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Une Femme mariée from Masters of Cinema in April

17 February 2009

Long out of circulation and unavailable on home video, Jean‑Luc Godard's 1964 masterpiece Une femme mariée, fragments d'un film tourné en 1964 en noir et blanc [A Married Woman: Fragments of a Film Shot in 1964 in Black and White] has, until now, represented the ostensibly 'missing' key work from the first, zeitgeist‑defining phase of Godard's filmography. The feature which bridges the gap between Bande à part and Alphaville, Une femme maride is, nevertheless, a galaxy, or gallery, unto itself – a lucid, complex, profoundly funny series of portraits, etched with Godardian acids, of the wife that represents either a singular case, or a universal example, of " a"/"the" married woman, and the men in her orbit.

Macha Méril (later of Pialat's Nous ne vieillirons pas ensemble, and Varda's Sans toit ni loi) plays Charlotte – the title character. She's married to aviator Pierre (Philippe Leroy, of Becker's Le Trou). She sleeps with thespian Robert (Bernard Nodi). She talks "intelligence" with renowned critic‑filmmaker Roger Leenhardt, and takes part in a fashion‑shoot at a public pool. The "fragments" of the film's subtitle are chapters, episodes, vignettes, tableaux: Une femme mariée is a pile of magazines made into a film, and a film turned into a magazine – the table of contents reading: Alfred Hitchcock; Jean Racine; La Peau douce; A Peruvian serum; Nuit et brouillard; The "Eloquence" bra; The quartets of Beethoven; Madame Cdline; Fantômas; Robert Bresson; A Volkswagen making a right turn; – A film shot in 1964, and in black and white. Featuring striking cinematography by Raoul Coutard, Godard's picture captures a moment in time – but all its mysteries, its truths, its beauty, comedy and grace, serve to resolve into a work of art for the ages.

Une femme mariée, fragments d'un film tourné en 1964 en noir et blanc will be released on UK DVD for the first time on 20th April 2009 by Eureka Entertainment as part of the Masters of Cinema series. The disc will feature a new progressive high‑definition transfer of the film in its original 1.33:1 aspect ratio, new and improved English subtitle translations, and the original trailer for the film, created and edited by Jean‑Luc Godard at the time of the film's original French release. Also included will be an 80 page booklet containing new "overture" by legendary French critic and filmmaker Luc Moullet (Les Contrebandières, A Girl Is a Gun, Les Sièges de l'Alcazar, Le Prestige de la mort); a lengthy roundtable discussion between Luc Moullet, writer/critic and American correspondent for Cahiers du cinéma Bill Krohn, writer/critic Andy Rector, and MoC's Craig Keller on the film, and its relationship to Godard's oeuvre from the 1950s through the 2000s; a concentrated investigation into the film by Bill Krohn; an image‑essay by Andy Rector; a new statement about the film by star Macha MCril; a transcript of Godard's late­'70s lecture on Une femme maride, Bergman's Persona, Flaherty's Nanook of the North, and Rossellini's Francesco giullare di Dio, originally presented in Introduction à une véritable histoire du cinéma, translated here into English for the first time; relevant excerpts from Jean Racine's Bérénice, in the original French, accompanied by a new parallel English translation; a graphical consideration (running the course of the book) of the role of DVD booklets in the modern film-viewing era; and more!