Une femme douce – Radiance Films (Blu-ray)
Theatrical Release Date: France, 1969
Director: Robert Bresson
Writer: Robert Bresson
Cast: Dominique Sanda, Guy Frangin, Jeanne Lobre, Claude Ollier, Jacques Kébadian, Gilles Sandier, Dorothée Blanck
Release Date: December 8th, 2025
Approximate Running Time: 88 Minutes 48 Seconds
Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1 Widescreen / 1080 Progressive / MPEG-4 AVC
Rating: 15 (UK)
Sound: LPCM Mono French
Subtitles: English
Region Coding: Region B
Retail Price: £14.99 (UK)
"From the balcony of her Parisian apartment, a young woman (Dominique Sanda, The Conformist) jumps to her death. Her body is moved to the bed that she shared with her husband Luc (Guy Frangin), a pawnbroker she met at a time of need. Through a series of flashbacks, Luc reflects on their marriage and the events that may have led to her suicide." - synopsis provided by the distributor
Video: 5/5
Here’s the information provided about this release's transfer, “Une femme douce was restored in 2K from the original negative in 2013. The film restoration was carried out using tools to remove dirt and improve stabilization. Completed with the support of CNC by Eclair Group and L.E. Diapason for Paramount Pictures and Cine Mag Bodard, with the collaboration of Mylène Bresson.”
Une femme douce comes on a 50 GB dual layer Blu-ray.
Disc Size: 28.8 GB
Feature: 24.2 GB
The source looks excellent; flesh tones look healthy, colors look correct, image clarity, contrast, black levels, and compression are solid, and the image always looks organic.
Audio: 5/5
This release comes with one audio option, a LPCM mono mix in French with removable English subtitles. The audio sounds clean, clear, and balanced, and ambient sounds are well-represented.
Extras:
Extras for this release include an image gallery (22 images—stills/lobby cards), an archival French TV interview with actress Dominique Sanda (5 minutes 29 seconds, Dolby Digital mono French with removable English subtitles), an archival French TV interview with director Robert Bresson (7 minutes 29 seconds, Dolby Digital mono French with removable English subtitles), a video essay by Cristina Álvarez López and Adrian Martin titled Over Her Dead Body (17 minutes 26 seconds, Dolby Digital stereo English with non-removable English subtitles for French film clips), an audio commentary with Michael Brooke, reversible cover art, removable OBI strip leaving packaging free of certificates and markings and a 32-page booklet (limited to 3000 copies) with cast & crew information, an essay titled Behind the Façade: Une femme douce and the Hiddenness of God written by Alex Barrett and an archival interview with Robert Bresson conducted by Ronald Hayman, and information about the transfer.
Summary:
Robert Bresson directed Une femme douce; he adapted the screenplay from Fyodor Dostoyevsky's short story A Gentle Creature. He directed 14 films; the most notable are Diary of a Country Priest, A Man Escaped, Pickpocket, and Au hasard Balthazar.
When a woman kills herself, leaving no explanation, her husband looks back on their time together and tries to uncover the reason why.
Robert Bresson was truly one of cinema’s most unique filmmakers. While he mastered the media, he did not follow traditional cinema techniques. He favored using non-actors in his films and often rejected the artificial aesthetics commonly found in traditional cinema. His narratives often had deliberate gaps that allowed viewers to fill in the missing information.
Une femme douce is a film that opens with a pivotal moment, and from there, its narrative retraces the events that led to that moment. In its opening moments a woman jumps from her apartment's balcony to the street below, causing her death. In the aftermath, her husband has her body taken to their bed while their maid prepares her for the wake. From there, a series of memories recounted by the husband reveal who the woman was and offer some insight into her mental state.
The two leads, Guy Frangin in the role of the husband and Dominique Sanda (The Conformist), had never acted before Une femme douce. While the latter would have a career that lasted six decades, the former would not appear in another film. When it comes to their performances, there is a rawness that enhances the authenticity.
For his 10th film, Robert Bresson would shoot in color for the first time. The visuals in Une femme douce include a few striking moments, particularly the scene of the wife's lifeless body on the pavement below their apartment. However, for the most part, the visuals remain observational. Despite this lack of visual flair, the film would not have had the same impact if it had been shot in black and white.
Although the husband tries to fill in the blanks about his deceased wife's life and their time together, these are his memories of those events. Despite her absence of perspective, it is evident that she was a troubled soul, confined by the restrictions imposed by her husband. Feeling trapped, the wife's final words were that she'd found happiness, only to jump to her death. Her final words offer clearer insight into her psyche than the memories her husband has of her. Ultimately, Une femme douce is an extraordinary exploration of the human condition.
Une femme douce gets a definitive release from Radiance Films. Highly recommended.
Written by Michael Den Boer























































