Jacques Tati


5 directors influenced by the surreal films of Jacques Tati

Directed by Comedy / Fantasy Film Review T he film that torpedoed Jacques Tati's filmmaking career, effectively marginalising one of France's most inventive and daring film directors, Playtime is now almost universally considered to be a cinematic masterpiece and a work of immense creative vision.


0460B Jacques Tati Playtime 1967 Frankrig /Italien Mon Oncle

Jacques Tati's 1967 film Playtime may elicit muted guffaws, raised eyebrows, jaws dropped in amazement - but belly laughs? Hardly. Tati creates a different kind of comedy - a deadpan kind.


We’ll Always Have Paris Tati’s Playtime Bright Wall/Dark Room

"Tativille," a 1967 episode of the British television program Tempo International, featuring an interview with Tati from the set of PlayTime Beyond "PlayTime," a short 2002 documentary featuring behind-the-scenes footage from the production Interview from 2006 with script supervisor Sylvette Baudrot


Playtime by Jacques Tati (615CI) — Atlas of Places

Directed by Jacques Tati • 1967 • France Starring Jacques Tati, Barbara Dennek, Georges Montant Jacques Tati's gloriously choreographed, nearly wordless comedies about confusion in an age of high technology reached their apotheosis with PLAYTIME. For this monumental achievement, a nearly three-year-long, bank-breaking production, Tati again thrust the lovably old-fashioned Monsieur Hulot.


Jacques Tati in Playtime (1967) a photo on Flickriver

Playtime (Jacques Tati, 1967) is the third of four films based on the character of Monsieur Hulot (Jacques Tati), which follows a self-effacing everyman as he visits a modernized Paris over the course of a day and a night.


Jacques Tati, Playtime The Glasgow Masters Series

Directed by Jacques Tati • 1967 • France Starring Jacques Tati, Barbara Dennek, Georges Montant Jacques Tati's gloriously choreographed, nearly wordless comedies about confusion in an age of high technology reached their apotheosis with PLAYTIME. For this monumental achievement, a nearly three-year-long, bank-breaking production, Tati again thrust the lovably old-fashioned Monsieur Hulot.


FRIDAY NIGHT BOYS Jacques Tati Playtime (1967)

Playtime (stylized as PlayTime and also written as Play Time) is a 1967 comedy film directed by Jacques Tati. In the film, Tati again plays Monsieur Hulot, the popular character who had central roles in his earlier films Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot (1953) and Mon Oncle (1958).


Jacques Tati

Playtime (1967) Jacques Tati's most painstaking accomplishment blends deft slapstick, endless visual ingenuity and sonic comedy in a stupendous modern satire. Buy on Blu-Ray £65.99 Watch and discover Sight and Sound The Greatest Films of All Time Playtime


PlayTime (1967) The Criterion Collection

Details Select delivery location Used: Very Good | Details Sold by KGR Media Add to Basket Playtime (Blu-ray + DVD) [1967] Jacques Tati (Director) Rated: Universal, suitable for all Format: DVD 4.6 182 ratings £4080 Blu-ray from £28.11 DVD £40.80 Additional DVD options Edition Discs Amazon Price New from Used from DVD — 1 £11.91 £11.91 — DVD — —


Jacques Tati

Jacques Tati's "Playtime" (1967) is a world of plate glass and steel, endless corridors, work stations, elevators and escaltors -- and Mr. Hulot (Tati), in his signature short pants, raincoat, hat and umbrella, who is seemingly on display behind glass walls in a modern office building. Now streaming on: Powered by JustWatch


Playtime by Jacques Tati (615CI) — Atlas of Places

Jacques Tati in his 1967 film Playtime. Photograph: Specta Films/Allstar Stream team Movies Playtime: Jacques Tati's masterpiece took cinema close to a video game The French.


by BenQ Playtime (1967)

A ttempting to adapt Jacques Tati's 1967 masterpiece is courageous, maybe even reckless. Often classed among the greatest ever films, it has a flimsy plot, long shots of moving crowds and.


Jacques Tati in Playtime (1967) French postcard by Les Fil… Flickr

PLAYTIME. France, 1967. Director: Jacques Tati. Production: Specta Films, Eastmancolor, 70mm, stereophonic sound; running time: originally 155 minutes,versions for United States release run about 108 minutes or 93 minutes. Released 1967, France. Re-released 1972 in the United States in 35mm version. Filmed on specially constructed sets just.


Playtime (1967) de Jacques Tati FranceSoir

The tribulations of the tourist photographer.


Travel posters from Jacques Tati's PlayTime (1967) criterion

Clumsy Monsieur Hulot (Jacques Tati) finds himself perplexed by the intimidating complexity of a gadget-filled Paris. He attempts to meet with a business contact but soon becomes lost. His.


Jacques Tati in Playtime (1967) a photo on Flickriver

Film Photo: Courtesy of Continental Distributing Time Out says French actor-filmmaker Jacques Tati's 1967 masterpiece still holds up as a feast of subtle sight gags, playful noise and, above.

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