/oyatchDPpS4I9jpIIezFJGrmXcR.jpg
Drama

Cléo from 5 to 7

- The whole world... has made an appointment with...

Agnès Varda eloquently captures Paris in the sixties with this real-time portrait of a singer set adrift in the city as she awaits test results of a biopsy. A chronicle of the minutes of one woman’s life, Cléo from 5 to 7 is a spirited mix of vivid vérité and melodrama, featuring a score by Michel Legrand and cameos by Jean-Luc Godard and Anna Karina.

Release Date : 1962-04-11

Language :French

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Rome-Paris FilmsCiné-Tamaris

Production Country : FranceItaly

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Corinne Marchand

Character Name : Florence 'Cléo' Victoire

Original Name : Corinne Marchand

Gender : Female

Antoine Bourseiller

Character Name : Antoine

Original Name : Antoine Bourseiller

Gender : Male

Dominique Davray

Character Name : Angèle

Original Name : Dominique Davray

Gender : Female

Dorothée Blanck

Character Name : Dorothée

Original Name : Dorothée Blanck

Gender : Female

Michel Legrand

Character Name : Bob, the Pianist

Original Name : Michel Legrand

Gender : Male

José Luis de Vilallonga

Character Name : José, Cléo's Lover

Original Name : José Luis de Vilallonga

Gender : Male

Loye Payen

Character Name : Irma, the Fortune Teller

Original Name : Loye Payen

Gender : Male

Renée Duchateau

Character Name : The Seller of Hats

Original Name : Renée Duchateau

Gender : Female

Lucienne Marchand

Character Name : The Taxi Driver

Original Name : Lucienne Marchand

Gender : Female

Serge Korber

Character Name : Maurice

Original Name : Serge Korber

Gender : Male

Robert Postec

Character Name : Docteur Valineau

Original Name : Robert Postec

Gender : Male

Jean-Luc Godard

Character Name : The Man with Black Glasses / Actor in Silent Film

Original Name : Jean-Luc Godard

Gender : Male

Anna Karina

Character Name : Anna, The Blonde Bride / Actress in Silent Film

Original Name : Anna Karina

Gender : Female

Emilienne Caille

Character Name : The Black Bride / Actress in Silent Film

Original Name : Emilienne Caille

Gender : Female

Eddie Constantine

Character Name : The Sprinkler / Actor in Silent Film

Original Name : Eddie Constantine

Gender : Male

Sami Frey

Character Name : Undertaker / Actor in Silent Film

Original Name : Sami Frey

Gender : Male

Danièle Delorme

Character Name : The Flower Vendor / Actress in Silent Film

Original Name : Danièle Delorme

Gender : Female

Yves Robert

Character Name : The Handkerchief Seller / Actor in Silent Film

Original Name : Yves Robert

Gender : Male

Alan Scott

Character Name : The Sailor / Actor in Silent Film

Original Name : Alan Scott

Gender : Male

Georges de Beauregard

Character Name : The Hearse and Ambulance Driver / Actor in Silent Film

Original Name : Georges de Beauregard

Gender : Male

Raymond Cauchetier

Character Name : Raoul, The Projectionist (uncredited)

Original Name : Raymond Cauchetier

Gender : Male

Jean-Claude Brialy

Character Name : The Nurse (uncredited)

Original Name : Jean-Claude Brialy

Gender : Male

Jean Champion

Character Name : The Boss of the Café (uncredited)

Original Name : Jean Champion

Gender : Male

Fernande Engler

Character Name : The Girl at the Café (uncredited)

Original Name : Fernande Engler

Gender : Female

Jean-Pierre Taste

Character Name : The Coffee Boy (uncredited)

Original Name : Jean-Pierre Taste

Gender : Male

Arthur Brunet

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Arthur Brunet

Gender : Male

Reviews

T

talisencrw

@talisencrw

2021-06-23

When I think of interesting filmmakers, the world over, whose movies are always a pleasure to watch, I thank God every day for Agnès Varda. I had her '4 Films by' Criterion boxed set, seemingly forever, left unwatched, and I don't really know why. Perhaps I felt her films wouldn't excite me enough, I don't know. I certainly enjoy foreign, and French, filmmaking enough. Maybe it was because she was female, I don't know. I hope not, but I'm simply being honest. Sometimes I'm apprehensive about starting to investigate the works of a director who's different from me: Female, non-English, non-Caucasian. I think it's difficult for me to start, because I'm afraid that I won't be able to fully emphasize with their sphere of reference, and thus won't be able to either appreciate or enjoy the filmic experience as much as I should. Once I start, and watch that first film I see of theirs, I'm fine. But until that point, it's truly a challenge. My university library had her two recent critically-acclaimed films, 'The Gleaners and I' and its sequel, on one DVD, and one of my favourite critics, Roger Ebert, had made a 'Great Movie' article about the original. So I gave that series a viewing, each film a separate night, and I fell in love with her as a person, and found that her films were not going to be a challenge for me at all. Thus I then turned to my previously-imposing, aforementioned boxed set, and went through it chronologically. This, the second film of the set, was extraordinary, basically a real-time cinematic exercise of a lady who is waiting for the results of a biopsy, and thus wondering if her quality of life is going to be seriously challenged or not. In it, as I've found in all of her films so far, there's an extraordinary visual flair, a great and natural storytelling facility present, and you can really tell that Varda both loves people and is glad to be alive, and it shows in everything she does. If you are in a similar boat, and are reluctant to investigate Varda's works, please do yourself a favour and don't hesitate any longer. Appreciate this extraordinary woman and her work while she is still alive. You will never be the same.

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2024-11-19

It's actually quite hard to write an objective review about this film. Why? Well, that is because the eponymous singer (Corinne Marchand) has a personality that offers us very little to like. She is a hypochondriac who is obsessed with the thought that she might have cancer. Desperate for a second opinion, she consults a mystic and then we follow her for the remainder of her afternoon whilst she awaits the results of medical tests. In many ways it adopts a video diary sort of format and that means there is plenty herein that isn't the least interesting. Like with most of our daily routines, there is not that much of interest going on. She meets her lover, José (José Luis de Vilallonga) an unsympathetic man well used to her behaviour and a soldier "Antoine" (Antoine Bourseiller) who is enthralled by her, but who is also facing deployment in the soon to be independent Algeria. I liked the style of the photography. It has an intimacy to it. The score from Michel Legrand (who also features playing piano) also adds a richness to this, but for the most part this is quite a curiously dry observational effort from Agnès Varda. If you can see it on a big screen then do try - on a smaller one it can struggle to retain the attention a little.