← Back to results
A Man and a Woman
A Man and a Woman
Un homme et une femme
1966 ·102 min ·France · 16+
8.1
IMDb 7.5 КП 7.9 RT 75%
Drama, Romance
Director: Claude Lelouch
Trailers A Man and a Woman
Trailer EN
Trailer EN
EN

A man and a woman meet by accident on a Sunday evening at their childrens' boarding school. Slowly, they reveal themselves to each other, finding that they have something deeply in common.

Anouk Aimée
Actor
Jean-Louis Trintignant
Actor
Pierre Barouh
Actor
🏆 BAFTA 1968 — Best International Actress
🏆 Golden Globe 1967 — Best Actress (Drama)
🏆 Golden Globe 1967 — Best International Feature Film
🏆 Golden Globe 1967 — Best Actress (Drama)
🎬 Golden Globe 1967 — Best Original Score
🏆 Golden Globe 1967 — Best International Feature Film
🏆 Academy Awards 1967 — Best Original Screenplay
🏆 Academy Awards 1967 — Best International Feature Film
🎬 Academy Awards 1967 — Best Actress
🎬 Academy Awards 1967 — Best Director
🎬 BAFTA 1968 — Best Picture
🏆 Cannes Film Festival 1966 — OCIC Award
🏆 Cannes Film Festival 1966 — Palme d'Or

Un homme et une femme is widely regarded as a quintessential romantic classic, celebrated for its visual elegance, emotive score, and the magnetic chemistry of its leads. While many viewers cherish its lyrical atmosphere and intimate storytelling, a vocal minority finds the screenplay overly conventional, shallow, and reliant on contrived melodrama.

Cinematography The cinematography is visually stunning, masterfully utilizing shifts between black-and-white and color to capture intimate details and landscapes.
Score Francis Lai's iconic score is a central pillar of the film, effectively enhancing the lyrical and emotional atmosphere.
Acting The lead performances by Anouk Aimée and Jean-Louis Trintignant are deeply compelling, relying on subtle gestures and glances to convey profound emotion.
Pacing The film's pacing is polarizing: supporters find its slow, meditative tempo essential for building intimacy, while detractors find it repetitive and thin on meaningful content.
Screenplay The screenplay divides opinion; while some praise its simple, poetic exploration of love and loss, others criticize it as naive, superficial, and reliant on contrived plot devices.
Loading tags…
Settings
Interface language
Translation only
Movies translated into the selected language
Hide adult content
Movies rated 18+