The Young Girls Of Rochefort -1967- Criterion -... Upd [2025]
Through the Criterion Collection’s definitive home video release, this French New Wave musical receives the meticulous preservation it deserves. Criterion’s stellar visual transfer and expansive bonus features allow modern audiences to appreciate the immense technical discipline hidden beneath the film’s effortlessly breezy surface. The Plot: A Symphony of Near Misses
The magic of Demy’s script lies in its geometric irony: almost every character is looking for their ideal soulmate, and while those soulmates are often just a room or a street corner away, the characters continuously pass each other by without realizing it. Production and the Real-Life Sisterhood
In the vast, often somber library of the Criterion Collection—a canon filled with neorealism’s grit, Bergman’s existential dread, and Tarkovsky’s poetic melancholy—there is one title that stands apart like a pastel-colored firework against a grey sky. That title is . The Young Girls of Rochefort -1967- Criterion -...
A touching documentary by Agnès Varda (Demy’s widow and a legendary filmmaker in her own right) that revisits the town of Rochefort, exploring the lasting impact of the production on its residents.
But if you need a reminder that cinema can be pure, unironic pleasure —that a camera can spin, that colors can sing, that two sisters in matching sundresses can dance through a French square to a jazz sextet—then there is nothing better. Production and the Real-Life Sisterhood In the vast,
The restoration process involved a painstaking review of the original materials, careful digital cleanup, and a thorough color grading process to ensure that the film's original color palette and visual aesthetic are preserved. The result is a viewing experience that feels both nostalgic and contemporary.
The piece highlights the film as a "love letter to American cinema," specifically noting the presence of Gene Kelly and how the film engages with the idealized France seen in An American in Paris . But if you need a reminder that cinema
Criterion’s two-disc edition offers deep dives for cinephiles:
: Includes a 1966 French television interview with Jacques Demy and Michel Legrand, along with a 2014 conversation between Demy biographer Jean-Pierre Berthomé and costume designer Jacqueline Moreau.
In 1967, French New Wave directors Jacques Demy and Philippe de Broca joined forces to create a cinematic masterpiece that would enchant audiences for generations to come: ( Les Demoiselles de Rochefort ). Now, thanks to the Criterion Collection, this beloved musical has been restored and re-released, allowing a new wave of film enthusiasts to experience its magic.
The following supplements are included in the Criterion edition: The Young Girls Turn 25
