
What’s This Flick About, Then?
Robert Bresson’s Four Nights of a Dreamer (1971) is what happens when a French bloke saves a girl from jumping into the Seine, falls in love over late-night chats, and still ends up the odd man out. It’s based (loosely) on Fyodor Dostoevsky’s White Nights, but instead of snow and despair, we get warm Paris evenings, political aftershocks, and a lot of romantic fizzling.
Jacques: Our Soft-Spoken Dreamboat
Meet Jacques (Guillaume des Forêts)—a painter by trade, but honestly more of a professional heart-sufferer. He spots Marthe (Isabelle Weingarten) about to take a dive into the Seine and does the decent thing: stops her. Cue four nights of walking, talking, and a whole lot of almost-but-not-quite kisses. He paints, she reminisces. He falls in love, she waits for a bloke who ditched her for Yale.
“The artist desires nothing, because he creates what he desires.”
– Dostoevsky, probably wishing Bresson gave Jacques a hug.
Custom Chart: Jacques’ Romance Odds vs. Actual Outcome
Romantic Gesture | Effort Level (Out of 10) | Result |
---|---|---|
Saves Marthe from bridge | 10 | She thanks him, nothing more |
Walks Paris streets all night | 8 | Emotional bonding, no snogs |
Shares his dreams & artwork | 9 | Still second to Yale guy |
Confesses love | 10 | She bolts to ex in crowd |
Final Outcome | N/A | Left alone with a blank canvas |
Art, Alienation & Amour Fou
Instead of flashy performances, Bresson uses “non-actors” who float through the film like dreamy mannequins. Marthe? Played by the daughter of playwright Romain Weingarten. Jacques? More still life than life of the party.
The streets of Paris are painted in oranges, mauves, and greens, bathed in post-‘68 revolution heat. In one gorgeous scene, Jacques and Marthe lean over a bridge while a boat passes by, soundtracked by Marku Ribas’ Porto Seguro. It’s like a live jazz daydream.
“A rendezvous between the mundane and the sublime,” as The Guardian poetically puts it.
Aussie Translation, Please?
Jacques is your artsy mate who falls head over heels for someone who’s still stuck on their ex. He pulls out all the stops—saves her life, walks her home, shares his soul—but in the end, she ghosts him for some bloke in a turtleneck who probably overuses the word “dialectical.”
The whole vibe? It’s like sipping wine at a gallery and accidentally crying into your baguette. Beautiful, devastating, and painfully familiar.
Quick Bresson Breakdown
Element | Description |
---|---|
Director | Robert Bresson, known for formalist minimalism and using non-actors |
Source Material | Dostoevsky’s White Nights |
Setting | Post-1968 Paris |
Themes | Unrequited love, artistic longing, urban loneliness |
Streaming In Australia | Mubi, Binge |
Streaming In UK | Mubi |
Soundtrack Highlight | Porto Seguro by Marku Ribas |
Final Thoughts: Love Is a Dream, Art Is What’s Left
Four Nights of a Dreamer doesn’t end in happily-ever-after, but rather the quiet devastation of what could’ve been. It’s a slow, stylish, and haunting watch for anyone who’s ever loved someone who still had eyes on someone else.