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==Plot== ==Plot==
Betty (]), a young alcoholic woman, is caught cold while cheating on her bourgeois husband. Wasting no time, he and his family arrange a quick divorce settlement, ousting her from home and keeping her away from the two children the couple have. One night she ends up in a restaurant called Le Trou (The Hole), where she meets Laure (]), an older woman, an alcoholic herself. Laure decides to take care of Betty after hearing the heart-breaking stories of her being a victim of a rich and ruthless society. Betty receives care and friendship from Laure, who's in a relationship with Mario, the restaurant's owner. The envy toward Laure for Mario grows each day and will drive Betty to artfully contrive the means to conquer her new friend's lover. Laure realizes she has made a mistake by trusting her new friend and things soon begin to tremble between them. Betty's true colors are now visible and she sees her life at a point of no return, as she selfishly stomped on the last chance she had been given to be a better person.<ref name="At The Movies">{{cite news|title=At The Movies|publisher=The New York Times|url= http://www.nytimes.com/1991/12/27/movies/at-the-movies.html|author=Lawrence Van Gelder}}</ref> Betty (]), a young alcoholic woman, is caught cold while cheating on her bourgeois husband. Wasting no time, he and his family arrange a quick divorce settlement, ousting her from home and keeping her away from the two children the couple have. One night she ends up in a restaurant called Le Trou (The Hole), where she meets Laure (]), an older woman, an alcoholic herself. Laure decides to take care of Betty after hearing the heart-breaking stories of her being a victim of a rich and ruthless society. Betty receives care and friendship from Laure, who's in a relationship with Mario(]), the restaurant's owner. The envy toward Laure for Mario grows each day and will drive Betty to artfully contrive the means to conquer her new friend's lover. Laure realizes she has made a mistake by trusting her new friend and things soon begin to tremble between them. Betty's true colors are now visible and she sees her life at a point of no return, as she selfishly stomped on the last chance she had been given to be a better person.<ref name="At The Movies">{{cite news|title=At The Movies|publisher=The New York Times|url= http://www.nytimes.com/1991/12/27/movies/at-the-movies.html|author=Lawrence Van Gelder}}</ref>


==Cast== ==Cast==

Revision as of 23:30, 22 June 2011

This article contains weasel words: vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information. Such statements should be clarified or removed. (June 2011)
1992 Template:Film France film
Betty
Directed byClaude Chabrol
Produced byCanal +
StarringMarie Trintignant, Stéphane Audran, Jean-François Garreaud
Music bySylvain Daurat
Release date
  • 1992 (1992)
Running time103 min
CountryTemplate:Film France

Betty is a French movie directed by Claude Chabrol adapted from a novel by Georges Simenon. It was first released in France in 1992.

Plot

Betty (Marie Trintignant), a young alcoholic woman, is caught cold while cheating on her bourgeois husband. Wasting no time, he and his family arrange a quick divorce settlement, ousting her from home and keeping her away from the two children the couple have. One night she ends up in a restaurant called Le Trou (The Hole), where she meets Laure (Stéphane Audran), an older woman, an alcoholic herself. Laure decides to take care of Betty after hearing the heart-breaking stories of her being a victim of a rich and ruthless society. Betty receives care and friendship from Laure, who's in a relationship with Mario(Jean-Francois Garreaud), the restaurant's owner. The envy toward Laure for Mario grows each day and will drive Betty to artfully contrive the means to conquer her new friend's lover. Laure realizes she has made a mistake by trusting her new friend and things soon begin to tremble between them. Betty's true colors are now visible and she sees her life at a point of no return, as she selfishly stomped on the last chance she had been given to be a better person.

Cast

Reception

Journalist Lawrence O'Toole from Entertainment Weekly defined Marie Trintignant's performance "Smashing". EW's vote was a B+

References

  1. "Betty". Le Figaro.
  2. Janet Maslin. "Betty". The New York Times.
  3. Lawrence Van Gelder. "At The Movies". The New York Times.
  4. Lawrence O'Toole. "Video Review: Betty". Entertainment Weekly.

External links

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