The Model Couple
Brief Synopsis
A newlywed couple is the focus of a scientific examination into every aspect of their daily life.
Cast & Crew
Read More
William Klein
Director
André Dussollier
Jean-Michel
Eddie Constantine
Goldberg
Georges Descrieres
Minister
Jacques Boudet
Technician
Michel Colombier
Music
Film Details
Also Known As
Couple Temoin, Guinea Pig Couple, The, Le couple témoin, Model Couple
Genre
Comedy
Foreign
Release Date
1977
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 30m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Eastmancolor)
Synopsis
A newlywed couple is the focus of a scientific examination into every aspect of their daily life.
Director
William Klein
Director
Film Details
Also Known As
Couple Temoin, Guinea Pig Couple, The, Le couple témoin, Model Couple
Genre
Comedy
Foreign
Release Date
1977
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 30m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Eastmancolor)
Articles
The Delirious Fictions of William Klein - Eclipse Releases the 3-Film Set THE DELIRIOUS FICTIONS OF WILLIAM KLEIN on DVD
Who Are You, Polly Maggoo? (Qui êtes-vous Polly Maggoo?) is the best film in the package. It's a satirical look at the 'image' industries of fashion and television, using a French TV program's rather cynical investigation of a big-time fashion model. Polly Maggoo is a twenty-year-old New Yorker discovered by a talent agent at a Beatles rally, which is exactly how Klein found the actress who plays her, Dorothy MacGowan. Slightly bucktoothed, with huge eyes, Polly is a top runway model and photographer's darling. She's pegged as an empty vessel by the gruff producer of the "Who Are You?" TV show. Director Grégoire Pecque (Jean Rochefort) begins filming her bio and immediately falls in love. Although the TV people dismiss models as hopelessly shallow, none of them cares what's beyond Maggoo's pop image; an ordinary, pleasant young woman isn't good enough. Meanwhile, in the Eastern European kingdom of Borodine, Prince Igor (Sami Frey) plays with his toys while swooning over photos of Polly. He dispatches two comic spies to tell her that he's coming to Paris with a proposition of marriage.
Polly Maggoo is a fun, free-form satirical comedy in an eclectic style. Some of the comic timing resembles Richard Lester's work but Klein's own point of view predominates. The riffs on high fashion are more than convincing: Klein spent ten years as a photographer for the American edition of Vogue. A brooding designer showcases a fashion collection made entirely of sheet aluminum. His dressers use metal shears, and during backstage prep one of the models receives a bad cut in her armpit. Klein's old boss Diana Vreeland appears in the form of "Miss Maxwell", a domineering and slightly ridiculous top editor played by American actress Grayson Hall The Night of the Iguana). Lesser journalists wait like lemmings to hear Miss Maxwell's verdict on the metal 'dresses' that turn models into rather dangerous statues.
Ms. MacGowan is slightly kooky but doesn't play the role "cute", like Rita Tushingham in Richard Lester's The Knack... and How to Get It. Klein's photography experience gives him the ability to conjure up dozens of unique and amusing set pieces, as when a line of nervous models learn that a prince is coming to seek out a Paris model for his bride. (see B&W pic below) Backstage scenes crowded with TV crew people and fashion lizards appear to be completely authentic.
The movie looks far more expensive than it probably was. The smooth score is by Michel Legrand. Fantasy sequences interrupt the narrative at regular intervals, and Klein stages a railroad station welcome and a VIP motorcade for his visiting prince. More than one sequence uses cleverly animated photo cut-outs, in the exact style that brought Terry Gilliam fame on Monty Python. One of the jittery 2-D montages superimposes an image storm of design changes on Polly Maggoo's face, much like the 'police sketch' sequence in the next year's Diabolik. Star Phillippe Noiret has a substantial role as a jaded TV writer. Unpleasant surrealist filmmaker Fernando Arrabal plays a part as well, billed only as "Arrabal."
Klein's intelligent script pokes fun but doesn't draw blood, satirically speaking. After innumerable plot and style tangents, the ending finds a new twist on the Cinderella story. The handsome but somewhat juvenile Prince anxiously rings the doorbell of the woman of his dreams but receives no answer. The door of the neighbor apartment opens up instead ...
