Claude Sautet Movies
One of France's most respected directors, Claude Sautet was without equal in his ability to chronicle the banal complexities of French bourgeois life. In such works as Les Choses de la Vie (1969), Vincent, Paul, François, et les Autres (1974), and Un Coeur en Hiver (1992), Sautet explored the personal relationships and emotional frailties of everyday men and women with warmth and assurance, providing audiences with rare insight into the lives and loves of the French middle classes.
Born in the working class Parisian suburb of Montrouge on February 24, 1924, Sautet worked as a social worker and music critic before attending the Institut des Hautes Etudes Cinématographiques in the late '40s. He toiled for a number of years as a writer, assistant director, and TV producer, penning, among other works, Georges Franju's horror classic Les Yeux Sans Visage (1959). Although Sautet made his directorial debut in 1955 with Bonjour Sourire, it was not until he wrote and directed Les Choses de la Vie (1969) that he earned international attention. An ostensibly simple story about a businessman (Michel Piccoli) who must choose between his wife and his mistress, the film introduced a number of themes that would continue to be apparent throughout Sautet's subsequent work, particularly concerns revolving around one's home, loved ones, and material possessions. Les Choses de la Vie was shown in competition at the 1970 Cannes Festival, where its enthusiastic reception announced Sautet as one of the new decade's more promising talents.
He followed Les Choses in 1971 with Max et les Férrailleurs, which starred Piccoli as a former judge whose obsession with bringing criminals to justice leads him to concoct an unwieldy scheme involving a prostitute (Romy Schneider, whose starring role in Les Choses revived her career) and her criminal boyfriend. 1972's César et Rosalie was another journey into the mundane emotional dilemmas of the bourgeoisie, with Schneider portraying a married woman whose former lover comes back into her life. Sautet next addressed his favorite bourgeois themes in Vincent, Paul, François, et les Autres (1974), one of the most acclaimed films of his career. A melancholy portrait of four middle-class men who meet in the country every weekend to eat, drink, and discuss their lives, it featured strong, assured performances from a cast that included Piccoli, Yves Montand, Gérard Depardieu, and Stéphane Audran.
After having further critical success with Mado (1976) and the Oscar-nominated Une Histoire Simple (1978), which featured Schneider in a César-winning performance as a dissatisfied 40-something working woman, Sautet entered something of a career lull. During the course of the 1980s he made only a few films, of which Garçon! (1983), a drama starring Yves Montand as a middle-aged waiter, and the comedy Quelques Jours Avec Moi (1988) were relatively well-received. Sautet returned to form in 1992 with Un Coeur en Hiver, his latest meditation on French middle-class bourgeois life. Starring Emmanuelle Béart as a beautiful violinist who comes between two business partners (Daniel Auteuil and André Dussollier), the film offered an intricate, subtle exploration of the inner lives of its three main characters, both recalling Sautet's works of the 1970s and proving that the director was able to give his oft-revisited central themes fresh treatment. Un Coeur en Hiver was a popular and critical success; its numerous international awards included a Best Director César and Venice Film Festival Silver Lion for Sautet.
Following this triumph, Sautet continued his tradition of writing scripts for other directors, something that, earlier in his career, led François Truffaut to affectionately dub the director a "
ressemeler de scenarios" (re-soler of screenplays). He provided the script for Intersection, the 1994 remake of Les Choses de la Vie. Although the film was a disappointment, it was overshadowed completely by what would turn out to be Sautet's last film, the 1995 Nelly et Monsieur Arnaud. Similar to Un Coeur in its focus on an unlikely love triangle, Nelly starred Béart as a young woman whose work for Monsieur Arnaud (Michel Serrault), an emotionally repressed retired judge, is compromised by her affair with a young publisher (Jean-Hugues Anglade) and the presence of her estranged husband (Charles Berling). Nominated for a score of Césars, the film ultimately won two, one for Michel Serrault and the other for Sautet.
The award was a fitting end for Sautet's career; five years later, on July 22, 2000, he died of liver cancer at the age of 76. Following his death, French President Jacques Chirac said that the writer and director "held out the mirror of our times," a fitting tribute to a man who provided filmgoers with such poignant explorations of the more intimate details of human nature. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, Rovi

