14
Oct/12

TO SAVE AND PROJECT: A MAN AND A WOMAN

14
Oct/12

Anouk Aimée and Jean-Louis Trintignant play characters trying to escape their pasts in Claude Lelouch’s A MAN AND A WOMAN

THE TENTH MoMA INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL OF FILM PRESERVATION/MONDAY NIGHTS WITH OSCAR: A MAN AND A WOMAN (UN HOMME ET UNE FEMME) (Claude Lelouch, 1966)
Academy Theater at Lighthouse International
111 East 59th St. between Lexington & Park Aves.
Monday, October 15, $5, 7:00
212-821-9251
www.oscars.org
www.moma.org

Winner of both the Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film and the Palme d’Or at Cannes, Claude Lelouch’s A Man and a Woman is one of the most popular, and most unusual, romantic love stories ever put on film. Oscar-nominated Anouk Aimée stars as Anne Gauthier and Jean-Louis Trintignant as Jean-Louis Duroc, two people who each has a child in a boarding school in Deauville. Anne, a former actress, and Jean-Louis, a successful racecar driver, seem to hit it off immediately, but they both have pasts that haunt them and threaten any kind of relationship. Shot in three weeks with a handheld camera by Lelouch, who earned nods for Best Director and Best Screenplay (with Pierre Uytterhoeven), A Man and a Woman is a tour-de-force of filmmaking, going from the modern day to the past via a series of flashbacks that at first alternate between color and black-and-white, then shift hues in curious, indeterminate ways. Much of the film takes place in cars, either as Jean-Louis races around a track or the protagonists sit in his red Mustang convertible and talk about their lives, their hopes, their fears. The heat they generate is palpable, making their reluctance to just fall madly, deeply in love that much more heart-wrenching, all set to a memorable soundtrack by Francis Lai. Lelouch, Trintignant, and Aimée revisited the story in 1986 with A Man and a Woman: 20 Years Later, without the same impact and success. A new print of the original will be shown on October 15 at the Academy Theater as part of MoMA’s annual “To Serve and Project” film preservation festival, in conjunction with the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences’ monthly “Monday Nights with Oscar” programming and will be introduced by Aimée, who has appeared in several recent films following a seven-year hiatus. The MoMA series, cocurated by J. Hoberman, continues through November 12 with such films as Jacques Demy’s Lola, Andy Warhol’s San Diego Surf, Raoul Walsh’s Wild Girl, and the director’s cut of Roberto Rossellini’s General della Rovere.