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Pickpocket - Criterion Collection
 
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Pickpocket - Criterion Collection (2005)

Starring: César Gattegno, Marika Green Rating: Unrated Format: DVD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Actors: César Gattegno, Marika Green, Kassagi, Martin LaSalle, Pierre Leymarie
  • Format: Black & White, DVD, Full Screen, Subtitled, NTSC
  • Language: French
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Studio: Criterion Collection
  • DVD Release Date: November 8, 2005
  • Run Time: 75 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000BB14IA
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #41,728 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)
  • For more information about "Pickpocket - Criterion Collection" visit the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)

Special Features

  • New, restored high-definition digital transfer
  • Audio commentary by film scholar James Quandt
  • New video introduction by writer-director Paul Schrader
  • The Models of "Pickpocket," a 2003 documentary by filmmaker Babette Mangolte, featuring actors from the film
  • A 1960 interview with Bresson, from the French television program Cinepanorama
  • Q&A on Pickpocket, with actress Marika Green and filmmakers Paul Vecchiali and Jean-Pierre Ameris fielding questions at a 2000 screening of the film
  • Footage of sleight-of-hand artist and Pickpocket consultant Kassagi, from a 1962 episode of the French television show La piste aux etoiles
  • Original theatrical poster
  • New and improved English subtitle translation
  • A new essay by novelist and culture critic Gary Indiana

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Robert Bresson drew inspiration from Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment for this examination of an arrogant young pickpocket who deems himself above the laws and conditions of ordinary men. Michel (Martin LaSalle), a rather bland-looking young man with a perpetually blank face, haunts the subways, city streets, and racetracks to ply his trade. He plays a game of wits with a fatherly police inspector and walls his heart off from the affections of a quiet young woman, Jeanne (Marika Green), who looks after his dying mother. Bresson's direction of his "models" (as he calls his nonprofessional performers) strips them of affectation and motivation, making them blank slates defined by the accumulation of precisely drilled actions and words. Pickpocket is no thriller, though Bresson offers impressive, meticulously detailed scenes of daring and intimate robberies (one sequence on a subway feels like an homage to Sam Fuller's Pickup on South Street). Rather, it is a powerful, profound search for meaning and spiritual enlightenment by a man who believes in nothing but himself, and many critics consider it Bresson's masterpiece. Paul Schrader, whose book Transcendental Cinema offers a detailed analysis of Bresson's work, has quoted the famous, emotionally restrained yet spiritually moving conclusion in two of his own films: American Gigolo and Light Sleeper. --Sean Axmaker


Product Description

Robert Bresson's masterful investigation of crime and redemption tells the story of arrogant, young Michel, who spends his days learning the art of picking pockets in the streets, subway cars, and train stations of Paris. As Michel grows bolder and more a

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31 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (31 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Complex Film About A Man's Search For Significance, June 1, 2006
"Pickpocket" never grabs us the way a standard movie does. The plot is difficult to extract, and the storyline is never as easy to understand as we might like. Minimalism is at play, although it never overtakes this complex film about a man's search for meaning in the bowels of his own soul.

Just as with movies like "Passion of the Christ," or "Clockwork Orange," my appreciation of the movie is not because I felt good throughout, but because throughout the movie, I was able to think about what makes humankind and the shape of redemption.

"Pickpocket" is an art house film, with its long vignette style, with Hitchcock-like shots and film noir-like shadowing.

Michel, the main character, develops a desperate fetish for pickpocketing. He learns to be good at the techniques of pickpocketing. He practices wrist watch stealing with the leg of a table as the arm.

No one is lonelier than Michel in his fetish. He knows it is wrong and is unable to face his own mother. His eyes are almost always downturned. They are partly looking for the next steal, and partly unable to face the real world.

All of Michel's relationships are void of passion and intimacy. The closest relationship is that with a police inspector who knows Michel is a thief but chooses not to prove it. He sees good in Michel and tries to steer him out of the lifestyle.