- 1995
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Almost a follow-up to director Claude Sautet's Un Coeur en Hiver (1992), Nelly & Monsieur Arnaud further explores repressed emotions and failed relationships. Nelly (Emmanuelle Béart), an attractive young woman, is six months behind in her rent and struggling with odd jobs, while her husband (Charles Berling) lies in bed reading newspapers and watching TV. Her friend Jacqueline introduces her to Pierre Arnaud (Michel Serrault), a retired judge and wealthy ex-businessman, who offers to settle Nelly's debt. She agrees and is later so disappointed by her husband's indifferent reaction that she leaves him. Arnaud asks her to be his secretary because he needs help in typing his memoirs. Though obviously attracted to her, he rarely expresses his emotions, and he suddenly erupts only when he finds out about Nelly's affair with his young publisher Vincent (Jean-Hugues Anglade). The film won Césars from the French Academy of Cinema for Best Director and Best Actor, although it lost Best Film to Mathieu Kassovitz's more innovative La haine. ~ Yuri German, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Emmanuelle Béart, Michel Serrault, (more)

- 1992
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- Add Un Coeur en Hiver to Queue
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Daniel Auteuil and Emmanuelle Béart from Manon of the Spring (1986) co-star once again in Un Coeur en Hiver, playing characters whose distance from each others' lives belies the enormous emotional impact they have on one another. Directed by Claude Sautet, whose 40-year career included the Oscar-winning César et Rosalie (1972), Un Coeur en Hiver is a remarkably restrained film with torrents of feeling just under the surface. Auteuil plays Stephane, partner in an exclusive violin brokerage. His older business partner Maxime (Andre Dussolier) has a lovely new violinist girlfriend, Camille (Béart), who stirs Stephane but is ultimately rejected by him, sending all three characters into a spin that destroys their delicate, symbiotic balance. Hovering over this story is an unusual musical motif that is key to the characters' inner motivations. Violins play, and play on camera, all through the film, but the nature of Stephane's craft, Camille's career, and Maxime's profits is that the music can always be refined, tinkered with, changed with a twist of this or a bit of that. That's precisely how they conduct their relationships and lives -- with a fragile sense of security and no idea when to stop manipulating life for effect. ~ Tom Keogh, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Daniel Auteuil, Emmanuelle Béart, (more)

- 1989
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Georges (Thierry Fremont) is a juvenile Nazi collaborator who agrees to gather information on others in France in exchange for the authorities forgiving his own transgressions. Rove (Andre Dussolier) is the intelligence officer who trains Georges in his quest to hunt down Nazi war criminals. Liberation judges demand full sentences for the small-time collaborators while allowing the bigger fish to escape, and other Nazis are allowed to be recruited by the United States, as political pressures move towards a communist witch hunt. Conveniently overlooked once again is the historical fact that only a small minority in France were actively involved in the heroic resistance movement against the Nazis. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Thierry Frémont, Valérie Kaprisky, (more)

- 1988
- PG13
Claude Sautet's A Few Days With Me (Quelque Jours avec Moi) stars Daniel Auteuil as the emotionally disturbed heir to a supermarket empire. Auteuil's mother Danielle Darrieux tries to give her son some purpose in life by assigning him the task of reinvigorating one of the supermarket chain's least profitable links. Every effort Auteuil makes to reach out and communicate with his employees is doomed to failure due to his conscious and unconscious insensitivities. He is humanized by a brief affair with maid Sandrine Bonnaire. The romance doesn't last, and Auteuil ends up back in a mental institution, but still there is a ray of hope for him in the final scenes. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Daniel Auteuil, Sandrine Bonnaire, (more)

- 1983
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Yves Montand stars in this French seriocomedy as a middle-aged waiter. He has long harbored dreams of becoming a singer, and is also anxious to prove he's as virile as he was when he started pushing plates. Montand gets a chance to rev up his sexual energy and his musical skills when an old flame (Nicole Garcia) reenters his life after 17 years. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Yves Montand, Nicole Garcia, (more)

