
Paris Belongs to Us
Paris nous appartient
Dir. Jacques Rivette, 1961, 141 min
With Betty Schneider, Giani Esposito, Françoise Prévost
In French with English subtitles
One of the original critics turned filmmakers who helped jump-start the French New Wave, Jacques Rivette began shooting his debut feature in 1958, well before that cinema revolution officially kicked off with The 400 Blows and Breathless. Ultimately released in 1961, the rich and mysterious Paris Belongs to Us offers some of the radical flavor that would define the movement, with a particularly Rivettian twist.
The film follows a young literature student (Betty Schneider) who befriends the members of a loose-knit group of twenty-somethings in Paris, united by the apparent suicide of an acquaintance. Suffused with a lingering post–World War II disillusionment while also evincing the playfulness and fascination with theatrical performance and conspiracy that would become hallmarks for the director, Paris Belongs to Us marked the provocative start to a brilliant directorial career.
Richard Peña (series curator): “A lesser-known but still crucial masterwork of the French New Wave, Rivette’s debut feature stands as a remarkable premonition of the Sixties, when a group of young people—some vaguely involved in politics—become increasingly afraid of dark forces that threaten to engulf them all.”
“Rivette’s tightly wound images turn the ornate architecture of Paris into a labyrinth of intimate entanglements and apocalyptic menace; he evokes the fearsome mysteries beneath the surface of life and the enticing illusions that its masterminds, whether human or divine, create.” – The New Yorker
- Year1961
- Runtime141 minutes
- LanguageFrench with English Subtitles
- CountryFrance
- DirectorJacques Rivette
- CastBetty Schneider, Giani Esposito, Françoise Prévost
Paris Belongs to Us
Paris nous appartient
Dir. Jacques Rivette, 1961, 141 min
With Betty Schneider, Giani Esposito, Françoise Prévost
In French with English subtitles
One of the original critics turned filmmakers who helped jump-start the French New Wave, Jacques Rivette began shooting his debut feature in 1958, well before that cinema revolution officially kicked off with The 400 Blows and Breathless. Ultimately released in 1961, the rich and mysterious Paris Belongs to Us offers some of the radical flavor that would define the movement, with a particularly Rivettian twist.
The film follows a young literature student (Betty Schneider) who befriends the members of a loose-knit group of twenty-somethings in Paris, united by the apparent suicide of an acquaintance. Suffused with a lingering post–World War II disillusionment while also evincing the playfulness and fascination with theatrical performance and conspiracy that would become hallmarks for the director, Paris Belongs to Us marked the provocative start to a brilliant directorial career.
Richard Peña (series curator): “A lesser-known but still crucial masterwork of the French New Wave, Rivette’s debut feature stands as a remarkable premonition of the Sixties, when a group of young people—some vaguely involved in politics—become increasingly afraid of dark forces that threaten to engulf them all.”
“Rivette’s tightly wound images turn the ornate architecture of Paris into a labyrinth of intimate entanglements and apocalyptic menace; he evokes the fearsome mysteries beneath the surface of life and the enticing illusions that its masterminds, whether human or divine, create.” – The New Yorker
- Year1961
- Runtime141 minutes
- LanguageFrench with English Subtitles
- CountryFrance
- DirectorJacques Rivette
- CastBetty Schneider, Giani Esposito, Françoise Prévost