Paul
Marlon Brando
Paul

“When you see a love story, it's only a movie. When you feel it with every nerve in your body, it's a masterpiece.”
A recently widowed American begins an anonymous sexual relationship with a young Parisian woman.
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Paul
Marlon Brando
Paul
Jeanne
Maria Schneider
Jeanne
Rosa's Mother
Maria Michi
Rosa's Mother
Prostitute
Giovanna Galletti
Prostitute
Tom
Jean-Pierre Léaud
Tom
Jeanne's Mother
Gitt Magrini
Jeanne's Mother
Catherine
Catherine Allégret
Catherine
Olympia
Luce Marquand
Olympia
Monique
Marie-Hélène Breillat
Monique
Mouchette
Catherine Breillat
Mouchette
TV Sound Engineer
Dan Diament
TV Sound Engineer
Script Girl
Catherine Sola
Script Girl
"Jeanne" (Maria Schneider) is flat-hunting when she encounters the predatory "Paul" (Marlon Brando) in an empty apartment where he proceeds to rape her. It turns out that he has recently lost his wife to suicide and is completely bereft - bewildered and almost feral in his attitude towards this girl. He rents the apartment and she comes back for more - always using the no names no pack drill routine as the sex becomes perfunctorily obsessional for both of them. The question is - can they both remain so dispassionate emotionally as their rendezvous become more intense, more humiliating for her and ultimately completely addictive? She is obedient in every way, and like most things reliably delivered on a plate the sex soon ceases to satiate his desires. He must completely control this young woman. She, meantime, is engaged to the aspiring film director "Tom" (Jean-Pierre Léaud) who remains blissfully oblivious of his fiancée's peccadilloes. In the end, it's going to be "Jeanne" who has to take control of her own life - but which way will she turn? For a film that's essentially about passion, this is an entirely sterile affair with little actual chemistry between the couple as Bertolucci exposes us to endless pointless female nudity, some clumsily choreographed sex and a surfeit of dialogue that doesn't generate steam so much as spray amidst a series of gratuitous nookie that did neither Brando nor the marginally more natural Schneider any favours. If it's supposed to be a penetrative look at the human psyche, or at our animal instincts, or maybe even at our dependencies, then I'm afraid it was all just too plodding, repetitive and undercooked. This just wasn't for me, sorry.
Read full reviewMarlon Brando On The Dick Cavett Show
Larry Karaszewski on LAST TANGO IN PARIS
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