The obscure Who Are You, Polly Maggoo? (Qui êtes-vous Polly Maggoo?) carries a formidable underground reputation. Judging by the number of online fashion fans that claim to have sought out inferior bootlegs, Eclipse's beautiful enhanced widescreen B&W transfer will be a welcome purchase.
Daily Variety's original 1969 review does its best to dismiss William Klein's next film as aberrant anti-U.S. propaganda, which was probably all that was needed to discourage an American release. Klein's pop art comic strip satire of American arrogance and aggression is as blatant as anything in a Soviet propaganda film. Often wickedly funny, it plays out every possible variation on its one joke. Mr. Freedom is the story of -- who else -- Mister Freedom (John Abbey), a lanky deputy sheriff who takes time off from terrorizing ghetto blacks to fight America's ideological battles overseas. His super-hero costume is a mix of football, hockey and test pilot gear, color-coded in star-spangled hues. Located on the top floor of a building occupied by giant corporations, Freedom Incorporated communicates with Mr. Freedom via a Dick Tracy- like two-way wrist TV communicator. The slogan-spouting zealot Dr. Freedom (Donald Pleasance) dispatches our hero to France, where the local Captain Formidable (Yves Montand, seen only for a couple of seconds) has been murdered. The treacherous Commies Moujik Man (Phillipe Noiret) and Red China Man (a large paper dragon) are key suspects.
A combo killer and Yankee propaganda machine, Mr. Freedom guns down anybody who resists his ideas and works his fan-operatives like an ideological cheerleader: "F-R-double-E-D, D-O-M spells Freedom! We fight for freedom, for one and for all! It's you-and-me-dom, and ten foot tall!" He's a sexist, racist no-nothing galoot in love with his own presumed superiority; his speeches to his French supporters promise mountains of consumer goods. Mr. Freedom's main French ally is the pro-American freedom fighter Marie-Madeleine (Delphine Seyrig), who wears her own campy costume and a large red wig. The only thing that slows Mr. Freedom down is Marie-Madalene's disobedient son, who persists in calling him a fascist.
Mr. Freedom reacts to every challenge with righteous rage. He humiliates and murders a hotel maid who attempts to serve him a poisoned breakfast. He checks in with the American Embassy, which turns out to be a fully stocked supermarket. Wherever Mr. Freedom goes, nubile American girls and French collaborators adore him. But he fails in destroying Mr. Moujik Man, a jolly Russian in a puffy outfit and winter hat who claims to be America's friend. Convinced that France is hopelessly infiltrated by the forces of Non-Freedom, Mr. Freedom decides to carpet-bomb the entire country. But don't worry: he'll only have to destroy 60% of it.
The mood is Captain America and Batman with a generous helping of Jean-Luc Godard's Alphaville: just like Lemmy Caution, Mr. Freedom investigates the disappearance of another 'freedom fighter' and saves Paris by utterly destroying it. Mr. Freedom vents his anger by shouting to the heavens from a rooftop crowded with neon signs. He's too obsessed with his preconceived enemies to detect his real enemy, but lovers of Freedom need not fear. If Mr. Freedom fails, a new Mr. Freedom will take his place.
Although William Klein invests Mr. Freedom with spirited characters and lively art direction, it loses steam before the finish. Some scenes go on after their point has been made, such as a sequence of Freedom troops learning to torture enemies. Klein's ferocious message must have been a real shock in 1969. Had this show been given American distribution, we can easily imagine picketing and theaters set on fire. Today, of course, the word 'Freedom' has become a semantic smokescreen for political speeches, and some will recognize Klein's jingoistic nightmare as our dominant reality. It's all very funny, but the sick joke is on us. Wherever J. Edgar Hoover is, I hope he's being forced to watch Mr. Freedom for eternity.
