in 1967
  • August 12, 2009
    "What a rotten film. All we meet are crazy people"

    Now I can see why Premiere voted this movie as one of "The 25 Most Dangerous Movies"
  • June 9, 2009
    Political. Surrealist. With terrible black humour. Trop stupide pour moi.




  • February 24, 2009
    Campy and mildly funny attack to the upper classes by Jean-Luc Godard, one of the most acid and persuasive demagogues in film history.
  • February 4, 2009
    This film, completely went over my head, I?m sure to many it?s a creative masterpiece, but I just found it dull, annoying and it lacked any kind of real storyline
  • December 27, 2008
    Imagine La Aventura meets Discreet Charm of the Bourgeois meets Monty Python
  • June 1, 2007
    Godard's most f'd up, apocalyptic movie

Critic Reviews


J. Hoberman
October 4, 2011
J. Hoberman, Village Voice

This apocalyptic farce-Alice in Wonderland as reconceived by the Marquis de Sade-would mark both the high point and the end of Godard's meteoric career as a popular artist. Full Review

Renata Adler
July 11, 2004
Renata Adler, New York Times

The film must be seen, for its power, ambition, humor, and scenes of really astonishing beauty. Full Review

Keith Uhlich
October 5, 2011
Keith Uhlich, Time Out New York

As long as cinema like this exists, there's no end in sight. Full Review

Dan Jardine
August 9, 2011
Dan Jardine, Cinemania

Uncompromisingly cynical and completely unforgiving, Week End is a satire so black, you couldn't see hope if it was dancing in front of your eyes carrying sparklers and singing La Marseillaise. Full Review

Jay Antani
August 17, 2010
Jay Antani, Cinema Writer

This is Lord of the Flies as played by adults, and for Left Bank intellectuals, heady with righteous protest and wired on too many coffees and cigarettes Full Review

Urban Cinefile Critics
March 23, 2008
Urban Cinefile Critics, Urban Cinefile

There is nothing predictable about Weekend; Godard uses the camera as a radical satirical tool, inserting it up the backside of a society he perceives as lost, constrained and confused. And so are we. Full Review

Tim Brayton
January 20, 2008
Tim Brayton, Antagony & Ecstasy

A film that reads itself, tells the viewer what that reading should be, and at the same time tells the viewer that this reading is inaccurate and should be ignored. Full Review

Jake Euker
February 9, 2006
Jake Euker, F5 (Wichita, KS)

Visionary, insane, and barbarously funny; don't miss the chance to accept the challenge Weekend is still dying to make. Full Review

Eric Henderson
August 29, 2005
Eric Henderson, Slant Magazine

Weekend is a luridly colorful compendium of aesthetic juxtapositions and audio-visual schisms that evoke the frustrated tenor of the era. Full Review

Christopher Null
August 22, 2005
Christopher Null, Filmcritic.com

give the man credit for bitching about the human condition in style Full Review

Critic ratings and reviews powered by RottenTomatoes.com

Fresh (60% or more critics rated the movie positively)

Rotten (59% or fewer critics rated the movie positively)

More Like This


Click a thumb to vote on that suggestion, or add your own suggestions.

  • Sweet Movie
    Sweet Movie (50%)
  • For Ever Mozart
    For Ever Mozart (50%)
  • Un Chien Andalou (An Andalusian Dog)
    Un Chien Andalou (An Andalusian Dog) (67%)
  • Még kér a nép (Red Psalm)
    Még kér a nép (Red Psalm) (0%)

Facts


No facts approved yet. Be the first

Weekend (Week End... : Watch Free on TV


Movie Quizzes


No quizzes for Weekend (Week End). Want to create one?

Recent News


No recent headlines. Got one?

Recent Lists


Most Popular Skin


No skins yet. Interested in creating one?