Throughout, Michel is selfish, even when he gives his mother money. That is to appease his guilt, not to lift his mother's finances or encourage her spirits.

Michel, unable to escape his fetish, justifies criminals at large by suggesting some, as artisans of their craft, should retain a kind of freedom to steal. However, he never describes the noble benefit, like James Bond's license to kill provides, which in Bond's case is to save the Queen, and, ostensibly, the world. Rather, it is by the merit of being good at his craft that he would thinks should be enough, but the inspector, nor Michel himself, are ever truly convinced.

Jeanne, the plainly attractive neighbor who often cares for his mom, is strangely interested in him. They have only a matter-of-fact connection, not sensual or romantic in any way. She represents a meaningful existentiality, living as the lover to Michel's friend Jacques (who she does not really love), and helping her elderly neighbor. Michel's as existential as Jeanne, but without the redeeming selflessness that makes Jeanne more human.

Michel dearly wants redemption, and knows his futile lifestyle can only end in despair. He wants more, and when confronted with the likelihood of being arrested, he leaves Paris for several years. When he returns, he learns Jeanne has a child of a long-gone lover.

The opportunity for redemption is clear to audience, but is it to Michel? And what would it look like for a man as obsessed with his own desires as he is, since redemption requires us to look outside of ourselves to live a better life?

I fully recommend "Pickpocket."

Anthony Trendl
editor, HungarianBookstore.com
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pickpocket Brilliantly Dissects the Human Psyche in the Shadow of Morality..., January 21, 2006
Robert Bresson's genius rests in his awareness that actions often reflect on reality, as the action is something that physically affects its surroundings. By stripping the scenes from emotions and only displaying the actions with complete strangers, the audience gets a sense of genuine presence through the character's actions. To further the meaning of the action, Bresson displays a minimal amount of reactions to the acts taken by the characters such as facial expression or body language. It leaves the viewer with the cold atmosphere where the interactions bring out a true sense of what is taking place on the screen with a clear impression without misunderstandings. Thus, the deeds committed within the film tell the truth without the combination of acting and pointless gibberish of words that often blurs the situation through truths, half-truths, and lies.

Interestingly, Bresson opens the film with a shot of a hand writing down the beginning of self-confessional statement, which belongs to the main character. The initial statement remains enigmatic, as the film lyrically transitions the film into progression where the audience will learn what the main character has to confess. Through superimposing, the first scene with a pair of gloved rich female hands and a wad of money it allows the viewer to learn the truth of the confession. The gloved hands transfer the money to suited man who enters a line for on-site racetrack betting. Throughout the sequence, the hands are fiddling with the cash between the fingers, as the protagonist and antihero Michel's (Martin LaSalle) ogles the wealth switching hands while being within his reach. Bresson triggers a similar reaction that Pavol's dogs experienced when they salivated to the stimuli of the bell, as the fingers are fondling the money. It helps the audience to identify with Michel on various levels such as thinking about what the money could help provide. In this opening the audience learns the hands significance, as hands are what nurtures the protagonist's actions, which will inevitably lead to trouble.

At first, it seems that the internal desire is driven by greed, but shortly after Michel's first pick pocketing the emotional high of the possibility of apprehension due to the illegal act seems to be one of the motivating factors. Michel's voice-over statement strengthens this notion when he states, "I was walking on air, with the world at my feet." Clearly, he senses an emotional high, which also displays emotional arrogance nourished by his recent success. However, to Michel's dismay, he goes down in flames, as the police arrest him fleeing the scene, but they are forced to release him due to lack of evidence. In addition, his home seems to support the idea that wealth does not have a significant meaning to him, as he leaves all his doors unlocked for anyone to enter at any time.