John Abbey is fine as the brutal all-American jerk hero, and we're not surprised to see that the actor made no more American films. Top-billed Delphine Seyrig (Last Year at Marienbad, Daughters of Darkness) is both sexy and funny as Mr. Freedom's cheerleading French lover, a strong contrast to her more glamorous roles. The amusing Phillipe Noiret is a funny Russian threat and Sami Frey returns in an irreverent bit part as Jesus Christ.
Eclipse's enhanced transfer of Mr. Freedom makes the most of Klein's eye-popping color design. Some scenes are grainy and the overcast French skies don't always cooperate with Klein's pop art imagery. The film's closest American correlative is Philip Kaufman's first effort Fearless Frank (Frank's Greatest Adventure), a micro-budgeted comic-book fable starring Jon Voight. Kaufman's oddball film is nowhere near as organized, but it has a lot more warmth.
1977's The Model Couple (Le couple témoin) is a satirical science fiction film possibly inspired by the PBS television experiment An American Family, an early reality series that followed the Louds of Santa Barbara as they lived their 'real lives.' Its unsettling highpoint occurred when Mrs. Loud demanded a divorce from Mr. Loud, on camera. The history-making show later inspired Albert Brooks' comedy Real Life.
Klein's movie does what it can with an essentially claustrophobic concept. Happy young couple Jean-Michel (André Dussolier) and Claudine (Anémone) volunteer for a 'Ministry of the Future' experiment to study an 'average couple' as an aide to designing a perfect city. The young marrieds undergo an unending series of humiliating and meaningless tests. The researchers make them answer a multitude of questions while standing naked against a wall, before a battery of cameras.
The cruelties of being a human lab rat are immediately apparent. Claudine and Jean-Michel are offered choices, and then rudely told to accept what's already been planned for them. They wear paper jumpsuits and arrange plastic furniture in a windowless environment riddled with microphones and cameras. The researchers tell them to be grateful that all the appliances, etc. being forced on them will be billed at discount rates. Jean Michel spends his workday performing stupid consumer tests while Claudine must do housework. Their entire life is televised, with nightly updates carried on the news.
The leading female researcher (Zouk) addresses her captives in insultingly condescending tones intended to provoke discord. One 'experiment' demands that the pair get into a fight, a fake spat that quickly becomes real. When Claudine and Jean-Michel say that they are happy, the researcher keeps pounding at them until they change their decision. When they express doubt about the test methodology, the researcher becomes petty and spiteful, warning them that if they want to ruin the whole project, it can be stopped at a great loss to all. The researchers enjoy keeping their test couple in torment; it's like having one's life monitored by a team of vindictive bureaucratic clerks.
We discover that the test has nothing to do with future happiness; the state wants to define and quantify the exact minimum living requirements that citizens will accept. One bureaucrat says that just lowering ceilings by a foot will allow more floors to be added to already-crowded residential buildings.
The couple is eventually visited by an official delegation. The patronizing Minister of the Future makes lame speeches during a televised meal. The psychologist (Eddie Constantine) thinks little of the experiment, and proves his point by cruelly demonstrating how passively Jean-Michel obeys verbal commands. That's all that Jean- Michel and Claudine have been doing for months.
The Model Couple finishes rather abruptly when a group of 'terrorist children' take the couple hostage. Claudine and Jean-Michel get into the anti-authoritarian spirit and are upset when the moppets turn out to be ordinary hooligans pulling a prank. The story resolution is logical but unrewarding. The Model Couple is true to its depressing concept, as it makes us think of the banal ways our lives are 'controlled' by technology.
William Klein's fantasies clearly deserve more recognition. The charming Polly Maggoo? is a nostalgic time capsule of fashion culture and Mr. Freedom wields a raw political outrage that found relatively little exposure. Klein's films have keen pop sensibilities coupled with unusually witty and intelligent scripts. Eclipse's arresting disc release will hopefully spur renewed interest in this unique filmmaker.
For more information about The Delirious Fictions of William Klein, visit Eclipse. To order The Delirious Fictions of William Klein, go to TCM Shopping
by Glenn Erickson
The Delirious Fictions of William Klein - Eclipse Releases the 3-Film Set THE DELIRIOUS FICTIONS OF WILLIAM KLEIN on DVD
Photographer and filmmaker William Klein is famous in fashion
circles but barely acknowledged in American film criticism.
