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From TMDb members · 1 total- CRCulver10/10
As the 1960s went on Jean-Luc Godard kept up the kind of brash, zany, experimental style with which he made his name and became a cornerstone of the French New Wave, but his work increasingly showed a political consciousness sparked by the explosion of the consumer society in tha…
Full text & links on TMDb in the reviews section below.
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Weekend
69%
Movie
1h 44m
AI Analysis
Weekend (1967) — AI movie analysis
WatchMind AI generated this AI analysis of Weekend (1967) — a movie tagged as Comedy with funny moods and steady pacing.
Story & themes: A supposedly idyllic weekend trip to the countryside turns into a never-ending nightmare of traffic jams, revolution, cannibalism and murder as French bourgeois society starts to collapse under the weight of its own consumer preoccupations. Our models also surface themes such as identity, conflict, and relationships from synopsis and genre signals.
Watch context: Best suited for date night and casual background watching. Expect steady storytelling (~104 min).
Community signal: TMDb members rate Weekend 69% (312 votes) — solid community ratings for this movie.
AI verdict
Use this AI analysis as a quick read on Weekend before you watch — trailer, TMDb reviews, and licensed streaming links on this page help you decide.
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TMDb audience score
69%
from 312 TMDb votes
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Synopsis
A supposedly idyllic weekend trip to the countryside turns into a never-ending nightmare of traffic jams, revolution, cannibalism and murder as French bourgeois society starts to collapse under the weight of its own consumer preoccupations.
Quick facts
- Type
- Movie
- Status
- Released
- Release date
- 1967-12-29
- Runtime
- 1h 44m
- TMDB rating
- 6.9
- TMDB ID
- 8075
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Frequently asked questions
Where can I watch Weekend (1967)?
Weekend is available for discovery on WatchMind. You can find official links to rent, buy, or stream from licensed digital stores like Apple TV and Amazon in our "Where to Watch" section.
Is there an official trailer for Weekend?
Yes, you can watch the official trailer for Weekend directly on this page. We pull the latest video metadata from TMDb and play it via YouTube integration.
What is Weekend about?
A supposedly idyllic weekend trip to the countryside turns into a never-ending nightmare of traffic jams, revolution, cannibalism and murder as French bourgeois society starts to collapse under the... This is the official synopsis available via TMDb community metadata.
Is there an AI analysis for Weekend?
Yes. WatchMind publishes an AI analysis on this page — tone, pacing, audience fit, and community scores from TMDb metadata and recommendation models (not a chatbot). Scroll to the AI Analysis section or read the meta description summary.
How long is the movie Weekend?
The official runtime for Weekend is approximately 104 minutes.
Cast & crew
Names and photos from The Movie Database (TMDb). Follow links on themoviedb.org for full filmographies.
Directors & writers
Cast

Mireille Darc
Corinne Durand

Jean Yanne
Roland Durand

Jean-Pierre Kalfon
Le Chef du Front de Libération de la Seine et Oise

Yves Afonso
Gros Poucet (uncredited)

Yves Beneyton
Un Membre du FLSO (uncredited)

Juliet Berto
Une Activiste du FLSO / Jeune Bourgeoise Accidentée (uncredited)

Michèle Breton
Girl in the Woods (uncredited)
- M
Michel Cournot
Man From Farmyard (uncredited)
- L
Lex De Bruijn
Revolutionary (uncredited)

Omar Diop
Mon Frère Africain (uncredited)

Jean Eustache
L'Auto-Stoppeur (uncredited)
- J
Jean-Claude Guilbert
Le Clochard (uncredited)

Paul Gégauff
Le Pianiste (uncredited)
- B
Blandine Jeanson
Emily Bronte (uncredited)
- L
Louis Jojot
Monsieur Jojot (uncredited)

Valérie Lagrange
La Femme du Chef du FLSO (uncredited)

Jean-Pierre Léaud
Saint-Just / Le Jeune Minet du 16ème (uncredited)

