Pickpocket
8,331
Drama. Romance
Michel takes up picking pockets as a hobby, and is arrested almost immediately, giving him the chance to reflect on the morality of crime. After his release, though, his mother dies, and he rejects the support of friends Jeanne and Jacques in favour of returning to pickpocketing (after taking lessons from an expert), because he realises that it's the only way he can express himself.
Media | Author | Review | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
"The movie, above all, affirms the miracle of redemptive love and its price in humility and unconditional surrender." | ||||
"A marvel of poise and circumspect emotion from French auteur Robert Bresson." | ||||
"Robert Bresson made this short electrifying study in 1959; it's one of his greatest and purest films, full of hushed transgression and sudden grace." | ||||
"Every image in Pickpocket evokes the director's idea of the soul in transition." | ||||
"It is, at base, about self-fulfilment and redemption through love -- a common enough idea in films. But this 1959 epic has seldom been equalled as a philosophical treatise on the subject." | ||||
"Bresson choreographs the complex techniques of lifting wallets and watches with such precision that one seems to be watching a kind of surreptitious ballet." |
We encourage you to check the reviews' original sources. Intellectual property rights of these reviews belong to their authors and/or the correspondent media from which they have been extracted. If you'd like to help us to add more reviews to your favorite movies, just send us a message.