Klein's films of the 1960s are eccentric and insightful pop
snapshots of their time, but few were given American releases.
Eclipse's The Delirious Fictions of William Klein collects
three of his best, including the legendary Mr. Freedom, a
daringly anti-Yankee comedy that until a short while ago was
viewable only as a few enticing stills in rare copies of the
French fantasy film magazine Midi-Minuit Fantastique.
Who Are You, Polly Maggoo? (Qui êtes-vous Polly
Maggoo?) is the best film in the package. It's a satirical
look at the 'image' industries of fashion and television, using a
French TV program's rather cynical investigation of a big-time
fashion model. Polly Maggoo is a twenty-year-old New Yorker
discovered by a talent agent at a Beatles rally, which is exactly
how Klein found the actress who plays her, Dorothy MacGowan.
Slightly bucktoothed, with huge eyes, Polly is a top runway model
and photographer's darling. She's pegged as an empty vessel by
the gruff producer of the "Who Are You?" TV show. Director
Grégoire Pecque (Jean Rochefort) begins filming her bio
and immediately falls in love. Although the TV people dismiss
models as hopelessly shallow, none of them cares what's beyond
Maggoo's pop image; an ordinary, pleasant young woman isn't good
enough. Meanwhile, in the Eastern European kingdom of Borodine,
Prince Igor (Sami Frey) plays with his toys while swooning over
photos of Polly. He dispatches two comic spies to tell her that
he's coming to Paris with a proposition of marriage.
Polly Maggoo is a fun, free-form satirical comedy in an
eclectic style. Some of the comic timing resembles Richard
Lester's work but Klein's own point of view predominates. The
riffs on high fashion are more than convincing: Klein spent ten
years as a photographer for the American edition of Vogue.
A brooding designer showcases a fashion collection made entirely
of sheet aluminum. His dressers use metal shears, and during
backstage prep one of the models receives a bad cut in her
armpit. Klein's old boss Diana Vreeland appears in the form of
"Miss Maxwell", a domineering and slightly ridiculous top editor
played by American actress Grayson Hall The Night of the
Iguana). Lesser journalists wait like lemmings to hear Miss
Maxwell's verdict on the metal 'dresses' that turn models into
rather dangerous statues.
Ms. MacGowan is slightly kooky but doesn't play the role "cute",
like Rita Tushingham in Richard Lester's The Knack... and How
to Get It. Klein's photography experience gives him the
ability to conjure up dozens of unique and amusing set pieces, as
when a line of nervous models learn that a prince is coming to
seek out a Paris model for his bride. (see B&W pic below)
Backstage scenes crowded with TV crew people and fashion lizards
appear to be completely authentic.
The movie looks far more expensive than it probably was. The
smooth score is by Michel Legrand. Fantasy sequences interrupt
the narrative at regular intervals, and Klein stages a railroad
station welcome and a VIP motorcade for his visiting prince. More
than one sequence uses cleverly animated photo cut-outs, in the
exact style that brought Terry Gilliam fame on Monty
Python. One of the jittery 2-D montages superimposes an image
storm of design changes on Polly Maggoo's face, much like the
'police sketch' sequence in the next year's Diabolik. Star
Phillippe Noiret has a substantial role as a jaded TV writer.
Unpleasant surrealist filmmaker Fernando Arrabal plays a part as
well, billed only as "Arrabal."
Klein's intelligent script pokes fun but doesn't draw blood,
satirically speaking. After innumerable plot and style tangents,
the ending finds a new twist on the Cinderella story. The
handsome but somewhat juvenile Prince anxiously rings the
doorbell of the woman of his dreams but receives no answer. The
door of the neighbor apartment opens up instead ...
The obscure Who Are You, Polly Maggoo? (Qui êtes-vous
Polly Maggoo?) carries a formidable underground reputation.
Judging by the number of online fashion fans that claim to have
sought out inferior bootlegs, Eclipse's beautiful enhanced
widescreen B&W transfer will be a welcome purchase.
