Mouchette Comments

  • Sister 2022-03-19 09:01:08

    Bomi Lao Shi points to Bresson’s girly feelings, and behind it is still a strong reality-the multiple weaknesses of society, family, and gender. The stubborn hum of the girl's leather shoes, the light, shadow and noise left by the passing cars in the dimly lit room, and the ending are...

  • Ashlynn 2022-03-19 09:01:08

    #重看#4.5; It has something in common with "Donkey" and "Money", both of which are harmful to people by the indifferent environment; long stalks stand alone, neglected by cold-eyed prejudice, bad family environment and patriarchal oppression, neighbours wear colored The glasses are humiliated, no one is cute, and there is no love to tell. For a time, he tried to reach out and grab the false light. The last straw broke the humble girl who had also tried to smile at life. A trap scene is set at the...

  • Dee 2022-03-19 09:01:08

    The world is so desolate and ruthless for the girl Muschett, only death can relieve the external suffering and inner hatred. At the beginning of the film, Muschett asked himself in the woods: "What would they do without me?" Similar questions were discussed by Frank Capra in an extremely inspirational way ([How beautiful is life]), and Bresson's coldness runs through the beginning and the end, like the metaphor of hunting and trapping, and killing the protagonist on the screen many times...

  • Darby 2022-03-19 09:01:08

    Bresson completely ruined the original filming, dear! I think this girl is pretentious. Bresson has acted too hard: the most important point is that Asen gave her family the lack of respect and attention, she is a self-sacrifice, not Stockholm! The original book is a concentrated narrative of night and morning, very subtle! What are you stretched...

  • Dessie 2022-03-19 09:01:08

    The last paragraph of "The Dreamers" is useful to the end of the film. Very...

  • Christelle 2022-03-18 09:01:06

    The obedience and resistance of Mouchette shown in the movie are her actions to deal with the exploitation of others. Bresson’s non-exploitation, or indifference and cruelty, is that he has omitted the little bit of Mouchette's “for himself” action. Seeing that the audience is about to empathize with her, the next second has been cut into the full after the sadness. Tears on the face. Therefore, when Mouchette finally went to tumbling constantly at the end, it became a rare and long final...

  • Mortimer 2022-03-18 09:01:06

    The way of narration is restrained to the point of no edges and corners, and so calm as to be almost indifferent. Muchet is eccentric and indifferent to the world. She was calmly hurt by everyone, and made a trivial counterattack with a blank face. The mother wanted to live for the baby in her swaddle. Thinking that I discussed suicide with my roommate before, she said that she always wondered what would happen to her grandmother if she committed suicide, so she quickly dismissed her thoughts;...

  • Florine 2022-03-17 09:01:08

    The hare also wants to be close to the fruit, but the first thing is to live. This is realism. We can give cats and dogs the greatest kindness, but indifferently treat struggling souls that have nothing to do with ourselves. This is...

  • Nicola 2022-03-17 09:01:08

    The final water scene should be edited and played back, which is a funeral for the protagonist embedded in the context of his own work. I don't know if it was a misunderstanding. The first time I saw the poster, I thought that Muschet was a male/child. After watching the movie, I found that it was "she", and she died as a woman of XX. As a gender, there is no growth stage and space, and no trace of change. Even I am "de-genderized" (and cannot be understood in the context of equal rights)....

  • Jimmy 2022-03-16 09:01:07

    Bresson's pursuit of psychological portrayal and the truth of life is almost paranoid. He allows the audience to watch what Muchette has encountered without any modification. He tells you (and you know it well) this is a true, de-dramatic story. This is the height that Lao Ta, Bergman and other masters want to achieve, but for ordinary audiences, this movie is too cruel. The ups and downs of the plot are meaningless to this film. The only important thing is the...

Extended Reading

Mouchette quotes

  • Mouchette: [singing] Hope! Hope is dead, Three days, Columbus said to them, Pointing to the vast sky ahead, That stretched beyond the horizon...

  • Mouchette's Mother: I can't breathe.