- 1980
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This is a quiet drama about the struggles of a former drug addict and dealer, Bruno Calgagni (Patrick Dewaere), as he is released from prison in the U.S. and arrives back home in France. His unhappy father blames this disgraceful prison stint for the death of Bruno's mother. No one wants to hire an ex-con, and a romantic liaison with another, very delicately balanced former addict only adds to the burden Bruno is carrying. Mauvais Fils skillfully limns Bruno's daily fight to keep his head above water. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Patrick Dewaere, Brigitte Fossey, (more)

- 1978
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Nominated for an Academy Award, Claude Sautet's A Simple Story (Une Histoire Simple) examines the behavior of its characters as dictated by their environment. Romy Schneider plays Marie, a fortysomething working woman whose tiresome existence has prompted her to inaugurate an affair. Marie eventually parts with her lover, aborting the pregnancy resulting from her liaison. She pauses long enough to take stock of her current situation, and to muse on its possible outcome. Though exuding star quality throughout, Romy Schneider is thoroughly believable as the essentially ordinary, nonspectacular heroine. Her behavior is not that of a wealthy play-actress but a genuine bourgeois woman emotionally hemmed in by her social strata. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Romy Schneider, Bruno Cremer, (more)

- 1976
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Michel Piccoli plays Simon, a French businessman reluctantly venturing into middle age. As he deals with his own midlife crisis, Simon becomes virtually oblivious to the social changes around him. The businessman tries to counter advancing age with an increased sex life, but finds that women aren't the same compliant creatures he remembers from his youth. Though the material is rife with opportunities for "radical" camerawork, director Claude Sautet chooses an austere, near-classic cinematic style, allowing us to concentrate more on the people in front of the camera rather than the person behind it. Featured in the cast of Mado is actress Romy Schneider, a Sautet favorite. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Michel Piccoli, Ottavia Piccolo, (more)

- 1974
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Vincent, Francois, Paul and the Others is a gentle character study of a group of friends who meet each weekend in the country for food, drink and conversation. Over the course of the film, the three main characters undergo a variety of personal and professional struggles, which are all vividly evoked by Claude Sautet's direction and the cast's stellar acting. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Yves Montand, Michel Piccoli, (more)

- 1972
- R
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Claude Sautet's romantic drama César et Rosalie (Cesar and Rosalie) stars Romy Schneider as Rosalie, a beautiful young woman involved with successful businessman Cesar (Yves Montand). One day, Rosalie's former flame David (Sami Frey) appears and attempts to win her back. Cesar reacts with a jealous intensity never before seen by Rosalie, and because of that, she returns to David. She remains conflicted regarding her choice of partner, but eventually, one of the men does something which resolves the situation. César et Rosalie contains one of the first screen appearances of French actress Isabelle Huppert. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Romy Schneider, Yves Montand, (more)

- 1971
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This film is a French period comic romance, set in the time just surrounding the French Revolution (1789). "Year Two," of the French title refers to the second year following the revolution. Those who guided the French Revolution renamed the days of the week, the months of the year, and much more. They also began their calendar from the time of the revolution. In this film, Jean-Paul Belmondo plays the husband of a vivacious, two-timing, and socially ambitious young woman (Marlene Jobert). After he kills one of her aristocratic lovers, the husband flees to the New World (the Americas). He returns to France after the revolution, finds that he has been divorced, and then works hard to woo his ex-wife away from all the important men and outlaw aristocrats she is spending time with. Happiness reigns anew as, remarried, they both attain aristocratic status in Napolean's regime. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jean-Paul Belmondo, Marlène Jobert, (more)

- 1971
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Max (Michel Piccoli) is a former judge obsessed with seeing criminals brought to justice. The frustrations of the courtroom, where evidence matters more than guilt, lead him to join the police force. Independently wealthy, he uses all his official and personal resources to make criminals pay for their crimes. He hits on a scheme involving a prostitute (Romy Schneider) and her small-time criminal boyfriend (Bernard Fresson) in which he incites the boyfriend to carry out larger and larger crimes until he can arrange to catch him red-handed. While he has been using the prostitute to set up her boyfriend, he has also fallen in love with her. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Michel Piccoli, Romy Schneider, (more)

