Join Amazon Prime and ship Two-Day for free and Overnight for $3.99. Already a member? Sign in.

 

or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
 
 
More Buying Choices
36 used & new from $23.99

Have one to sell? Sell yours here
 
   
Shoot the Piano Player - Criterion Collection
 
See larger image
 

Shoot the Piano Player - Criterion Collection (1962)

Starring: Charles Aznavour, Marie Dubois Director: François Truffaut Format: DVD
4.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

List Price: $39.95
Price: $35.99 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
You Save: $3.96 (10%)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
In Stock.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com. Gift-wrap available.

Want it delivered Tuesday, July 21? Choose One-Day Shipping at checkout. Details
27 new from $24.37 9 used from $23.99
Also Available in: List Price: Our Price: Other Offers:
VHS Tape 24 used & new from $1.24
More Puppets Please
Fall in love with this "America's Got Talent" winner and his hilarious cast of characters. "Terry Fator: Live from Las Vegas" is now available for pre-order on DVD and Blu-ray.

Special Offers and Product Promotions

  • Summer Staycation: No need to load up your car or book airline tickets--get away from it all in the comfort of your own home with the Summer Staycation plan. For a limited time save on action, comedy, and drama hits.

  • Save up to 57% on Pixar Classics: Exhilarated by Up? Get all your Pixar favorites now and save up to 57% off. See details.


Frequently Bought Together

Shoot the Piano Player - Criterion Collection + Jules and Jim - Criterion Collection + Breathless
Total List Price: $99.85
Price For All Three: $84.97

Show availability and shipping details

  • This item: Shoot the Piano Player - Criterion Collection DVD ~ Charles Aznavour

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
    This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details

  • Jules and Jim - Criterion Collection DVD ~ Jeanne Moreau

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
    This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details

  • Breathless DVD ~ Richard Balducci

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
    Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details


What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Shoot the Piano Player - Criterion Collection
81% buy the item featured on this page:
Shoot the Piano Player - Criterion Collection 4.8 out of 5 stars (20)
$35.99
Jules and Jim - Criterion Collection
6% buy
Jules and Jim - Criterion Collection 4.1 out of 5 stars (61)
$33.99
Breathless
6% buy
Breathless 4.4 out of 5 stars (84)
$14.99
Day for Night
4% buy
Day for Night 4.2 out of 5 stars (41)
$17.99

Product Details

  • Actors: Charles Aznavour, Marie Dubois, Nicole Berger, Michèle Mercier, Serge Davri
  • Directors: François Truffaut
  • Writers: François Truffaut, David Goodis, Marcel Moussy
  • Producers: Pierre Braunberger
  • Format: Black & White, Dolby, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Language: French
  • Subtitles: English
  • Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Studio: Astor Pictures Corporation
  • DVD Release Date: December 6, 2005
  • Run Time: 92 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000BC8SWO
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #49,609 in Movies & TV (See Bestsellers in Movies & TV)

    Popular in this category: (What's this?)

    #4 in  Movies & TV > Art House & International > By Director > Truffaut, Francois

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential video
A man runs through deserted night streets, stalked by the lights of a car. It's a definitive film noir situation, promptly sidetracked--yet curiously not undercut--by real-life slapstick: watching over his shoulder for pursuers, the running man charges smack into a lamppost. The figure that helps him to his feet is not one of the pursuers (they've oddly disappeared) but an anonymous passerby, who proceeds to escort him for a block or two, genially schmoozing about the mundane, slow-blooming glories of marriage. The Good Samaritan departs at the next turning, never to be identified and never to be seen again. And the first man--who, despite this evocative introduction, is not even destined to be the main character of the movie--immediately resumes his helter-skelter flight from an as-yet-unspecified and unseen menace.

The opening of Shoot the Piano Player, François Truffaut's second feature film, is one of the signal moments of the French New Wave--an inspired intersection of grim fatality and happy accident, location shooting and lurid melodrama, movie convention and frowzy, uncontainable life. At this point in his career--right after The 400 Blows, just before his great Jules and Jim--the world seemed wide for Truffaut, as wide as the Dyaliscope screen that he and cinematographer Raoul Coutard deployed with unprecedented spontaneity and lyricism. Anything might wander into frame and become part of the flow: an oddball digression, an unexpected change of mood, a small miracle of poetic insight.

The official agenda of the movie is adapting a noirish story by American writer David Goodis, about a celebrated concert musician (Charles Aznavour) hiding out as a piano player in a saloon. He's on the run as much as the guy--his older brother--in the first scene. But whereas the brother is worried about a couple of buffoonish gangsters, Charlie Koller is ducking out on life, love, and the possibility that he might be hurt, or cause hurt, again. Decades after its original release, Shoot the Piano Player remains as fresh, exhilarating, and heartbreaking--as open to the magic of movies and life--as ever. --Richard T. Jameson

Product Description
Francois Truffaut is drunk on the possibilities of cinema in this, his most playful, anarchic film. Part thriller, part comedy, part tragedy, Shoot the Piano Player relates the adventures of the mild-mannered piano player Charlie (Charles Aznavour, in a triumph of hangdog deadpan) as he stumbles into the criminal underworld and a whirlwind love affair. Loaded with gags, guns, clowns, and thugs, this razor-sharp homage to the American gangster film is pure nouvelle vague.


Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought

Breathless

Breathless

DVD ~ Richard Balducci
4.4 out of 5 stars (84)  $14.99
The 400 Blows - Criterion Collection

The 400 Blows - Criterion Collection

DVD ~ Bernard Abbou
Elevator to the Gallows - Criterion Collection

Elevator to the Gallows - Criterion Collection

DVD ~ Jeanne Moreau
4.5 out of 5 stars (22)  $35.99
The Bicycle Thief

The Bicycle Thief

DVD ~ Lamberto Maggiorani
4.6 out of 5 stars (121)  $17.99
Band of Outsiders - Criterion Collection

Band of Outsiders - Criterion Collection

DVD ~ Claude Brasseur
4.6 out of 5 stars (36)  $22.49
Explore similar items

Tags Customers Associate with This Product

 (What's this?)
Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
Check the boxes next to the tags you consider relevant or enter your own tags in the field below.

Your tags: Add your first tag
 
Help others find this product — tag it for Amazon search
No one has tagged this product for Amazon search yet. Why not be the first to suggest a search for which it should appear?

 

Customer Reviews

20 Reviews
5 star:
 (16)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
33 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I use the word 'emotional' a lot. It means everything to me, July 5, 2001
This review is from: Shoot the Piano Player (DVD)
Truffaut said he realised, when filming 'Shoot the Pianist', a gangster film, that he hated gangster films. He shows his contempt most by consistently emphasising human truth over generic convention, but finally allowing generic convention to win brutally through. For Truffaut, genre is incompatible with humanity and its messiness.

Like many of my favourite films (and it is my favourite), 'Shoot' is a reworking of 'Vertigo', the story of a man who lets two women die because of his own emotional cowardice, leaving him in emotional shellshock. Aznavour's performance - and this isn't sufficiently realised - is one of the towering achievements of cinema, a complete, physical embodiment of diffidence, guilt, solitude and emotional paralysis, a man more lethal in his dithering passivity than murderous gangsters are in their violence.

Like all the best art, 'Shoot' is a tragicomedy, moving bewilderingly between the two moods, creating a devastating emotional texture - the hilarious scene where Charlie debates the best way to hold Lena only to tragically realise she's gone, or the frightening abduction scene that sees captor and juvenile captive argue comically over scarves.

As the title suggests, music is this film's soul, the only thing that can transcend genre for Charlie, the only way an emotionally dead man can feel.

Truffaut's restlessly inventive mise-en-scene, switching between studied artifice and breathless open air filming, is full of Hitchcock, Godard, Ophuls, Ray, Renoir - all the best of cinema; but in truth, there is no other film like it.

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Funny and Emotional Ride, May 8, 2003
By R. W. Rasband (Heber City, UT) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
Truffaut's "Shoot The Piano Player" is a remarkable thing: a funny and light-on-its-feet movie about despair. The director combines the grittiness of David Goodis' noir novel "Down There" with his own more optimistic humanism and the full stylistic arsenal of the French "New Wave" to create a film that manages to say as much about Art and Life as any really good, satisfying book. Charles Aznavour plays the timid Edouard, aka Charlie, a piano player in a cheap bar who is really a classical concert pianist hiding from a catastrophic, tragic history. A pretty new waitress knows who he is and encourages him to live again. But as in most American gangster movies, you can't run away from your past. Truffaut includes an amazing amount of philosophy about women, Fate, success, failure, marriage; all couched in a runaway style that is familiar to us today, but must have been shocking and exhilirating back in 1960. (The famous cut to the "old woman dropping dead" could have come directly from MAD magazine.) And who hasn't sometimes felt bedeviled by fortune and shyness: we greatly identify with Charlie. The comically incompetent yet sinister villains are also a great touch. This movie feels as fresh as it must have 40 years ago.
Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)



 
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A classic movie filled with many wonderful moments, January 10, 2006
By Bomojaz (South Central PA, USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   

Truffaut's second film after THE 400 BLOWS, and it finds him experimenting all over the place. Charles Aznavour plays Charlie Kohler, once a very prominent concert pianist, but now playing honky-tonk in a back alley joint. Once he thought only of his great career, but in the process lost his wife to suicide (she slept with his promoter to help advance his career and he could never forgive her); now he wants only obscurity. But he inadvertently gets mixed up with a couple of thugs who are after his two brothers, and he falls in love with another woman (Marie Dubois). The thugs end up kidnapping Aznavour and Dubois, and although the two lovers had made plans that Aznavour would pursue his "career" again, fate seems to be against them: she is killed in a shoot-out at the end.

