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Stavisky

Play trailer Poster for Stavisky PG Released May 15, 1974 1h 57m Biography Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist Tomatometer Popcornmeter
85% Tomatometer 13 Reviews 59% Popcornmeter 250+ Ratings
After Serge Alexandre Stavisky (Jean-Paul Belmondo) is arrested for fraud for the first time in 1926, his ashamed father kills himself. Undeterred, Stavisky sticks with con games, rising in prominence by selling worthless investments to the French government. Devoted to his wife, Arlette (Anny Duperey), Stavisky prospers despite swindling old friends like Baron Raoul (Charles Boyer). When rumors of his financial dishonesty and extravagances spread, the disgraced financier goes on the run.

Critics Reviews

View All (13) Critics Reviews
Pauline Kael The New Yorker Stavisky has been made as if vitality would be a sin against art. The intricate plot provided by the screenwriter, Jorge Semprun, seems purposeless, except for back and forth movement that he wants in the cutting. Oct 6, 2023 Full Review Robert Abele Los Angeles Times A deceptively ruminative entertainment with a fizzy melancholy, and awash in sensory pleasures. Oct 11, 2018 Full Review Nora Sayre New York Times A spell-casting mood piece that is also factually frustrating. Rated: 5/5 May 9, 2005 Full Review David Sterritt Christian Science Monitor Rarely are style and content so consciously, and thoroughly, mixed. And rarely does a film so sparkle with dreams of decades past. Aug 7, 2021 Full Review Jacoba Atlas Los Angeles Free Press Deceptively beautiful, deceptively linear, Stavisky is a complex and subtle work, a worthy successor to [Alain] Resnais' most controversial films. Dec 6, 2019 Full Review Armond White National Review Resnais and Semprún's themes are pleasure, happiness, riches, death, and the past -- as envisaged in the stylized recall of fancy-dressed individuals and the nation. Oct 31, 2018 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (9) audience reviews
isla s This is a nice piece of period drama. Its slow but the plot is intriguing. It certainly focuses on the more upper class sides of French society, including some pretty big names, primarily Trotsky. Its a throwback to the first half of the 1900s I suppose. There are some nice landscape shots and it kept my interesy for the most part. Its a little meandering but relatively easy watch I suppose, if you can manage the subtitles (its in French). I think I liked that the story slowly comes together via learning things from different people, getting a feel for the various characters and settings depicted - its a good piece of escapism I suppose. If anything, it is a little fuzzy, picture wise, which could be put down to it not being an HD quality stream but then I felt that it gave it a bit of a daydream-y type feel to it, which I suppose seems almost more suited to a film set so many decades ago, if you know what I mean. It is very slightly morbid in tone perhaps but its not exactly a gritty film. It works reasonably well overall and yes, I reckon I'd recommend this to others. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member There's something about films set in the 1930s but shot in the 1970s that makes them seem more artificial than many other films. Perhaps it is harder to stop the fashion and hair trends from creeping through (Is Belmondo's hair too long)? Or could it just be the font used for the titles? At any rate, Resnais's film doesn't suffer too much from this ailment; instead, it is another story told from multiple perspectives juggling past, present, and future (but the color photography makes this feel less effective than Last Year at Marienbad). Those who know their French history may be able to better follow the plot, but I understood it to be about a famous conman who rose to great heights of influence with the government and society figures of his day...and then crashed and burned bringing the government down with him. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/04/23 Full Review Audience Member While watching this film the thing that sprung to my mind was the Great Gatsby. Both have a man who has a shady past and both are ladies men Whats sets the film apart from the film adaption of Gatsby from the same year is that Resnais knows how to handle the material giving a it a high gloss sheen and an interesting narrative. What also helps is the casting of two giants of French Cinema in Charles Boyer and Jean Paul Belmondo. This casting gives the film an edge as Boyer represents the France that was to disapear with the coming of World War two and the scandals which took France there. Belmondo is top drawer as the main lead who even when his wolrd is collasping around him ,he still manages to lead a Champagne lifestyle and reamain confident and optimistic Resnais also uses Stephen Sondheim to bring out the elemnets of the story with his Gershwin like score. The film will not appeal to everyone as the pace is slower than most films and its not a Resnais classic. But on the whole their is plenty here to enjoy and engage the brain at the same time . Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/23/23 Full Review Audience Member Un bon petit film de ganster comme il ne s' en fait plus. Un bon Belmondo. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/22/23 Full Review Audience Member Un bon Rennais un peu tortueux mais glacant ! Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/12/23 Full Review Audience Member Belmondo, Belmondo, Belmondo!! Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Stavisky

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Movie Info

Synopsis After Serge Alexandre Stavisky (Jean-Paul Belmondo) is arrested for fraud for the first time in 1926, his ashamed father kills himself. Undeterred, Stavisky sticks with con games, rising in prominence by selling worthless investments to the French government. Devoted to his wife, Arlette (Anny Duperey), Stavisky prospers despite swindling old friends like Baron Raoul (Charles Boyer). When rumors of his financial dishonesty and extravagances spread, the disgraced financier goes on the run.
Director
Alain Resnais
Screenwriter
Jorge Semprún
Distributor
Cinemation Industries
Production Co
Les Films Ariane, Euro International Film (EIA) S.p.A., Cerito Films
Rating
PG
Genre
Biography
Original Language
French (France)
Release Date (Theaters)
May 15, 1974, Original
Box Office (Gross USA)
$12.0K
Runtime
1h 57m
Sound Mix
Mono