Film Review
What goes around, comes around. At the time
L'Argent des autres was made, in the
late 1970s, France was reeling from a series of financial and political
scandals that would have a lasting and far-reaching impact. The film itself was
based on a novel that was inspired by one of the most infamous fraud
cases of the 1960s, the Patrimoine Foncier affair. Three decades
on, the film has a chilling resonance, inviting stark comparisons with
the kind of world we now find ourselves in - one where banks and
governments are desperately colluding to prop up a capitalist system
which, through excessive greed, arrogance and sheer folly, the banks
have come spectacularly close to destroying.
L'Argent des autres begins in
the manner of a Kafkaesque living nightmare in which an ordinary man named
Rainier (played superbly by Jean-Louis Trintignant) goes for a job
interview and finds himself on trial for undisclosed failures in his
previous post. This sets the tone for the film brilliantly,
showing exactly what forces our hero is up against. Having lost
his job, Rainier is deprived of money and status and becomes a
non-person. He has no hope of defeating those who brought him
down, the greed merchants who are safely ensconced within the bastions
of a corporate monolith. The film's bleak portrayal of the power that
money confers on those who have it is enough to chill the blood
of any spectator. This is the true face of capitalism - ugly, brutal and soulless,
the bitterly acidic distillation of all human vice.
The film clearly deserved to be better known that it is,
not just because it remains highly pertinent, but because it is a well-made
and highly original piece, with a strong script and even stronger performances. It was directed by
Christian de Chalonge, a man renowned for his
distinctive psychological dramas (including the memorably weird
L'Alliance (1971)),
and features an impressive cast
which, in addition to the aforementioned Trintignant, includes such
stars as Catherine Deneuve, Michel Serrault and Claude Brasseur.
It won the coveted Prix Louis Delluc in 1978 and Césars in the best film and best director
categories in 1979.
Although the film has a blackly comedic edge to it, it is a
profoundly disturbing piece - all the more so now that its proximity to
our present reality is so frighteningly apparent.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Christian de Chalonge film:
Les Quarantièmes rugissants (1982)
Film Synopsis
Henri Rainier has everything a man could want. A glamorous wife,
two beautiful daughters and a well-paid job with a large bank.
Then, one day, his entire world collapses. In the wake of a
high-profile financial scandal, he is summoned into his director's
office and accused of negligence. Rainier has no choice but to
resign, but he soon realises that he has been made a scapegoat.
He begins his own investigation in an attempt to clear his name and
discover who is responsible for the enormous hole in the bank's
finances. It soon becomes apparent that he is up against a very
powerful and dangerous opponent...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.