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Pickpocket

Screening on Film
Directed by Robert Bresson.
With LaSelle, Marika Green, Jean Pélégri.
France, 1959, 35mm, black & white, 75 min.
Print source: Janus Films

The first film for which director Robert Bresson composed an entirely original script, this tale of a lonely young man who embarks on a career as a petty thief was to some extent inspired by Crime and Punishment. In Pickpocket, however, Bresson deals more directly with themes of submission and salvation: "With theft I entered by the back door into the kingdom of morality," the director stated. After being arrested, Bressonís novice thief reflects on the morality of a life of crime but, although temporarily deterred, he soon returns to his "vocation", after lessons from a master pickpocket. Voted by Cahiers du cinéma to be the greatest French film of the postwar era, Bresson's masterpiece has been praised by generations of fellow directors, including Louis Malle, who described it as "one of the four or five major events in the history of cinema."

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