Amazon.com video review:
The story is so simple, it hardly exists: a young girl marries a mate
aboard a river barge named L'Atalante; she grows bored and frustrated
with the dull life that results; when the barge docks in Paris, she runs away,
only to discover that she misses her husband. But the power of
L'Atalante isn't in its story--it's in the way the camera captures
the world in rich, dreamy images, steeping the audience in a viewpoint both
innocent and stark. The simplest things are also implacable and confusing.
The characters' personalities, and the ways they conflict, have the deep
frustrations of real life, and not the easily resolved plot points of most
romances. The culmination will leave you aching with happiness and
lingering sorrow. Director Jean Vigo--who died of lung disease after
completing the film--had an astonishing ability to make the real world
translucent; cinematographer Boris Kaufman said, "He used everything around
him: the sun, the moon, snow, night. Instead of fighting unfavorable
conditions, he made them play a part." This film is a masterpiece,
comparable to Satyajit Ray's Pather Panchali or the movies of Robert
Bresson in its ability to be simultaneously effortless and devastatingly
complex. --Bret Fetzer