Some of the motivating forces within Michel appear to be shame, guilt, and paranoia. These emotions seem to emerge through the Oedipus complex that he possesses in relation to his internal desire to pick pockets. He knows it is wrong, yet the desire overcomes his awareness of its immorality, which feeds his feelings of guilt, shame, and paranoia. At the same time, the exhilarating stimuli of succeeding, as he puts it "I was walking on air, with the world at my feet" is worth the risk of shame. These feelings remain throughout the film, but as Michel becomes a student of a master pickpocket he also begins to defeat his feelings with confidence. Nonetheless, the police remain in a not too far distance to remind him of his illegal activities, which allows for shame, guilt, and paranoia to linger throughout the film.

Pickpocket provides a fascinating tale of a man and his vocation, as it allows for the audience to drift into a deeply personal perspective on the motivations that drive a man to do what he does. With the help of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment Bresson brings out the psychological and moral aspects of the story. However, he is far subtler, as he does not deal with the axing of a human. Together with the music and the scene framing the acts of the characters deliver several absorbing ideas in regards to how and why Michel acts in the way he does. The minimalism that Bresson is known for also helps highlight many of these vital aspects of the film, as it does draws attention to what truly is important - the acts of human beings.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pickpocket, June 26, 2007
Loosely based on Dostoyevsky's "Crime and Punishment," this spare, understated character study by French auteur Bresson boasts a unique filmmaking style, with minimal dialogue, precise editing, and severely restrained acting from the cast of non-pros--the signature approach of the director. Yet slowly and gracefully, especially in the beautifully composed sequences in which Michel practices his nimble art, the spiritual dimension of Bresson's artistry emerges. The influence of "Pickpocket" on Paul Schrader was huge, too: He employed the film's confessional voiceover technique for his own "Taxi Driver."
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Minimalist to the point of dullness
The Bottom Line:

Bresson's style can sometimes work wonders (e.g. A Man Escaped) but here it just leaves the audience wanting more from a story which, aside from one... Read more
Published 4 months ago by One-Line Film Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Gallic Raskolnikov
It's taken me awhile to learn how to appreciate Bresson's films--my fault entirely, not his--but now that I've cottoned onto his cinematic way of speaking, I'm progressively... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Kerry Walters

5.0 out of 5 stars Watch the "support" pieces too!
Watch the movie slowly, if you think you missed something you probably did. Play it back. After you watch it the first time look at all of the extra features that are part of... Read more
Published 23 months ago by Open Mind

5.0 out of 5 stars Bresson's Pickpocket will steal your heart.
"Robert Bresson is French cinema, as Dostoevsky is the Russian novel and Mozart is the German music"--Jean-Luc Godard. Read more
Published on October 30, 2007 by G. Merritt

4.0 out of 5 stars Are you above normal men?
Robert Bresson can be chalked up as yet another director whose films I have heard about for years but which I have never watched. Read more
Published on August 30, 2007 by Daitokuji31

4.0 out of 5 stars "I was walking on air, with the world at my feet."
"Pickpocket" (1959), directed by Robert Bresson, is inspired in a novel written by Dostoievsky, "Crime and punishment". Read more
Published on August 11, 2007 by bel_78

3.0 out of 5 stars Good film marred by amateur acting
Pickpocket (Robert Bresson, 1959)

Robert Bresson's Pickpocket is one of those movies that's always held up as a paragon of filmmaking, one of the greatest... Read more
Published on March 13, 2007 by Robert P. Beveridge

4.0 out of 5 stars Bresson's films are quite unlike anything else in the cinema...
In his dismissal determination to keep out elements often thought fundamental to the medium--spectacle, drama, performance-- Bresson has followed an incomparable personal vision... Read more
Published on January 10, 2007 by Roberto Frangie

4.0 out of 5 stars The evolution of a thief
"Pickpocket" is director Robert Bresson's simple tale of the unfolding of the emotionally withdrawn existence of a young man, Michel, who has adopted the art of pickpocketing as... Read more
Published on September 23, 2006 by Cory D. Slipman

5.0 out of 5 stars Crime and Punishment, Bresson style
Looking like a French movie but sounding like Russian literature with all the furniture cataloguing removed, Pickpocket is from the days when Bresson still drew more naturalistic... Read more
Published on July 15, 2006 by Trevor Willsmer

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