Watch unlimited films online for $6.99.
Try MUBI for FREE.
 

Destroy, She Said

Détruire dit-elle

France

1969

98 Min
Black and White
1.66:1
French
  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

   |   

DIR Marguerite Duras

PROD Nicole Stéphane

SCR Marguerite Duras

DP Jean Penzer

CAST Catherine Sellers, Michael Lonsdale, Henri Garcin, Nicole Hiss, Daniel Gélin

ED Henri Colpi

Synopsis

The story of a middle-class couple whose lives are drastically transformed by two men and a woman. Or is it about the breakdown of our class society? Or is it the story of a professor married to one of his ex-students who falls in love with a married woman of his own age, while his wife gets involved with a writer? –BFI

Director

Original

Marguerite Duras

4 April 1914, Gia Dinh, French Cochinchina. [now Vietnam] – 3 March 1996, Paris, France.

Ms. Duras was born in southern Vietnam and lost her father at age 4. The family savings of 20 years bought the family a small plot in Cambodia, but everything was lost in a single season’s flooding. The disaster killed her mother as a result. After high school in Saigon, Ms. Duras left Indochina to study law in Paris. As a young woman, she worked as a secretary in France’s Ministry of Colonies from 1935 to 1941, before becoming a writer. She wrote 34 novels from 1943 to 1993, and became an enduring part of Paris’s intellectual elite. In addition to her writing, she also directed about 16 films. For the film India Song (1975), she won France’s Cinema Academy Grand Prix. She claimed to have rescued French president François Mitterand during World War II, when he was a resistance fighter and remained a friend and unconditional campaigner. Her most noted novel is “L’Amant”, the story of a girl… read more

Wall

Displaying 0 wall posts.

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 5 of 22 fans.

Lists

Displaying 5 of 12 lists.

Reviews

Displaying 1 of 1

All you need is Love

By Ogier de Beausea​nt on May 3, 2012

Détruire dit-elle/Destroy she said 1969
Marguerite Duras directs her adaptation of her novel in an enigmatic portrayal of what one must assume is a catharsis of her own experience…  read review

Forum

Displaying 0 discussion topics.