Bande à Part

A film by Jean-Luc Godard

Gleefully putting into practice D W Griffith’s maxim that all you need to make a film is a girl and a gun, Bande à part (The Outsiders) is Godard’s playful tribute to the Hollywood pulp crime movies of the 1940s, executed with typically Gallic cool.

Franz and Arthur, a couple of streetwise chancers, team up with the shy Odile (a beguiling performance from Anna Karina, Godard’s wife and muse at the time) to plan a robbery. As the trio of misfits roam the cafes of suburban Paris, do a lightning tour of the Louvre, and play-act shoot-outs, the suspicion grows that this is one heist that is not going to go according to plan.

As well as superb photography by Raoul Coutard and music by Michel Legrand, Bande à part features one of the most exhilarating dance sequences in film, which so impressed Quentin Tarantino that he paid homage to it with John Travolta and Uma Thurman in Pulp Fiction, and named his production company, Band Apart, after the film. Hal Hartley also paid homage to the sequence in Simple Men (1992).

Shot in just 25 days, Bande à part was greeted with puzzlement and even distaste when first released. Over the years it has become one of Godard admirers’ favourite films and is one that no French cinema DVD collection should be without.

About as enjoyable as cinema gets.” Time Out

Packed with fun stuff… effortlessly modern… pure, giddy joy on film.” The Daily Telegraph

Godard at his most irreverent and spontaneous.” The Guardian

It’s enough to leave you breathless.” The Mail on Sunday

Format

DVD  

Special features

  • Comprehensive interactive A-Z guide including a specially commissioned video interview with Anna Karina, Quentin Tarantino on the dance sequence, clips, stills, on-set footage and commentary by Dr Roland-Franois Lack, lecturer in the Department of French at University College London.
  • An interview with cinematographer Raoul Coutard.
  • The original theatrical trailer.
  • A biography of director Jean-Luc Godard.

Credits

Year

1964

Country

France

Buying options

Product information

Certificate

PG

Colour

Black/white

Languages

French

Subtitles

English

Original aspect ratio

1.33:1

DVD region

  • 2 Europe (except Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus), Middle East, Egypt, Japan, South Africa, Swaziland, Lesotho, Greenland, French Overseas departments and territories

Blu-ray region

  • B - Includes most European and Middle-Eastern countries, all of Africa, Australia and New Zealand

Catalogue number

BFIVD549