The Woman in Red Boots

(Redirected from La Femme aux bottes rouges)

The Woman in Red Boots (French: La Femme aux bottes rouges; Italian: La ragazza con gli stivali rossi; Spanish: La mujer con botas rojas) is a 1974 fantasy comedy-drama film co-written and directed by Juan Luis Buñuel.[1][2] The film stars Catherine Deneuve as a beautiful young writer with the power to make her wishes reality whose life becomes entangled with the plots of the wealthy art patron Perrot, played by Fernando Rey. The film is highly surrealistic and tinged with a meta-narrative, with the characters roughly representing divisions of the art world: the raw creative power of young Françoise, the heroine who has nearly unlimited potential; the cynical manipulation and distant intellectualism of the elder Perrot; and the middle-aged Marc (Adalberto Maria Merli), trapped in the middle and forced to choose.[3]

The Woman in Red Boots
French theatrical release poster
FrenchLa Femme aux bottes rouges
Directed byJuan Luis Buñuel
Written by
Produced byClaude Jaeger
Starring
CinematographyLeopoldo Villaseñor
Edited byGeneviève Vaury
Production
companies
  • Procinex
  • ORTF
  • Gerico Sound
  • Producciones Cinematográficas Logar
  • Rewind Film
Distributed by
  • UGC
  • NEF
  • CFDC (France)
  • Maxi Cinematografica Italiana (Italy)
  • As Films S.A. (Spain)
Release dates
  • 11 December 1974 (1974-12-11) (France)
  • 12 December 1974 (1974-12-12) (Italy)
  • 11 March 1975 (1975-03-11) (Spain)
Running time
95 minutes
Countries
  • France
  • Italy
  • Spain
LanguageFrench

Plot

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Françoise Leroy is a young and beautiful novelist with the extraordinary ability to make her wishes come true. She starts the film in a relationship with Richard, a bohemian painter. Perrot, an older wealthy art lover who is fascinated by the destruction of works, decides to meddle with Françoise and Richard. Perrot causes Françoise and Marc, a publisher, to meet; the two begin trading reality-altering letters, much to the concern of Sophie, Marc's wife. Sophie, while attempting to spy on Marc's hunting trip to understand what is going on with this potential affair, is shot by her husband in an accident, possibly caused by Françoise's unconscious desire for Marc to be available. Perrot invites Françoise to settle in his house to write there, then invites both Marc, Richard, and various other artists as well. Perrot's machinations are tied somewhat to his love of chess which manifests in a three-dimensional chess game he is playing (both in reality and his subjective actions). Perrot arranges the "Death of art" in a mass suicide of the artists, as art requires destruction to be complete in his opinion; Richard and Marc draw straws to see who can stay with Françoise. Marc loses; Françoise and Richard escape through one of Richard's paintings that opens up to allow them to physically walk inside to the world within, yet turns back to paint when another person inspects the picture.

Cast

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References

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  1. ^ "The Woman with Red Boots de Juan Luis Buñuel (1974)". UniFrance. Retrieved December 4, 2020.
  2. ^ Un siècle de cinéma fantastique et de SF. Editions Le Manuscrit. p. 284. ISBN 978-2-7481-6073-4.
  3. ^ Berchtold, Jacques (1998). Echiquiers d'encre: le jeu d'échecs et des lettres (XIXe-XXe s.). Librairie Droz. p. 42. ISBN 978-2-600-00289-9.
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