Tales of Love: The Enchanted World of Jacques Demy

7/25/13 to 8/31/13

This summer, we are delighted to showcase the films of Jacques Demy (1931–1990), one of the most gifted filmmakers to emerge during the French New Wave. Masterfully choreographed camera movements, a penchant for colorful decorative elegance, and a starring role for music (often by Michel LeGrand) are trademarks of Demy's cinematic style. Our series also includes three films about Demy directed by his wife, Agnès Varda.

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Past Films

  • The Umbrellas of Cherbourg

    • Saturday, August 31 8:15 pm

    Jacques Demy (France, 1964). (Les parapluies de Cherbourg). Digital Restoration! A paean to Catherine Deneuve, French design, 1960s chic, MGM musicals, and the songs of Michel Legrand. A boy and girl love, lose, love again, and lose again against an assortment of fabulous wallpaper, singing all the while. Also playing on Saturday, July 27. (92 mins)

  • The Young Girls of Rochefort

    • Friday, August 30 8:30 pm

    Jacques Demy (France, 1967). (Les demoiselles de Rochefort). Catherine Deneuve and sister Françoise Dorléac are twins lifted out of their small-town reveries by a troupe of wandering entertainers led by Mr. American in Paris himself, Gene Kelly. "Not merely charming or amusing, but profoundly moving" (Sight and Sound). Also playing on Thursday, August 8. (124 mins)

  • Three Seats for the 26th

    • Saturday, August 24 8:20 pm

    Jacques Demy (France, 1988). (Trois places pour le 26). Demy's last film is a retrospective, self-reflexive tribute to the romance of show business. Yves Montand stars as himself, returning to his hometown of Marseille to rehearse an autobiographical revue. “Quirky, appealing, and, in effect, Demy's farewell to cinema.” (Time Out). (103 mins)

  • The Pied Piper

    • Friday, August 23 8:35 pm

    Jacques Demy (U.K., 1972). Pop singer Donovan plays the fourteenth-century piper hired to rid a town, beset by the Black Plague, of its rats, in Demy's darkly political interpretation of the Brothers Grimm tale. “Deserves to be remembered as a very strange hybrid indeed: a neo-Marxist fairytale” (Jump Cut). (90 mins)

  • A Room in Town

    • Saturday, August 17 8:30 pm

    Jacques Demy (France, 1982). (Une chambre en ville). Demy's return to the musical is in an emotional key closer to opera than to Hollywood-more Donizetti than Stanley Donen. A 1955 labor strike in Nantes is the backdrop for a tale of tragic passions starring Richard Berry, Danielle Darrieux, Dominique Sanda, and Michel Piccoli. (95 mins)

  • A Slightly Pregnant Man

    • Thursday, August 15 7 pm

    Jacques Demy (France/Italy, 1973). (L'évènement le plus important depuis que l'homme a marché sur la lune). Driving instructor Marcello Mastroianni and his hairdresser wife Catherine Deneuve are faced with an unexpected pregnancy-his, in Demy's surreal comedy. (93 mins)

  • The World of Jacques Demy

    • Sunday, August 11 6:45 pm

    Agnès Varda (France, 1994). Varda's third documentary on Demy is a beautiful summary of her husband's career, and features interviews with Catherine Deneuve, Michel Piccoli, Danielle Darrieux, Jeanne Moreau, and many more of his collaborators. With Demy's 1957 short, Le bel indifférent. (120 mins)


  • The Young Girls Turn 25

    • Friday, August 9 7 pm

    Agnès Varda (France, 1993). (Les demoiselles ont eu 25 ans). Agnès Varda's splendid documentary revisits the town of Rochefort on the twenty-fifth anniversary of the shooting of The Young Girls of Rochefort, where she finds evidence of the film's lasting effects on the townspeople. The perfect accompaniment to Demy's masterful achievement. With short, Ars. (83 mins)

  • The Young Girls of Rochefort

    • Thursday, August 8 7 pm

    Jacques Demy (France, 1967). (Les demoiselles de Rochefort). Catherine Deneuve and sister Françoise Dorléac are twins lifted out of their small-town reveries by a troupe of wandering entertainers led by Mr. American in Paris himself, Gene Kelly. "Not merely charming or amusing, but profoundly moving" (Sight and Sound). Repeated on Friday, August 30. (124 mins)

  • Donkey Skin

    • Sunday, August 4 6:30 pm

    Jacques Demy (France, 1970). (Peau d'âne). Digital Restoration! This charming adaptation of a fairy tale by Charles Perrault (creator of Cinderella) has been called Demy's “grand synthesis of Cocteau and Minnelli.” Catherine Deneuve, Jean Marais, and Delphine Seyrig star. (90 mins)

  • Model Shop

    • Friday, August 2 9 pm

    Jacques Demy (France/U.S., 1969). Digital Restoration! This sequel to Lola finds Anouk Aimée, now a little older and sadder, in Los Angeles, working in a "model shop" where lonely men go to snap photos of beautiful women. "One of the great movies about L.A." (Time Out). With short, Lust. (106 mins)

  • Jacquot

    • Wednesday, July 31 7 pm

    Agnès Varda (France, 1991). (Jacquot de Nantes). Demy's wife Agnès Varda (Vagabond, The Gleaners and I) crafted this affecting and enlightening portrait of the artist as a young boy in 1940s Nantes. "A one-of-a-kind celebration” (NY Times). (118 mins)

  • The Umbrellas of Cherbourg

    • Saturday, July 27 8:30 pm

    Jacques Demy (France, 1964). (Les parapluies de Cherbourg). Digital Restoration! A paean to Catherine Deneuve, French design, 1960s chic, MGM musicals, and the songs of Michel Legrand. A boy and girl love, lose, love again, and lose again against an assortment of fabulous wallpaper, singing all the while. Repeated on Saturday, August 31. (92 mins)

  • Bay of Angels

    • Friday, July 26 7 pm

    Jacques Demy (France, 1962). (La baie des anges). Digital Restoration! Jeanne Moreau is a faded gambler ready for one last spin along the French Riviera, accompanied by a puppyish bank clerk. Music by Michel Legrand. "An exhibition of cinematic personality reminiscent of Dietrich's best” (NY Times). (85 mins)



  • Lola

    • Thursday, July 25 7 pm

    Jacques Demy (France, 1961). Digital Restoration! A nightclub dancer (Anouk Aimée) waits, against all logic, for the return of the lover who left her with a child seven years earlier. Demy's first feature, "among the most neglected major works of the French New Wave” (Jonathan Rosenbaum). With short, Le sabotier du Val de Loire. (114 mins)