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The Married Woman
Directed by
Jean-Luc Godard
Not Rated
1965
1h 35m
[Drama](/on-demand/category/drama), [Romance](/on-demand/category/romance)
7.1
86%
82%
6.9
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A superficial woman finds conflict choosing between her abusive husband and her vain lover.
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Where to Watch The Married Woman
Amazon Video
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Apple TV
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Google Play Movies
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YouTube
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Cast of The Married Woman
Macha Méril
Charlotte
Bernard Noël
Robert, the Lover
Philippe Leroy
Pierre, the Husband
Christophe Bourseiller
Nicolas
Roger Leenhardt
Self
Margareth Clémenti
Girl in Swimming Pool
Véronique Duval
Girl in Swimming Pool
Rita Maiden
Madame Celine
Georges Liron
The Physician
Jean-Luc Godard
The Narrator (voice) (uncredited) / Director / Writer
Henri Nogaret
Production Design
Raoul Coutard
Director Of Photography
Laurence Clairval
Costumer
Catherine Savignac
Script Supervisor
Suzanne Schiffman
Script Supervisor
Claude Othnin-Girard
Assistant Director
Jean-Pierre Léaud
Assistant Director
Hélène Kalougine
Assistant Director
Agnès Guillemot
Editor
Gérard Pollicand
Editor
The Married Woman Ratings & Reviews
Vague Visages
Jeremy Carr
So what does A Married Woman all add up to? For one thing, perhaps a sign of what was to come in Godard's ever-evolving methodology...
IONCINEMA.com
Nicholas Bell
A Married Woman reveals itself to be a rather terse but effective study on consumerism and gendered commodification.
Boston Globe
Ty Burr
Beauty in this movie is squeezed out of modern life until it fills the cracks between the characters' feelings.
The Stranger (Seattle, WA)
Charles Mudede
Godard's eye is as pure as a cello solo.
Cinemacy
Morgan Rojas
A Married Woman is a refreshing walk down memory lane, cinematically speaking...
Arts Fuse
Gerald Peary
I appreciate the effort to bring back this rarely seen early Godard. But there are reasons this movie hasn't been previously revived
Los Angeles Times
Robert Abele
A thoughtful, probing exercise in erotic stagnation - no less engaging for lacking pulpiness.
Village Voice
Calum Marsh
An extraordinarily rich and provocative picture in its own right.
Reel Film Reviews
David Nusair
...a series of nonsensical, infuriatingly abstract sequences and interludes.
Cinemania
Dan Jardine
Godard commodifies his actors in the same way that the world of advertising does. So, because Charlotta is immersed in this world, she experiences life the same way, in fragments, snippets and whispered sound bites.
CinePassion
Fernando F. Croce
A continuous, penetrating dance of misogyny and feminism
GreenCine
Aaron Hillis
... effortlessly and damningly dissect[s] the ugliness of beauty culture.
Movie Metropolis
Christopher Long
One of Godards most formally precise films of the early 60s, remarkable considering the hurried shooting schedule.
MovieMartyr.com
Jeremy Heilman
...one of Godard's most approachable, conventionally plotted movies. It merges the director's interest in social constructs with a curiosity about individual emotions often obscured in his work.
Turner Classic Movies Online
Sean Axmaker
... at the time it was one of Godard's most critically acclaimed films and remains one of the most financially successful films of his career.
Slant Magazine
Joseph Jon Lanthier
A seldom seen masterwork from Jean-Luc Godard's most fecund era.
TV Guide
The result is one of his most important and provocative dissections of modern life.
New York Times
Bosley Crowther
If Jean-Luc Godard isn't careful he is going to shoot his way right out of the avant-garde -- out of the idolatrous affection of all those cinema buffs who go for movies that are formless and obscure.
Chicago Reader
Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is still Godard's view of life in France in 1964, and one of his most sociological films, as well as one of his most formally accomplished.
Watch The Married Woman Videos
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