Daily Variety's original 1969 review does its best to
dismiss William Klein's next film as aberrant anti-U.S.
propaganda, which was probably all that was needed to discourage
an American release. Klein's pop art comic strip satire of
American arrogance and aggression is as blatant as anything in a
Soviet propaganda film. Often wickedly funny, it plays out every
possible variation on its one joke. Mr. Freedom is the
story of -- who else -- Mister Freedom (John Abbey), a lanky
deputy sheriff who takes time off from terrorizing ghetto blacks
to fight America's ideological battles overseas. His super-hero
costume is a mix of football, hockey and test pilot gear,
color-coded in star-spangled hues. Located on the top floor of a
building occupied by giant corporations, Freedom Incorporated
communicates with Mr. Freedom via a Dick Tracy- like two-way
wrist TV communicator. The slogan-spouting zealot Dr. Freedom
(Donald Pleasance) dispatches our hero to France, where the local
Captain Formidable (Yves Montand, seen only for a couple of
seconds) has been murdered. The treacherous Commies Moujik Man
(Phillipe Noiret) and Red China Man (a large paper dragon) are
key suspects.
A combo killer and Yankee propaganda machine, Mr. Freedom guns
down anybody who resists his ideas and works his fan-operatives
like an ideological cheerleader: "F-R-double-E-D, D-O-M spells
Freedom! We fight for freedom, for one and for all! It's
you-and-me-dom, and ten foot tall!" He's a sexist, racist
no-nothing galoot in love with his own presumed superiority; his
speeches to his French supporters promise mountains of consumer
goods. Mr. Freedom's main French ally is the pro-American freedom
fighter Marie-Madeleine (Delphine Seyrig), who wears her own
campy costume and a large red wig. The only thing that slows Mr.
Freedom down is Marie-Madalene's disobedient son, who persists in
calling him a fascist.
Mr. Freedom reacts to every challenge with righteous rage. He
humiliates and murders a hotel maid who attempts to serve him a
poisoned breakfast. He checks in with the American Embassy, which
turns out to be a fully stocked supermarket. Wherever Mr. Freedom
goes, nubile American girls and French collaborators adore him.
But he fails in destroying Mr. Moujik Man, a jolly Russian in a
puffy outfit and winter hat who claims to be America's friend.
Convinced that France is hopelessly infiltrated by the forces of
Non-Freedom, Mr. Freedom decides to carpet-bomb the entire
country. But don't worry: he'll only have to destroy 60% of
it.
The mood is Captain America and Batman with a
generous helping of Jean-Luc Godard's Alphaville: just
like Lemmy Caution, Mr. Freedom investigates the disappearance of
another 'freedom fighter' and saves Paris by utterly destroying
it. Mr. Freedom vents his anger by shouting to the heavens from a
rooftop crowded with neon signs. He's too obsessed with his
preconceived enemies to detect his real enemy, but lovers of
Freedom need not fear. If Mr. Freedom fails, a new Mr. Freedom
will take his place.
Although William Klein invests Mr. Freedom with spirited
characters and lively art direction, it loses steam before the
finish. Some scenes go on after their point has been made, such
as a sequence of Freedom troops learning to torture enemies.
Klein's ferocious message must have been a real shock in 1969.
Had this show been given American distribution, we can easily
imagine picketing and theaters set on fire. Today, of course, the
word 'Freedom' has become a semantic smokescreen for political
speeches, and some will recognize Klein's jingoistic nightmare as
our dominant reality. It's all very funny, but the sick joke is
on us. Wherever J. Edgar Hoover is, I hope he's being forced to
watch Mr. Freedom for eternity.
John Abbey is fine as the brutal all-American jerk hero, and
we're not surprised to see that the actor made no more American
films. Top-billed Delphine Seyrig (Last Year at Marienbad,
Daughters of Darkness) is both sexy and funny as Mr.
Freedom's cheerleading French lover, a strong contrast to her
more glamorous roles. The amusing Phillipe Noiret is a funny
Russian threat and Sami Frey returns in an irreverent bit part as
Jesus Christ.
