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Mouchette takes care of the household activities due to the inability of her bed-stricken mother to fulfill her responsibilities. Mouchette feeds the baby in the house and makes food, which is also one of the activities that she enjoys doing.
Mouchette takes care of the household activities due to the inability of her bed-stricken mother to fulfill her responsibilities. Mouchette feeds the baby in the house and makes food, which is also one of the activities that she enjoys doing.

[[Image:Mouchette1.png|250px|thumb|left|Mouchette stands at the gate of the rides of the fair, looking at the people in the rides.]]
[[Image:Mouchette1.png|250px|thumb|left|Mouchette stands at the gate of the rides of the fair, looking at the people in the rides.]]


One night, during a rainstorm, Mouchette becomes lost in the woods. She is found by Mr. Arsène (Jean-Claude Guilbert), an epileptic game poacher and drunkard. Unsure of whether he had just murdered a man, Arsène convinces Mouchette to stay with him, using her as an alibi. As she tries to leave, he throws her to the floor and rapes her. She returns home, where her sick mother dies in the night. Adding to her misery, she is called a slut by a store clerk who notices scratch marks on her chest, due to her top button being undone (undone buttons at the top of a womans shirt in this time would mean [[prostitute]]). She decides to take her life into her own hands, throwing herself down a hill and into a body of water, and drowns.
One night, during a rainstorm, Mouchette becomes lost in the woods. She is found by Mr. Arsène (Jean-Claude Guilbert), an epileptic game poacher and drunkard. Unsure of whether he had just murdered a man, Arsène convinces Mouchette to stay with him, using her as an alibi. As she tries to leave, he throws her to the floor and rapes her. She returns home, where her sick mother dies in the night. Adding to her misery, she is called a slut by a store clerk who notices scratch marks on her chest, due to her top button being undone (undone buttons at the top of a womans shirt in this time would mean [[prostitute]]). She decides to take her life into her own hands, throwing herself down a hill and into a body of water, and drowns.






==Cast==
==Cast==
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| [[Raymonde Chabrun]] || Grocer
| [[Raymonde Chabrun]] || Grocer
|}
|}


==Critical Reviews==

Mouchette is considered as one of the best of Bresson's films by critics, only next to [[Journal d'un curé de campagne]].

[http://www.bfi.org.uk/sightandsound/ Sight and Sound’s] prestigious critics’ poll placed Mouchette in the top 20 in 1972, but in 1992, from more than 200 critics polling for their 10 favourite films, it did not receive a single vote.




==References==
==References==

Revision as of 02:51, 11 November 2008

Mouchette
Film poster
Directed byRobert Bresson
Written byRobert Bresson
Produced byAnatole Dauman
StarringNadine Nortier
Jean-Claude Guilbert
Maria Cardinal
Paul Hebert
CinematographyGhislain Cloquet
Edited byRaymond Lamy
Music byJean Wiener
Claudio Monteverdi
Distributed byUGC / CFDC
Release dates
October 26, 1967
Running time
78 min.
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

Mouchette is a 1967 French film directed by Robert Bresson, starring Nadine Nortier, and Jean-Claude Guilbert. It is based on the novel by Georges Bernanos. "Mouchette" means "little fly" in French.

Mouchette tells the story of a 14-year-old young girl who lives with her alcoholic father and bed-stricken mother. It is a coming of age film where Mouchette discovers sexuality and Bresson portrays it in his own unique style.

According to Bresson, "Mouchette offers evidence of misery and cruelty. She is found everywhere: wars, concentration camps, tortures, assassinations." Bresson uses "flat" direction of his non-actors and creates a rhythm through editing and shot design.

The Criterion Collection DVD release includes a trailer for this film made by Jean-Luc Godard.

Plot

This film is the tale of a young girl whose life meets with countless tragedies. Mouchette (Nadine Nortier) lives in an isolated rural village with her alcoholic father and bed-stricken mother, where she is forced to take care of her infant brother and do all of the housework.

The film begins with the gamekeeper Mr.Arsene Jean Vimenet and the poacher Jean-Claude Gilbert watching each other during a game of poaching, which is metaphorical of Mouchette being chased and hunted throughout the film.

Mouchette is introduced in the film with no build-up and is shown entering the school in shabby, old clothes in contrast to her schoolmates. She is mocked and ignored by her classmates and teacher.

Mouchette goes to the fair and looks longingly at the bumper cars. A woman gives her some tokens, which Mouchette then uses to ride the bumper cars. She mets a modern man who flirts with her during the bumper car rides and she does enjoy the games in a way. She is then ridiculed by her father in the fair and is pushed into the church.

Mouchette takes care of the household activities due to the inability of her bed-stricken mother to fulfill her responsibilities. Mouchette feeds the baby in the house and makes food, which is also one of the activities that she enjoys doing.

File:Mouchette1.png
Mouchette stands at the gate of the rides of the fair, looking at the people in the rides.

One night, during a rainstorm, Mouchette becomes lost in the woods. She is found by Mr. Arsène (Jean-Claude Guilbert), an epileptic game poacher and drunkard. Unsure of whether he had just murdered a man, Arsène convinces Mouchette to stay with him, using her as an alibi. As she tries to leave, he throws her to the floor and rapes her. She returns home, where her sick mother dies in the night. Adding to her misery, she is called a slut by a store clerk who notices scratch marks on her chest, due to her top button being undone (undone buttons at the top of a womans shirt in this time would mean prostitute). She decides to take her life into her own hands, throwing herself down a hill and into a body of water, and drowns.



Cast

Besides his preference for non-professional actors, Bresson also liked to cast actors he had never used before. The one major exception to his policy is Jean-Claude Guilbert, who had the rôle of Arnold in Au hasard Balthazar, and is Arsène in this film.[1]

Actor Role
Nadine Nortier Mouchette
Jean-Claude Guilbert Arsène
Marie Cardinal Mother
Paul Hebert Father
Jean Vimenet Mathieu
Marie Susini Mathieu's wife
Suzanne Huguenin Layer Out of the Dead
Marine Trichet Louisa
Raymonde Chabrun Grocer


Critical Reviews

Mouchette is considered as one of the best of Bresson's films by critics, only next to Journal d'un curé de campagne.

Sight and Sound’s prestigious critics’ poll placed Mouchette in the top 20 in 1972, but in 1992, from more than 200 critics polling for their 10 favourite films, it did not receive a single vote.


References

  1. ^ Joseph Cunneen, "The Purity of Rebellion: Mouchette" Robert Bresson: A Spiritual Style in Film. New York: Continuum (2003): 118. "Jean-Claude Guilbert, who had been Arnold in Balthasar, is used here again as Arsène, the only "return" of a Bresson model."