Film Review
César et Rosalie is for
the 1970s what François Truffaut's
Jules
et Jim (1962) was for the '60s - a vibrant portrayal of a
love triangle in which the three participants are torn by conflicting
emotions as they attempt to reconcile their desires and faltering
friendships.
The film was directed by Claude Sautet, a
contemporary of the French New Wave whose first acclaimed feature was
Les Choses de la vie (1969), a
film that helped to revive the career of its lead actress Romy
Schneider. Sautet and Schneider would work together on five films
in total, including
César et
Rosalie - their most successful collaboration - and
Une histoire simple (1978), the
film that won Schneider her second César.
César et Rosalie features
another actor whom Sautet greatly admired and worked with on several
occasions, Yves Montand, who was then at the height of his popularity
as a singer and actor.
With the exception of his first four films (an odd assortment of genre
offerings which are perhaps best overlooked), Claude Sautet's cinema
has a remarkable coherence, both in style and subject. Between
1968 and 1995, he made just eleven films, but all of these are
superlative examples of the French
film
d'auteur with mainstream appeal - Sautet had a rare knack of
pleasing both the critics and audiences.
César et Rosalie is amongst
Sautet's best films and exemplifies his distinctive style, one that has
a dreamlike poetry which is draped, a little too elegantly, over a
cold girder of realism. It is easy to be lulled by the
implacable surface calm of Sautet's films, so that when raw emotions
suddenly rear up, in rare outbursts of conflict, these inevitably come
as a shock. The cinema of Claude Sautet is characterised by
a subtle form of stylisation that gives the most
piquant edge to his vivid slices of
life.
César et Rosalie is a
tour de force not only for its director but also for his three lead
actors, who form an impeccable trio as the components of that damned
eternal triangle which has tormented mankind since the dawn of
time. Yves Montand and Sami Frey complement one another perfectly
as the rival lovers who, inexplicably, develop a close friendship as
they each try to steal from the other the woman of his dreams.
Montand and Frey represent two extreme facets of masculinity, the one
macho, over-confident and aggressive, the other submissive, quiet,
almost feminine in his emotional restraint. Both actors are
superbly cast and give performances which easily rate as highpoints in
their respective careers. Montand is particularly memorable in
this film - only he can fill his audience with utter digust in once
scene (throwing his co-stars about the set as if they were mere dolls)
and then win them back just a few minutes later with his down-at-heel,
puppy-dog charm in the next.
Romy Schneider is no less memorable as the enigmatic Rosalie, a
character that seems more like an abstraction of the ideal woman than
the real thing, a siren-like beauty that seems too perfect for the
grubby world she inhabits and may well exist only in the imaginations
of the two men who seek to possess her. As in all of her films
for Claude Sautet, Schneider personifies the modern woman in a way that
few actresses of her generation could match, showing that a woman can
be both desirable and independent. Here,
Sautet exploits Schneider's unrivalled charm and beauty to the maximum
and, in doing so, he creates one of the slickest and most arresting
French films of the 1970s. With a haunting poetry and
sublime narrative simplicity, powered by three remarkable performances,
César et Rosalie contains
the most exquisitely poignant expression of the cruel vicissitudes of
love - a film which Sautet would surpass only with his 1992
masterpiece,
Un coeur en hiver.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Claude Sautet film:
Vincent, François, Paul... et les autres (1974)
Film Synopsis
After her divorce, 30-something Rosalie decides to live with
César, a wealthy scrap-metal dealer who is prone to violent
bursts. Five years on, the two have settled into a happy domestic
routine, although Rosalie is in no hurry to get married. Just
when all appears to be going well, David, Rosalie's former lover,
suddenly turns up from nowhere and tells her he is still madly in love
with her. Rosalie hasn't yet forgiven David for wrecking her marriage
and so is reluctant to start an affair with him. Unfortunately,
César thinks otherwise and, convinced that David is about to
take Rosalie away from him, he turns on his rival in a fit of
jealousy. This merely drives Rosalie into David's arms and the
two renew their earlier romance. When César manages
to track her down to Italy, Rosalie finds that she is once again torn
between her two lovers...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.