La Belle Noiseuse
| Genre: | Drama, Foreign Language Language |
| Mood: | Intense, Moving |
| Decade: | 1990's |
| Country: | France |
| Director: | Jacques Rivette |
| Actor: | Michel Piccoli |
| Actress: | Emmanuelle Beart |
| Release Year: | 1991 |
| Studio: | New Yorker Video |
| Runtime: | 240 Mins. |
| Format: | Color |
| Rating: | Unrated |
| Language: | French |
What It's About:
Fallow and unproductive for almost ten years, 60-year-old painter Edouard Frenhofer (Piccoli) lives in the French countryside with his wife and muse, Liz (Jane Birkin), though his last major work-a nude study of Liz entitled "The Beautiful Nuisance"-lies unfinished. When he confides to protegé Nicholas (David Burzstein) that his career has finally come to an end, the young man suggests that Edouard ask his gorgeous girlfriend Marianne (Beart) to model. Edouard agrees, and thus begins an intensely intimate, often contentious working relationship.
Why I Love It:
Rivette's extraordinary drama about a famous artist who feels his well of talent has dried up examines the mysteries and passions that attend the artistic process, and the obsessive intimacy that often develops between painter and model. In a role that demanded a solid, mature, weighty presence, Piccoli is magnificent as Edouard, while Beart is simply ravishing in an equally demanding, robust performance. Expertly and patiently directed by Rivette, who homes in on the mundane details of creating a masterly artwork-the painstaking applications of ink and oil, the methodical refinement of technique-"Noiseuse" is, quite simply, an enthralling experience. If a four hour viewing time deters you, by all means watch it in two parts.







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