Truffaut said this movie was "a grab bag." And it does seem to have everything in it but the kitchen sink: it's rooted in "B" Hollywood gangster movies, is a wonderful mixture of comedy and tragedy, and has almost no storyline. In fact, Truffaut throws the storyline to the wind: it's a picture of touches, of quick, fleeting moments, rather than narrative continuity. Its juxtapositions are wonderful: fame and obsurity, love and hate, gangsters with a sense of humor, lots of action and the desire to go and do nothing. It's a great movie - funny and sad - and one filled with many memorable moments. Definitely worth a watch.
Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
 
 
Ad
 
Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Out of Its Time?
We filled in one of our cinephile gaps the other night with Shoot the Piano Player. Maybe we should have transported ourselves mentally back to 1960 and, a la Eternal Sunshine of... Read more
Published 3 days ago by James Carragher

5.0 out of 5 stars Shoot the Piano Player is Classic French Cinema.
I experienced the new 35mm presentation of François Truffaut's 1960 film, Shoot the Piano Player (Tirez sur le pianiste), in my local theater over the weekend. Read more
Published 6 months ago by G. Merritt

5.0 out of 5 stars Greatest Film of the French New Wave (Truffaut's Masterpiece)
The crown jewel of the French New Wave and Truffaut's underrated masterpiece--this bittersweet, melancholy film is a comic gangster B-movie, a tragic romance, an innocent drama of... Read more
Published 15 months ago by Graveyard Poet

5.0 out of 5 stars Offbeat, undisciplined, sprawling, funny, sad, goofy...A Coen Bros. movie before the Coen Bros. made movies
Before there was Jim Jarmusch, before there was Quentin Tarentino, before there were the Coen Brothers, there was Francois Truffaut and the whole French New Wave. Read more
Published on July 1, 2007 by John Grabowski

5.0 out of 5 stars Shoot the Piano Player
This quirky crime film by the great Truffaut mixes sight-gag comedy with suspense, resulting in a superbly nutty homage to the 1940s film noirs he so admired. Read more
Published on June 28, 2007 by John Farr

5.0 out of 5 stars The PIANO PLAYER is music to my ears.......
I am a great fan of the late, great French director, Francois Truffaut. I must confess that I haven't seen nearly enough of his films. Read more
Published on June 15, 2007 by D. Pawl

5.0 out of 5 stars Impossible to characterize, but funny, touching and sad
Asks the interviewer, "What place would you give Shoot the Piano Player in relation to your other films?" Answers director François Truffaut, "No place. Read more
Published on January 7, 2007 by C. O. DeRiemer

5.0 out of 5 stars Shoot the Piano Player
I want to start this review with this. The piano player is never shot. Having said that, this is Francois Truffaut's second film, following his masterpiece
"The 400 Blows. Read more
Published on September 12, 2006 by Joshua Miller

4.0 out of 5 stars Another Truffaut classic
This review is for the Criterion Collection DVD edition of the film.

"Shoot the Piano Player" known in France as "Tirez sur le pianiste" is one of Fran? Read more
Published on April 23, 2006 by Ted M.

5.0 out of 5 stars A kinetic ride!
"Shoot the piano player" reveals the enormous amount of expressive burden and creative energy respect to well know establsihed and fixed classic references. Read more
Published on February 21, 2006 by Hiram Gomez Pardo

Only search this product's reviews



Customer Discussions

 Beta (What's this?)
New! See all customer communities, and bookmark your communities to keep track of them.
This product's forum (0 discussions)
  Discussion Replies Latest Post
  No discussions yet

Ask questions, Share opinions, Gain insight
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
  [Cancel]


Active discussions in related forums
  Discussion Replies Latest Post
HDDVD or BlueRay? 12 23 hours ago
Your Favorite Criterion Collection Movie 135 12 days ago
   


Product Information from the Amapedia Community

Beta (What's this?)



Look for Similar Items by Category


A Savings Shower

Home Improvement Value Center
Find the right showerhead at the right price in the Home Improvement Value Center, where you can find items up to 50% off.

Shop the Value Center

 

Mowers at Great Prices

Lawn-Boy mowers
Make quick work of maintaining the yard with these offerings from Lawn-Boy. Get the Lawn-Boy quality you want at a price you'll love.

Shop all Lawn-Boy

 

You Can Never Have Too Many

Shop for gardening gloves
Every gardener needs another pair of gloves. Shop our selection of gardening gloves in the Home Improvement Store.

Shop all outdoor power and lawn equipment

 

The Perfect Fit

Shop for adjustable wrenches
No matter what size you need, an adjustable wrench gives you the right fit in tight situations.

Shop now

 
Ad

 

Feedback

If you need help or have a question for Customer Service, contact us.
 Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
Is there any other feedback you would like to provide?

Your comments can help make our site better for everyone.


Where's My Stuff?

Shipping & Returns

Need Help?

Your Recent History

  (What's this?)
You have no recently viewed items or searches.

After viewing product detail pages or search results, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.

Look to the right column to find helpful suggestions for your shopping session.

Continue shopping: Top Sellers
Free
Free by Chris Anderson
Paranoia
Paranoia by Joseph Finder
My Soul to Lose
My Soul to Lose by Rachel Vincent
Darkfever
Darkfever by Karen Marie Moning

Conditions of Use | Privacy Notice © 1996-2009, Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates