Masculin Féminin - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Masculin Féminin"
Masculin féminin (1966)
Timing: 1:45 (105 min)
Masculin Féminin - TMDB rating
7.2/10
414
Masculin Féminin - Kinopoisk rating
7.766/10
13592
Masculin Féminin - IMDB rating
7.4/10
19000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Photo Anatole Dauman #96805
Anatole Dauman
Producer

Writer

Editor

Agnès Guillemot
Editor

Original Music Composer

Photo Jean-Jacques Debout #199587Photo Jean-Jacques Debout #199588Photo Jean-Jacques Debout #199589

Jean-Jacques Debout

Jean-Jacques Debout
Original Music Composer

Director of Photography

Photo Willy Kurant #333482
Willy Kurant
Director of Photography

Still Photographer

Marilù Parolini
Still Photographer

Production Manager

Philippe Dussart
Production Manager

Story

Photo Guy de Maupassant #199584Photo Guy de Maupassant #199585Photo Guy de Maupassant #199586
Guy de Maupassant
Story

Assistant Director

Bernard Toublanc-Michel
Assistant Director
Jacques Henri Barratier
Assistant Director

Sound Engineer

René Levert
Sound Engineer

Sound Recordist

René Levert
Sound Recordist

Publicist

Christine Brierre
Publicist

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film explores themes of youth and sexual relationships, which led to it being banned from screening to audiences under 18 in France. As Jean-Luc Godard put it, “for the people it was made for.”
  • The film had no script – instead, it used brief descriptions of the main scenes. The dialogue for each subsequent scene was written the day before filming, and in some cases was entirely improvised by the actors.
  • During the filming of the cinema scene, the actors had to sit in front of a blank screen and react as if they were watching a movie. Madeleine’s actress, Chantal Goya, asked director Jean-Luc Godard (1930-2022) what they were watching, and he replied that “Gone with the Wind” (1939) by Victor Fleming (1889-1949), George Cukor (1899-1983), and Sam Wood (1883-1949) was playing. Goya reacted as if watching a romantic melodrama. Only later did she find out that the blank screen was actually showing some kind of art-house pseudo-pornographic film.
  • The film explores themes of youth and sexual relationships, which led to its being banned in France for viewers under 18. As Jean-Luc Godard put it, “precisely for the people it was made for.”
  • During the filming of the scene in the cinema, the actors had to sit in front of a blank screen and react as if they were watching a movie. Madeleine’s actress, Chantal Goya, asked director Jean-Luc Godard (1930-2022) what exactly they were watching, and he replied that “Gone with the Wind” (1939) by Victor Fleming (1889-1949), George Cukor (1899-1983), and Sam Wood (1883-1949) was playing on the screen. Goya reacted as if she were watching a romantic melodrama. Only later did she learn that the blank screen was actually showing some kind of art-house pseudo-pornographic film.
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