The Green Ray

1986 [FRENCH]

Action / Drama / Romance

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
868.47 MB
1204*720
French 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 34 min
P/S 0 / 1
1.57 GB
1792*1072
French 2.0
NR
25 fps
1 hr 34 min
P/S 1 / 4

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by claudio_carvalho3 / 10

Overrated, Boring and Dull Tale of Loneliness

In Paris, fifteen days before her summer vacation, the lonely secretary Delphine (Marie Rivière) receives a call from her friend Caroline telling her that she would not travel with her to Scotland. Delphine does not want to travel alone and has difficulties to have relationship with unknown people, and she decides to travel to Cherbourg with a friend. A couple of days later, she is bored and decides to return to Paris. Then she calls a friend in La Plagne, but she returns on the same day to her place in Saint German. While walking on the streets of Paris, she meets an old friend that offers her house in Biarritz. Once there, a young stranger flirts with Delphine, invites her to go to Bayonne and they spend the afternoon together and watch the sunset until its last green ray.

I have had another huge disappointment with the director Eric Rohmer after watching "Le Rayon Vert". I found this movie an overrated, boring and dull tale of loneliness with an annoying lead character. It is very easy to understand the solitude of the unpleasant Delphine and I recommend to see this movie on DVD, since the viewer will be able to use the rewind (when he or she takes an involuntary nap) or the fast forward button in case of unbearable boredom. In my case I was forced to rewind the movie three or four times. My vote is three.

Title (Brazil): "O Raio Verde" ("The Green Ray")

Reviewed by writers_reign5 / 10

Green For Inertia

As a movie buff weaned on the Hollywood classics of the thirties and forties via endless reruns on TV I absorbed by osmosis the 'classic' style of film-making - Master Shot, Long Shot, Medium Shot, Close Shot, 2-Shot, Reverse Angle etc - without being able to put a name to them and this is perhaps why I find Rohmer 'amateur' in terms of Style. I have reached the conclusion that 1) he doesn't 'know' how to make fluid films, 2) he does know but has only contempt for this kind of 'professionalism' or 3) can't afford multiple set-ups for each scene and so settles for the 'boring' option.

This particular movie - given away with a British newspaper - begins with a long shot in which two girls are talking in an office. A third girl enters the scene and has a telephone conversation. Rohmer shoots the WHOLE thing in what would be, in the Real film-making world, a Master Shot with a static camera. Time and time again we get something similar, not necessarily a Long Shot, sometimes he even gives us a Close Shot that lasts interminably. I'm guessing that his shooting ratio is one of the shortest of any director, about one-to-one, two-to-one at the outside. Filming like this means, of course, that you'd better have something really riveting to say or you're going to alienate anyone who has access to TV reruns and/or a video/DVD player. Arguably viewers born some ten or twenty years after Rohmer helped establish the short-live New Wavelet will accept these crude methods never having known Style but the rest of us are obliged to look at Content and all too often come up empty. This entry benefits from a fine central performance but that's about it.

Reviewed by morrison-dylan-fan5 / 10

Éric Rohmer's Comedies and Proverbs series:Part 5.

Disappointingly finding the Blu-Ray to be faulty, (which due to a lack of receipt means I can't replace it or sell the set on!) I was relieved to discover that the DVD version of this entry in Rohmer's loose film series played fine,which led to me getting ready to go on a summer holiday.

The plot:

Hit by a breakup just before her summer holiday, Delphine decides to join a friend on a beach house weekend.Almost from the moment she takes her first steps in the beach house, Delphine finds her pal trying to get her to confirm to her idea of what a good holiday is. Running off (talk about giving someone a chance!) Delphine isolates herself in search of the perfect holiday.

View on the film:

Skipping into the season with Delphine,co-writer/(along with lead actress Marie Rivière) director Éric Rohmer & cinematographer Sophie Maintigneux cast a warm,floral atmosphere,where water colour blue, greens and yellows sway in the fine breeze.Shot with just a crew of 4 people and the cast improvising the dialogue from Rohmer's outline,Rohmer's restrains himself from showing any sign of rebellion in the limited set-up,by spanning the title with frozen wide shots.

Along with cutting the free-flowing nature on offer away,leads to the film being rather dry. Threaded with improvised dialogue from the cast, Marie Rivière offers a shimmering image of isolation as Delphine,that is left to sadly fade by the dialogue having a sawn- off, stilted quality which blocks a full view of the sun and Delphine from being cast across the screen.

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