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Love on the Run
Overlook Pick

Love on the Run

Antoine Doinel. He's got four ladies ... Nine lives ... and Plenty of alibis!
70
User Score214 ratings
TMDB 7.016+19791h 33mFrench
RomanceDramaComedy

Synopsis

Now in his thirties, Antoine Doinel is a divorced proofreader in love with a record seller. Colette Tazzi, now a lawyer, buys his first published autobiography, leading them to a chance meeting.

Director
François TruffautFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Les Films du Carrosse1 production companies
Release
January 24, 1979Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 21
Jean-Pierre Léaud
Jean-Pierre Léaud
Antoine Doinel
Marie-France Pisier
Marie-France Pisier
Colette Tazzi
Claude Jade
Claude Jade
Christine Doinel
Dani
Dani
Liliane
Dorothée
Dorothée
Sabine Barnerias
Daniel Mesguich
Daniel Mesguich
Xavier Barnerias
Julien Bertheau
Julien Bertheau
Monsieur Lucien
Marie Henriau
Marie Henriau
La Juge du Divorce

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
alexbakshaev
Feb 28, 2017

Godawful opening and closing credits song apart, this final entry into the Antoine Doinel Saga is an enjoyable experience. Fairly briskly paced during the first twenty minutes or so, the film later sinks into a series of unnecessarily lengthy flashbacks, filmed in various aspect ratios. Jean-Pierre Leaud is his usual charming self and the main reason to watch 'Love on the Run'. One only wishes Truffaut hadn't cannibalized his earlier works to beef up the film's running time.

CinemaSerf
Dec 22, 2024

By now, we know that "Antoine Doinel" (Jean-Pierre Léaud) is a bit of a scoundrel and the first few scenes here illustrate that to a T! The ink is barely dry on his divorce from "Christine" (Claude Jade), when he is leaving new gal "Sabine" (Dorothée) to meet up with their son "Alphonse". This behaviour rather epitomises the problem for "Sabine" who yearns for just a little more commitment from her flaky boyfriend. He, on the other hand, is continuing to juggle the plates to nobody's particular satisfaction and that's depicted in this entertainingly stitched together drama using a series of flashbacks and contemporaneous storylines that only become more complex when he runs into his original infatuation "Colette" (Marie-France Pisier) - and him without a train ticket, too! For "Antoine" it's all a maelstrom of emotions that surround and immerse him, frequently leaving him flailing, but who might make him happy? Whom might he actually make happy if he stops being selfish long enough? Could he ever be that selfless? There's a fine chemistry here between Léaud and both Pisier and Dorothée as the comedy veers perilously close to slapstick at times, but it does stay just the on right side as his character raises laughs of both empathy and shame as his escapades see his life unravel before us. Truffaut keeps it moving along quickly and there's some observational wit amidst a script that quite poignantly sums up a man I reckon it'd be better not to know - especially if you're a woman.

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