A Woman Is a Woman
1961, NR, 84 min.
Directed by Jean-Luc Godard, Narrated by , Voices by , Starring Jean-Claude Brialy, Anna Karina, Jean-Paul Belmondo.

A revival of this early Godard feature provides a hint of the heady flavor that marked the works of the French New Wave. The movie shows Godard re-evaluating the musical genre and almost at a crossroads in his development into either a sourpuss or a bouyant optimist. Model-turned-starlet-turned-Godardian spouse Anna Karina seizes the screen as a contemporary woman who works as a topless performer and decides that she wants to have a baby. But neither of the two men in her life share her desires. At the time of its release, Godard’s portrait of a woman’s dilemma seemed rather anachronistic, but now it makes me wonder if he was one of the first to document the ticking of a woman’s biological clock. Full of Godardian film play, A Woman Is a Woman also reflects the joy of a filmmaker unleashed.

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Marjorie Baumgarten is a film critic and contributing writer at The Austin Chronicle, where she has worked in many capacities since the paper's founding in 1981. She served as the Chronicle's Film Reviews editor for 25 years.