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Synopsis

During a war, the poor and ignorant brothers Ulysses and Michel-Ange are lured and recruited by two soldiers that promise wealth to them in the name of their King. The greedy wife of Ulysses Cleopatre and her daughter Venus ask them to enlist to pursue fortune. They travel to Italy and become unscrupulous criminals of war. When Ulysses is wounded in one eye, he returns home with Michel-Ange and a small bag full of postcards of famous locations and the promise that they would be entitled of the properties in the end of the war. However, when the King signs the peace treaty with their enemy, they find that the agreement was actually surrender and they have a prize to pay for their actions. —IMDb

Director

Original

Jean-Luc Godard

The lynchpin of the French New Wave, Jean-Luc Godard was arguably the most influential filmmaker of the postwar era. Beginning with his groundbreaking 1959 feature debut A Bout de Souffle, Godard revolutionized the motion picture form, freeing the medium from the shackles of its long-accepted cinematic language by rewriting the rules of narrative, continuity, sound, and camera work. Later in his career, he also challenged the common means of feature production, distribution, and exhibition, all in an effort to subvert the conventions of the Hollywood formula to create a new kind of film.

Godard was born in Paris on December 3, 1930, the second of four children. After receiving his primary education in Nyon, Switzerland – during World War II, he became a naturalized Swiss citizen – he studied ethnology at the Sorbonne, but spent the vast majority of his days at the Cine-Club du Quartier Latin, where he first met fellow film fanatics Francois Truffaut and Jacques Rivette. In May… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 8 wall posts.
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Jon

13Apr13

The scene with Michelangelo in the theater is one of the funniest pieces of film I've seen in some time - "Sherlock Jr." inverted. So far easily my favorite Godard.

Picture of John Pastüch

John Pastüch

30Mar13

Another Godard film that I despise. Sloppy, aimless satire. Awful to sit through this.

Picture of Mike

Mike

24Jun12

I, for one, hated it.

Loraine likes this

Picture of Anıl Can

Anıl Can

1May12

"vive le roi"

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W184

Quote of the day

By on January 12, 2010

Jean-Luc Godard’s old truism of the cinema.

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Les Carabiniers

By Jon on April 13, 2013

Les Carabiniers is an anti-war movie, and a hell of a good one at that, but it goes a step further to become an anti-war movie that also comments on other anti-war movies. Godard does this…  read review

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