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Format: Laserdisc
 Not Rated
 Recording Mode: (unknown)
 117 min. |
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* ML=ships from multiple locations, AE/AP/AA=ships from U.S. Military location.
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Movie Description With an original title named after the French term for male genitalia (LES VALSEUSES), Bertrand Blier's early feature lets viewers know right away what they're getting into. For better or worse, Blier doesn't disappoint. Gérard Depardieu and Patrick Dewaere star in Blier's bawdy comedy as Jean-Claude and Pierrot, two drifters who roam about stealing and taking whatever women they want, usually by force. Apparently on a search for nothing in particular except to flout bourgeois values whenever possible, the shameless duo finds targets wherever they turn (including two of France's most prominent actresses, Jeanne Moreau and Isabelle Huppert). Eventually, the two stumble across an unlikely comrade in Marie-Ange (Miou-Miou), a taciturn hairdresser who exerts an oddly calming influence on the rambunctious pair. A daring blend of freewheeling comedy, rampant sex, and unabashed misogyny, Blier's film is not for the timid, but for those who like their humor crude and graphic-and who want to see Depardieu and Dewaere going head-to-head--GOING PLACES certainly won't disappoint.
Synopsis One of the quintessential films about existential angst. A pair of aimless young men roam the French countryside, robbing, raping and (occasionally) seducing as they go along.
Film Notes Theatrical Release: March 20, 1974.
Industry Reviews "...Blier's strategies in the telling of his sexual odyssey remain fresh, outrageous and inspired..." Los Angeles Times - Kevin Thomas (08/10/1990)
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