
Gaby is expelled from school after a married teacher commits suicide after telling her he can't live without her. Though she has done nothing, she is punished for his act.


Is this for you? If you like movies that feel like a slow-motion car crash, you might dig Everybody's Woman. If you are in the mood for something light or fair, stay away. This is pure, unadulterated misery for the protagonist. Gaby’s situation is infuriating from the first frame. She is a teenager, she is bright, and...

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Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Max Ophüls

Bruno Ziener
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"Is this for you? If you like movies that feel like a slow-motion car crash, you might dig Everybody's Woman. If you are in the mood for something light or fair, stay away. This is pure, unadulterated misery for the protagonist. Gaby’s situation is infuriating from the first frame. She is a teenager, she is bright, and she is being blamed for a man’s inability to keep his own life together. It’s a tale as old as time, really, but Ophüls shoots it with this cold, clinical eye that makes you feel ..."
Max Ophüls, Salvatore Gotta, Hans Wilhelm, Curt Alexander
Italy

