Member Login
Username:Password:
or Sign up here
Discover

BELLE DE JOUR

(Redirected from Belle de Jour)

'''Belle de jour''' is a 1967 French film starring Catherine Deneuve. The film was directed by the Spanish director Luis Buñuel. It is based on the 1928 novel of the same name by Joseph Kessel.

Contents
Plot
Cast
Awards
Namesakes
See also
External links

Plot


Séverine Serizy is a young, beautiful Paris housewife who has masochistic daydream fantasies about elaborate floggings and bondage. She is married to a doctor (Jean Sorel) and loves him, but cannot share physical intimacy with him. A male friend mentions a high-class brothel to Séverine, and soon she secretly tries to work there during the afternoon (using the pseudonym ''Belle de jour''). The brothel is run by Madame Anaïs, played by Geneviève Page. Séverine will only work up until five o'clock each day, returning to her blissfully unaware husband in the evening.

Cast



Catherine Deneuve as Séverine Serizy aka Belle de Jour

Jean Sorel as Pierre Serizy

Michel Piccoli as Henri Husson

Geneviève Page as Madame Anais

Pierre Clémenti as Marcel

Georges Marchal as Duke

Françoise Fabian as Charlotte

Macha Méril as Renée

Muni as Pallas

Maria Latour as Mathilde

Awards


The film won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival in 1967.

Namesakes



★ The song 'My Lover's Box' by Scottish rock group Garbage was inspired, in part at least, by the movie. Later, Their music video for 'Tell me where it hurts' was also based on this film.

★ The pseudonymous British writer Belle de Jour is presumably named after this film.

See also



Sadism and masochism in fiction

External links







Review of DVD of Belle De Jour

Belle de jour review by Edward Guthmann - San Francisco Chronicle

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.