Les Petits riens (1942) Directed by Raymond Leboursier
Comedy
aka: Little Nothings
Film Review
Les Petits riens is an early
example of the anthology film (or film
à sketches) that would become a popular mainstay of
French cinema in the 50s and 60s. The film certainly has an
impressive cast but a distinct lack of imagination on both the writing
and directing fronts prevents it from being as entertaining as it
should be. Formerly a film editor, Raymond Leboursier makes a
fairly unimpressive debut as a director, and without the star presence
of Fernandel, Raimu and Jules Berry this would be a fairly dismal
offering. After a promising start the film soon stalls as the
stories that make it up have less and less interest value. Things
pick up markedly towards the end as Raimu shows up and performs a
one-man salvage operation, breaking our hearts (as he is apt to do) in
the final poignant vignette.
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Film Synopsis
At a reception, a group of friends each recall a small incident in
their past which provided a significant turning point in their
lives. Drial admits that he became a famous painter through the
misfortune of a road accident. Jean Astier, a successful
businessman, attributes his success to speculation on the stock
exchange. The writer Mesnard was waiting at table when he learned
that his first stage play had been a hit in Paris. La Clermont
reveals how fate decreed that she would become a leading actress.
Towards the end of the soiree, Charpillon turns up and confides in
Astier that his wife has left him on his wedding day...
A wave of fresh talent in the late 1950s, early 1960s brought about a dramatic renaissance in French cinema, placing the auteur at the core of France's 7th art.