Watch: Une Affaire de femmes 1988 123movies, Full Movie Online – Marie Latour, a woman of limited schooling, raises two children in a ratty flat during World War II in occupied France. In 1941, her husband Paul returns from German captivity, too weak to hold a job. Marie discovers she can make money performing abortions, using a soapy water douche. Many of her clients are knocked up by occupying Germans. She buys better food and clothes, looks for a new flat, and, through an acquaintance, who is a prostitute, rents out her bedrooms to hookers during the day. She’s indifferent to Paul; his humiliations grow as does her income. She hopes to be a singer. Male Vichy umbrage and moral hypocrisy may upend her. What is she thinking?.
Plot: France, World War II. In order to somehow make ends meet, the mother of two children, Marie Latour, does underground abortions and rents a room to a familiar prostitute. She doesn’t pay any attention to her husband, who returned from the war because of his injury and lives her own life. Abortions gradually begin to bring a good income, and boredom can be easily dispelled by starting a young lover …
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7.5/10 Votes: 5,011 | |
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N/A Votes: 119 Popularity: 6.426 | TMDB |
Cinema Omnivore – Story of Women (1988) 8.6/10
“With regard to the hot-button issue of abortion, unlike similar-themed works such as Mike Leigh’s VERA DRAKE (2004), Chabrol refuses to head into sentimentality of snot and lachrymose excretion, Marie reckons her act as a means to earn money and help those really in need, without much qualms (only later she tentatively asks Lulu, do fetuses have souls? And Lulu shoots back a piercing zinger). Even when a philoprogenitive mother (Blanc, her confession is delivered with pluperfect poignancy) dies after the homespun procedure, there is no compunction can be found on Huppert’s steely face, only commiserations. For Marie, it is a risk entailed, she did nothing wrong, and it doesn’t stop her to take the fee, the film’s pro-choice stance is unbending and cogently asserted.”read my full review on my Cinema Omnivore, thanks.
Abortion in Nazi-occupied France
Claude Charbrol’s stark and unsentimental masterpiece about the last woman to be executed in France–she was guillotined for performing abortions in Nazi-occupied France during World War II–forces us to see a side of war not often depicted. What does a woman with two little children do when her country is occupied by the brute forces of the enemy? How is she to find enough to eat, to buy the increasingly scarce and costly necessities of life? How is she to find joy in life? Women often turn to prostitution during such times, but Maire Latour does not. Instead she aborts the foetuses of the prostitutes and of other women impregnated, often by the Nazis. In a sense this is her “resistence.” However she prospers and takes up with a Nazi collaborator. In the process she reduces her husband to frustration and humiliation.Isabelle Huppert as Marie Latour is mesmerizing in a role that allows her talent full latitude. She is clear-headed and sly as a business woman, warm and ordinary as a mother, cold and brutal as a wife, childish and careless as an adulteress, resourceful and fearless as an abortionist, and unrepentant as she awaits the executioner (foreshadowed, by the way, by her son, who wants to be an executioner when he grows up). Francois Cluzet plays her husband Paul, and he is also very good, especially at rousing our pity. Charbrol makes it clear that both Marie and Paul are victims, not only of war, but of their divergent natures. Paul wants the love of Marie, but she wants only a man that represents success and power, a man who is clean-shaven, not the menial worker that he is. Marie Trintignant is interesting and convincing as a prostitute who becomes Marie Latour’s friend and business associate.
While abortion is indeed “Une affaire de femmes” this film is about much more than that. No doubt the title is there to emphasize Charbrol’s point that men really do not (did not then, and do not now) really understand abortion and why it is sometimes a horrible and abject necessity. When Marie is taken to Paris for a show trial she exclaims to a woman in jail with her, referring to the court that will pass judgment on her, “It’s all men…how could men understand?” We can see that men really can’t, and that precisely is what this movie is all about: showing us just how horrible pregnancy can be under the circumstances of enemy occupation.
A secondary story here, not quite a subplot, is Paul’s story. What does a man do when he and his children are dependent on a woman who doesn’t love him, a woman who rejects him and even goes so far as to arrange for the cleaning woman to sleep with him? It is not only Marie who humiliates him, but it is the defeat of his country, the easy surrender to the Nazis that has so reduced him. This is made clear in a scene late in the film between two lawyers who voice their shame as Frenchmen in a time of defeat.
What Paul does is not pretty (and I won’t reveal it here), but so great is the provocation that one understands his behavior and can forgive him.
(Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book “Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can’t Believe I Swallowed the Remote!” Get it at Amazon!)
Original Language fr
Runtime 1 hr 48 min (108 min)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated TV-14
Genre Drama, History, Romance
Director Claude Chabrol
Writer Colo Tavernier, Claude Chabrol, Francis Szpiner
Actors Isabelle Huppert, François Cluzet, Marie Trintignant
Country France
Awards 14 wins & 8 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix Mono
Aspect Ratio 1.66 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format 35 mm