The Soft Skin cover art

The Soft Skin Details

1964 Certificate PG
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 837 members

THE SOFT SKIN, from one of the New Wave's most prolific directors, Francois Truffaut, is a brilliant classic replete with intrigue, emotion, and stunning imagery. This anatomy of an affair between successful publisher and novelist Pierre Lachenay (Jean Desailly), and airline stewardess Nicole (Francoise Dorleac), begins on .. Read more

Starring Jean Desailly, Francoise Dorleac, Nelly Benedetti, Daniel Ceccaldi
Director Francois Truffaut
Genres Drama, World Cinema

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The Soft Skin

THE SOFT SKIN, from one of the New Wave's most prolific directors, Francois Truffaut, is a brilliant classic replete with intrigue, emotion, and stunning imagery. This anatomy of an affair between successful publisher and novelist Pierre Lachenay (Jean Desailly), and airline stewardess Nicole (Francoise Dorleac), begins on Lachenay's trip to Lisbon for a lecture. On the airplane he watches, enraptured, as Nicole changes out of her work shoes and into sexy, sling-back pumps. From there, his lust for her only grows, and he begins a deeply involved affair with her that continues back in Paris. Meanwhile Lachenay's perfect bourgeoise wife, Franca (Nelly Benedetti) is entertaining friends and playing with their cute five-year-old daughter, Sabine (Sabine Haudepin), seemingly unaware of her husband's strange behavior. But when Franca discovers that he's been cheating and may even be in love, she reacts irrationally. THE SOFT SKIN's surprising finale is one of the most memorable in film history.
Perhaps it is Truffaut's attention to detail that builds so much tangible emotion into his films. The camera seems to skim over sufaces, examine the unattractive angles of people's faces, read street signs. In the car, the camera is riding in the back seat, but as the car speeds up, it's pressed against the windshield. In THE SOFT SKIN, Truffaut expresses a precise emotion with each sequence. Viwers of the film are so often nervous because of the way Lechenay's gaze flits around, blurring up the scenery, frantically. Then, when Lechenay is with his lover, Nicole, the light is bright, the gaze is steady, the mood is triumphant. In the final scenes, as the cobblestones of Parisian boulevards whizz by chaotically, we are reminded of the suspenseful clues given in Hitchcock movies, and we know what is about to happen. At once beautiful and hilariously observant, Truffaut's expressive visuals make THE SOFT SKIN an inarguable masterpiece.

Starring Jean Desailly, Francoise Dorleac, Nelly Benedetti, Daniel Ceccaldi, Laurence Badie, Sabine Haudepin
Director Francois Truffaut
Studio PALISADES TARTAN
Run time DVD: 1 hr 52 mins
Certificate Certificate PG
Genres Drama, World Cinema
Language DVD: French
Subtitles DVD: English
Released DVD: 16 Dec 2002
Production year: 1964
Format DVD
  • Critics' reviews (2) of The Soft Skin

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  • 4 stars out of 5

    The influence of Alfred Hitchcock is readily apparent in this darkly comic and wonderfully observed tale of femmes fatales and crimes passionels. François Truffaut depicts air hostess Françoise Dorléac (Catherine Deneuve's sister) as a blonde ice maiden whose passing fancy for hapless intellectual Jean Desailly has a life-shattering effect. There are also touches of Jean Renoir's humanism and echoes of Jacques Tati's despair at the mechanised world in what was wrongly considered, in the aftermath of Jules et Jim, to be a coolly cynical melodrama. With Nelly Benedetti's passionate wife completing the brilliant central triangle, this is an overlooked gem.

    • Radio Times
  • A superb tragi-comedy of adultery in which a middle-aged intellectual ducking out from under a demanding wife tries to... read more on Time Out

    • Time Out
  • Most helpful member's review of The Soft Skin

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  • 5 out of 5 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 5 stars [Highly rated reviewer]

    This film bombed on first release as critics saw a cliched story of adultory with an unsympathetic hero. For me viewing the film now it seems an absolute gem. Truffaut and his collaborators excel in all departments: the black and white photography of Raoul Coutard is particularly splendid. OK, so the hero, Pierre is completely buttoned up and repressed but that is precisely the point. And the wife, Franca, is more sexy than the mistress, Nicole (an exceptional performance from Francoise Dorleac). Again, it's this unusual tension that makes the whole story so uniquely satisfying: Pierre and Nicole are more like brother and sister than lovers. And what an amazing view of 1960's Europe and especially Paris: the wacky cars, the men all in suits and the women with bad hairdos. Loved it.

      • Zamy from London
  • Most recent members' review of The Soft Skin

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  • 2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    Not the greatest of Truffaut's films.

    Really not the greatest of Truffaut's film I have seen. Script is slow, unoriginal and slightly dated. Still worth seeing though.

      • tawana from London
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Rating breakdown

837 Member ratings
  • 100
78
  • 90
66
  • 80
129
  • 70
143
  • 60
162
  • 50
94
  • 40
73
  • 30
49
  • 20
30
  • 10
13

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