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Cleo From 5 to 7 (1962, Fr.) (aka
Cléo de 5 à 7)
In writer/director Agnes Varda's dramatic comedy (with
some musical elements) - a meandering episodic character study about
the impending doom facing a shallow, self-absorbed woman who feared
the results of a medical examination:
- the opening title sequence ("Cut the deck,
please") - (the only sequence in color) - a reading composed
solely of close-ups of hands and tarot cards, delivered by fortune
teller Madame Irma (Loye Payen) that revealed the Hangman's card
of Death ("It means a complete transformation of your whole
being")
- a film shot in real-time and marked with 13 precise
chapter headings (timings from 5 to 7 pm) - supposedly two hours,
although the film's actual length was 90 minutes, and should have
been titled Cleo From 5 to 6:30
- the central heroine: pretty, superficial blonde pop
singer Florence 'Cléo' Victoire (Corinne Marchand) - a superstitious,
distressed hypochondriac awaiting the results of diagnostic hospital
tests regarding terminal stomach cancer in the early evening
- the many times in the film that Cleo vainly viewed
herself in a mirror, at one time reassuring herself: "Wait,
pretty butterfly. Ugliness is a kind of death. As long as I'm beautiful,
I'm even more alive than the others" - and another time expressing
her frustrations: "My unchanging doll's face, this ridiculous
hat. I can't see my own fears. I always think everyone's looking
at me, but I only look at myself. It wears me out"
- the various individuals that the vain Cleo met with,
beginning at 5 pm with the fortune teller (from the title sequence),
then a café visit at Bonne Santé (Good Health)
with her loyal secretary/housekeeper Angèle (Dominique Davray)
when she broke down ("I might as well be dead already"),
followed by shopping for a hat, and a short apartment visit from
her superficial lover-boyfriend José (José Luis de
Villalonga)
- the scene of a music rehearsal with Cleo's pianist-composer
Bob (Michel Legrand) and lyricist Plumitif (Serge Korber) in her
luxurious Paris studio apartment; the two joked around (by pretending
to be doctors) and then her emotional singing of the torch song Sans
Toi - the song began with her using sheet music while accompanied
on the piano by Bob, then shifted her perspective to a full-scale
orchestral performance, as she sang with tears and the background
turned black behind her; afterwards, she angrily dismissed them,
telling them that they weren't taking her seriously as an artist: "What's
a song? How long can it last? You make me capricious! Nothing but
a china doll! Revolutions with macabre words. You think I'll make
a hit with that? You're trying to exploit me! Get out!?"; Cleo
ripped off her wig, donned a black dress, and left her apartment
- the images of Cleo looking into a store - through
a fractured, distorted, and cracked window - a symbol of her own
psyche, and as she walked down a sidewalk, her own subjective and
anxious POV as everyone appeared to judge and gaze at her
Cleo's Friend Dorothee - Nude Model
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- further visits with friend Dorothée (Dorothée
Blank), a liberated and uninhibited model posing nude at an artist's
sculpture studio, and with Dorothee's boyfriend Raoul (Raymond
Cauchetier) who projected a short silent comedy ("a film within
a film") to cheer her up; as she left the movie house, Cleo
dropped her purse on the pavement and broke her small mirror -
and believed it was a bad omen
Cleo's Chance Meeting With Soldier on Leave
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- the ending sequence beginning in the calm setting
of the 14th arrondissement's Parc de Montsouris - a chance meeting
with Antoine (Antoine Bourseiller), an on-leave soldier from the
Algerian War who formed an understanding of trust with Cleo (who
revealed her real name, Florence); he comfortingly agreed to accompany
her to get her test results if she would later see him off at the
train station; test results were that Cleo required two months
of chemotherapy; as they parted, the two spoke the final two lines
of dialogue: Antoine: "I'm sorry I'm leaving. I'd like to
be with you." Cleo: "You are. I think my fear is gone.
I think I'm happy"
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Hangman's Tarot Card of Death
Florence 'Cléo' Victoire (Corinne Marchand)
Cleo's Break-down in Cafe
Cleo's Music Rehearsal
Mirrors, Surrounded by Crowds and Cleo's POV
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