Eclipse's enhanced transfer of Mr. Freedom makes the most
of Klein's eye-popping color design. Some scenes are grainy and
the overcast French skies don't always cooperate with Klein's pop
art imagery. The film's closest American correlative is Philip
Kaufman's first effort Fearless Frank (Frank's Greatest
Adventure), a micro-budgeted comic-book fable starring Jon
Voight. Kaufman's oddball film is nowhere near as organized, but
it has a lot more warmth.
1977's The Model Couple (Le couple témoin) is a
satirical science fiction film possibly inspired by the PBS
television experiment An American Family, an early reality
series that followed the Louds of Santa Barbara as they lived
their 'real lives.' Its unsettling highpoint occurred when Mrs.
Loud demanded a divorce from Mr. Loud, on camera. The
history-making show later inspired Albert Brooks' comedy Real
Life.
Klein's movie does what it can with an essentially claustrophobic
concept. Happy young couple Jean-Michel (André Dussolier)
and Claudine (Anémone) volunteer for a 'Ministry of the
Future' experiment to study an 'average couple' as an aide to
designing a perfect city. The young marrieds undergo an unending
series of humiliating and meaningless tests. The researchers make
them answer a multitude of questions while standing naked against
a wall, before a battery of cameras.
The cruelties of being a human lab rat are immediately apparent.
Claudine and Jean-Michel are offered choices, and then rudely
told to accept what's already been planned for them. They wear
paper jumpsuits and arrange plastic furniture in a windowless
environment riddled with microphones and cameras. The researchers
tell them to be grateful that all the appliances, etc. being
forced on them will be billed at discount rates. Jean Michel
spends his workday performing stupid consumer tests while
Claudine must do housework. Their entire life is televised, with
nightly updates carried on the news.
The leading female researcher (Zouk) addresses her captives in
insultingly condescending tones intended to provoke discord. One
'experiment' demands that the pair get into a fight, a fake spat
that quickly becomes real. When Claudine and Jean-Michel say that
they are happy, the researcher keeps pounding at them until they
change their decision. When they express doubt about the test
methodology, the researcher becomes petty and spiteful, warning
them that if they want to ruin the whole project, it can be
stopped at a great loss to all. The researchers enjoy keeping
their test couple in torment; it's like having one's life
monitored by a team of vindictive bureaucratic clerks.
We discover that the test has nothing to do with future
happiness; the state wants to define and quantify the exact
minimum living requirements that citizens will accept. One
bureaucrat says that just lowering ceilings by a foot will allow
more floors to be added to already-crowded residential buildings.
The couple is eventually visited by an official delegation. The
patronizing Minister of the Future makes lame speeches during a
televised meal. The psychologist (Eddie Constantine) thinks
little of the experiment, and proves his point by cruelly
demonstrating how passively Jean-Michel obeys verbal commands.
That's all that Jean- Michel and Claudine have been doing for
months.
The Model Couple finishes rather abruptly when a group of
'terrorist children' take the couple hostage. Claudine and
Jean-Michel get into the anti-authoritarian spirit and are upset
when the moppets turn out to be ordinary hooligans pulling a
prank. The story resolution is logical but unrewarding. The
Model Couple is true to its depressing concept, as it makes
us think of the banal ways our lives are 'controlled' by
technology.
William Klein's fantasies clearly deserve more recognition. The
charming Polly Maggoo? is a nostalgic time capsule of
fashion culture and Mr. Freedom wields a raw political
outrage that found relatively little exposure. Klein's films have
keen pop sensibilities coupled with unusually witty and
intelligent scripts. Eclipse's arresting disc release will
hopefully spur renewed interest in this unique filmmaker.
For more information about The Delirious Fictions of William
Klein, visit Eclipse. To order
The Delirious Fictions of William Klein, go to
TCM Shopping
by Glenn Erickson
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1977
Released in United States 1990
Shown at Film Forum in New York City November 30-December 3, 1990.
Released in United States 1977
Released in United States 1990 (Shown at Film Forum in New York City November 30-December 3, 1990.)