Calmos

Calmos
Directed by Bertrand Blier
Written by Bertrand Blier
Philippe Dumarçay
Starring Jean-Pierre Marielle
Jean Rochefort
Bernard Blier
Brigitte Fossey
Music by Georges Delerue
Cinematography Claude Renoir
Edited by Claudine Merlin
Distributed by AMLF
Release date
  • 11 February 1976 (1976-02-11)
Running time
107 minutes
Country France
Language French

Calmos is a 1976 French film directed by Bertrand Blier.

Plot

Two men, fortyish, worn out by their wives, abandon everything to go and live in the back of beyond. There they meet a truculent priest, a boozer, Émile (Bernard Blier) who recalls them to life's simple pleasures. Calm is what they want. But soon their example inspires thousands of disorientated males, fleeing the feminist 1970s. Soon, too, there arrives a squadron of nymphomaniac Amazons.

Cast

Critical response

Pauline Kael reviewed the film in The New Yorker : "Blier's method worked in Going Places, and it works in Get Out Your Handkerchiefs, but something went wrong in his sexual extravaganza Calmos (and the picture failed, even in France)... The two men are joined by other escaping men; women demanding gratification come after them with guns, and it's a full-scale tedious war of the sexes until, finally, the two pals, old men now and shrivelled in size, are dropped out of a cloud onto an island... Calmos is an overscaled back-to-the-womb satiric fantasy - a male daydream about the impossibility of escape from the sexual wars. It's about the demands of sex on men who spent their youth chasing women and now - jaded - want a break from it - they want to go off and live like pigs. It's a funny idea, and though Calmos abandons it, there are still things to look at all through the picture... Throughout the women are made repellently beautiful - they have a neon voraciousness. Brigitte Fossey, a blond cat with a perfect tiny mouth, is like sensual porcelain. No one but Blier has matched such raunchiness and such visual beauty; you have to have a true respect for raunchiness to do that." [1]

References

  1. Pauline Kael, reprinted in When the Lights Go Down


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