Displayed (non textual) :
Person
:
Maria Schneider
(Actress)
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
Displayed (written) info :
MARLON BRANDO LAST TANGO IN PARIS BERNARDO BERTOLUCCI
Movie Genre :
Drama
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
,
Romance
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
Language - Spoken :
Movie credits (on artwork) :
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
Actor
:
Jean-Pierre Léaud
[Jean-Pierre Leaud]
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
Actor
:
Maria Schneider
(Actress)
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
End credits (not on artwork) :
Adaptation By
:
Agnès Varda
[Agnes Varda]
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
Cinematography By
:
Vittorio Storaro
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
Costume Design By
:
Gitt Magrini
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
Dialogues By
[Collaborator]
:
Jean-Louis Trintignant
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
Film Editing By
:
Franco Arcalli
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
Music Composed By
:
Gato Barbieri
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
Production Design By
:
Philippe Turlure
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
Screenplay By
:
Franco Arcalli
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
Set Decoration By
:
Philippe Turlure
This endpoint is new to the database, please check he (it) is not in with a similar endpoint name association (and use the ENA function if necessary).
This endpoint is approved in the database from previous submissions.
Description (by producer & GT in English only) :
In Bernardo Bertolucci's art-house classic, Marlon Brando delivers one of his characteristically idiosyncratic performances as Paul, a middle-aged American in "emotional exile" who comes to Paris when his estranged wife commits suicide. Chancing to meet young Frenchwoman Jeanne (Maria Schneider), Paul enters into a sadomasochistic, carnal relationship with her, indirectly attacking the hypocrisy all around him through his raw, outrageous sexual behavior. Paul also hopes to purge himself of his own feelings of guilt, brilliantly (and profanely) articulated in a largely ad-libbed monologue at his wife's coffin. If the sexual content in Last Tango is uncomfortably explicit (once seen, the infamous "butter scene" is never forgotten), the combination of Brando's acting, Bertolucci's direction, Vittorio Storaro's cinematography, and Gato Barbieri's music is unbeatable, creating one of the classic European art movies of the 1970s, albeit one that is not for all viewers.