Ernest Menzer
Ernest - le Cuisinier / Le Boucher du FLSO (uncredited)
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Community reviews
Written by TMDb members — same catalogue as our movie & TV metadata. API terms
As the 1960s went on Jean-Luc Godard kept up the kind of brash, zany, experimental style with which he made his name and became a cornerstone of the French New Wave, but his work increasingly showed a political consciousness sparked by the explosion of the consumer society in that decade. The class of haves, in his view, were being increasingly selfish and dog-eat-dog, while the have-nots of the world could not be expected to stand by idly. Society was surely headed for a breakdown, and his 1967 film WEEKEND is an absurdist vision of it in one hour and forty-five minutes. This is emphatically *not* a good entry point to Godard -- if you don't know his work, see Breathless or Le Mepris first -- but it is a marvelous capstone to his first decade of cinema. (After this, Godard disappeared from the limelight for some years while making more overtly political films with Jean-Pierre Gorin as the Dziga Vertov collective.) Married couple Roland (Jean Yanne) and Corinne (Mireille Darc) set off from Paris one weekend for Corinne's parents' home, as her father is dying and they want to make sure they get their cut of inheritance. Not only is their relationship with Corinne's parents focused solely on money, but both Roland and Corinne are secretly having affairs and each plans to later dispose of the other in order to run away with their lovers. As Roland and Corinne hit the road, civilization appears to have vanished all around them: people are violently fighting each other over petty arguments, the road out of Paris is an endless traffic jam of honking horns and yelling, and the roadside is littered with car wrecks and their bloody victims. WEEKEND is a grand portrait of human veniality like Dante's INFERNO. Even when Corinne and Roland encounter a group of hippies, the idealistic dreamers who oppose the cruel order of capitalist society, they are shown great cruelty. Godard was awfully prescient: not only did he shoot this film a year before the events of May 1968 and he presaged a youth revolt, but he also expected that youth to perpetuate the same flaws of the system they overthrew. Visually, WEEKEND is as much a delight as any of Godard's other colour films of this time, with a pop art feel. Godard and his cinematographer Raoul Coutard had a great eye for colour, mainly the red, white, and blue from the French flag, but all the hues on screen are bold and electric. A great treat for film aficionados are several long tracking shots that required great skill to shoot, such as the long traffic jam. There's a lot of poetry in the shots: I don't know why, but a long take where a pianist plays a Mozart suite to a crowd of farmers in a barnyard and Anne Wiazemsky (in a non-speaking role) walks up to listen, is as emotionally moving to me as anything from Tarkovsky. By this point Godard's films assume that the viewer is an intellectual, someone who has read a good bit of the literary canon and is aware of the political disputes not only of our time but also those reaching back to the 18th century. Thus as Corinne and Roland are wandering around lost around their own eventual car wreck, they come across the historical personage Saint-Just from the French Revolution (one of two amusing roles played here by the legendary Jean-Pierre Léaud), who absurdistly declaims from his writings while decked out in period costume. They then meet Tom Thumb and Emily Brontë. As the climax of the film approaches, two representatives of the Third World, African and Arab dustmen that our protagonists hitch a ride from, recite a revolutionary Marxist text at some length. And one scene where Corinne recounts a sexual encounter to her lover is a parody of Ingmar Bergman's PERSONA, which had come out the previous year. Criterion's re-release of WEEKEND on Blu-ray is a welcome event. The pop-art canvas of Godard's 1960s colour films comes through better in this higher-resolution format than on the old DVD releases. Criterion's extras are also enjoyable and informative. Viewers without a prior grounding in Godard's literary/political/social context will appreciate a 20-minute visual essay by Kent Jones which explains most of the references in the film, as well as some contemporary developments in Godard's life that aren't directly shown in the film, but made it what it is. There are interviews with the main actors from French television just before the film's 1968 release, and they explain how great it was to work with Godard, though one realizes that they hadn't seen the finished film and might well have been appalled at its anarchic pace and agitprop. The role of "making of" featurettes is provided by relatively recent interviews with cinematographer Raoul Coutard and assistant director Claude Miller.
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