
Contempt (film) - Wikipedia
Contempt (French: Le Mépris) is a 1963 French New Wave drama film written and directed by Jean-Luc Godard, based on Alberto Moravia ’s 1954 novel Il disprezzo. [6]
Contempt (1963) - IMDb
Contempt: Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. With Brigitte Bardot, Jack Palance, Michel Piccoli, Giorgia Moll. A French writer's marriage deteriorates while working on Fritz Lang's version of "The Odyssey", …
Watch Contempt (1963) - Free Movies | Tubi
Add to My List Share Contempt 1963 · 1 hr 44 min TV-14 Drama· Foreign/International A director's wife falls out of love with him while he adapts Homer's Odyssey for an American producer in this darkly …
Contempt | Rotten Tomatoes
60 years on from its initial release, Jean-Luc Godard’s elegant and layered Le Mépris (Contempt) remains a landmark achievement in his career and the French New Wave. Iconoclastic, Godard...
Contempt (1963) | The Criterion Collection
Jean-Luc Godard’s subversive foray into commercial filmmaking is a star-studded Cinemascope epic.
Contempt (1963) Full Movie Summary & Plot Explained
Oct 9, 2025 · Read the complete plot summary of Contempt (1963) with spoiler-filled details, twists, and thematic breakdowns. Discover the story’s meaning, characters’ roles, and what makes the film …
Contempt (1963) - Scene by Green
Apr 8, 2022 · The tension between the ancient and the modern is evident in Contempt as writers, directors, producers, and actors argue amongst themselves, trying to determine the motivation that …
Siskel Film Center | Chicago's Home for Great Cinema | CONTEMPT
In Godard’s CinemaScope sensation, the marriage between screenwriter Paul (Michel Piccoli) and his wife Camille (Brigitte Bardot, at peak bombshell) disintegrates on the set of a new film directed by …
Contempt - a/perture cinema
“ Contempt transports us back to another era: an early ’60s world in which the classicism of the past…is juxtaposed with the emptiness and ennui of modern culture.” ~ Michael Wilmington, Chicago Tribune
Contempt (1963) directed by Jean-Luc Godard - Letterboxd
There seems to be a prevailing, dual impression of self-therapy at play in Jean-Luc Godard’s Contempt, which on the surface is a backstage tragedy about the simultaneous strife on the set of a …