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Tout Va Bien
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| Tout va bien | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Jean-Luc Godard Jean-Pierre Gorin |
| Written by | Jean-Luc Godard Jean-Pierre Gorin |
| Produced by | Jean-Pierre Rassam |
| Starring | Yves Montand Jane Fonda Vittorio Caprioli |
| Cinematography | Armand Marco |
| Music by | Paul Beuscher |
Production companies | Anouchka Films Vieco Films Empire Films |
| Distributed by | Gaumont Film Company |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 95 minutes |
| Countries | France Italy |
| Languages | French, English |
Tout va bien is a 1972 French-Italian political drama film directed by Jean-Luc Godard and collaborator Jean-Pierre Gorin and starring Jane Fonda and Yves Montand.[1]
The film's title means "everything is going well". It was released in the United States under the title All's Well and internationally under the title Just Great.
The Godard/Gorin collaboration continued with the featurette Letter to Jane as a postscript to Tout va bien.
Overview
[edit]The film centers on a strike at a sausage factory which is witnessed by an American reporter and her French husband, who is a director of TV commercials. The film has a strong political message which outlines the logic of the class struggle in France in the wake of the May 1968 civil unrest. It also examines the social destruction caused by capitalism. The performers in Tout va bien employ the Brechtian technique of distancing themselves from the audience. By delivering an opaque performance, the actors draw the audience away from the film's diegesis and towards broader inferences about the film's meaning.

The factory set consists of a cross-sectioned building and allows the camera to dolly back and forth from room to room, theoretically through the walls. Another self-reflexive technique, this particular set was used because it forces the audience to remember that they are witnessing a film, breaking the fourth wall in a literal sense. Godard and Gorin use other self-reflexive techniques in Tout va bien such as direct camera address, long takes, and abandonment of the continuity editing system.
Cast
[edit]- Jane Fonda as Susan Dewitt, an American reporter
- Yves Montand as her husband
- Vittorio Caprioli as the factory manager
- Elizabeth Chauvin as Genevieve
- Éric Chartier as Lucien
- Jean Pignol as the union representative
- Anne Wiazemsky as a leftist worker
References
[edit]- ^ "Tout va bien". cinematheque.fr (in French). Retrieved 7 February 2024.
External links
[edit]- Tout va bien at IMDb
- Tout va bien Revisited an essay by J. Hoberman at the Criterion Collection
Tout Va Bien
View on GrokipediaTout va bien (translated as Everything's All Right or All's Well) is a 1972 French-Italian political drama film co-directed by Jean-Luc Godard and Jean-Pierre Gorin, starring Jane Fonda as an American journalist and Yves Montand as her French filmmaker husband, who become entangled in a wildcat strike at a sausage factory while grappling with their estranging marriage.[1][2]
The narrative employs a hybrid structure blending documentary-style interviews, staged reconstructions, and Brechtian techniques to dissect class antagonisms, managerial authority, and the commodification of labor under capitalism, marking Godard's partial return to conventional storytelling after years of avant-garde experimentation within the Dziga Vertov Group.[3][4]
Produced with financial backing from its high-profile leads—Fonda during her activist phase and Montand as a leftist figure—the film exemplifies Godard's Maoist-influenced critique of both bourgeois media and complacent reformist leftism, prioritizing collective struggle over individual narratives.[1][5]
Though praised for its incisive portrayal of workplace power dynamics and innovative form, it drew criticism for didacticism and perceived oversimplification of economic realities, reflecting tensions in 1970s radical cinema between agitprop and artistic nuance.[3][4]