- 1970
- R
Based on a Eugene Saccomano novel entitled The Bandits of Marseilles, this movie was followed by a sequel entitled Borsalino and Co. This movie captures the mood of 1930 Marseilles beautifully with the use of ambience and music. Alain Delon and Jean-Paul Belmondo portray two gangsters who kill their way to the top. ~ Tana Hobart, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Alain Delon, Jean-Paul Belmondo, (more)

- 1970
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After laboring in obscurity for several years, French filmmaker Claude Sautet finally struck a responsive chord with moviegoers in Les Choses de la Vie. The plot isn't much: the hero, businessman Michel Piccoli, must choose between his wife and his mistress, two women whom he loves with equal fervor. It is what Sautet does with the material that lifts the film above the ordinary. The director puts the central character's plight in context with his ongoing concerns over his job, his income, and his relationship with his family. In Choses de la Vie Sautet has nothing but the warmest feelings for his characters, which results in more three-dimensionality that might normally be expected in so banal a plotline. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Michel Piccoli, Romy Schneider, (more)

- 1968
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A young woman living on the Left Bank of Paris is a pickpocket and a prostitute. Running away from a man she has robbed, she sees a young street photographer and plants the stolen wallet on him. Before she goes to prison, the two fall in love. Upon her release, they are married and things look rosy until she reverts to thievery to earn money for her husband's studio. She then commits murder to hide her shady past (she is already married to another man) from her naive partner. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Dany Carrel, Jacques Perrin, (more)

- 1965
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A Matter of Resistance is the English-language title of the frothy wartime comedy La Vie De Chateau. Set in occupied France, the film stars Catherine Deneuve as the young and beautiful bride of middle-aged and homely Philipe Noiret. Disappointed at Noiret's indifference concerning the Nazi invaders, Catherine is swept off her feet by handsome Resistance leader Henri Garcin. Throughout the rest of the film, it seems as though the underground operatives and the German officers are more interested in bedding the bewitched Ms. Deneuve than in winning the war. The music by Michel Legrand lends just the right airiness to this captivating farce. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Philippe Noiret, Catherine Deneuve, (more)

- 1965
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A veteran sea captain (Lino Ventura) is blamed for the disappearance of a ship when the vessel is hijacked by gunrunners. Mrs. Osborne (Sylva Koscina) is a pretty American widow who helps the accused captain search for the missing ship. Leo Gordon plays the menacing heavy, Morrison, and co-stars with Alberto Mendoza as Pablo. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Lino Ventura, Sylva Koscina, (more)

- 1964
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Left a young widower, banker Monsieur (Jean Gabin) discovers that his late wife was having an affair before her death. About to end his life after the news, he is rescued from his misery by a prostitute who was once his maid. Deciding to make a change in his life, he abandons his old one and becomes a valet, passing the girl off as his daughter. Now working for a wealthy man, Monsieur finds that his employer's lonely wife is tempted to try out another's affection. Monsieur saves the day by dissuading the wife, falling in love with the prostitute and deciding to reclaim his prior fortune. This French comedy is adapted by Claude Sautet and Pascal Jardin from a play by Claude Gevel. Sautet would go on to direct some impressive features, including the more recent Un Coeur En Himer/Heart in Winter (1992) and Nelly et M. Arnaud/Nelly and Mr. Arnaud (1995) starring the talented Emmanuelle Beart. ~ Kristie Hassen, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jean Gabin, Liselotte Pulver, (more)

- 1963
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Trouble begins when five Frenchmen pool their money in an attempt to pull off a huge drug deal. One intercepts the money and kills his friend to cover his tracks. The others are haunted by doubt and innuendo to the point where they all point fingers and guns at each other. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Michel Auclair, Claude Dauphin, (more)

- 1960
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- Add Classe Tous Risques to Queue
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A criminal on the run finds going home after a decade is harder than he expects in this drama from French filmmaker Claude Sautet. Gangster Abel Davos (Lino Ventura) is wanted for murder in France, and has been living underground in Italy for ten years. Since then, Abel has married Therese (Simone France) and fathered two sons, and he's decided it's time to come home. Abel has planed an elaborate scheme in which he'll steal a fortune to finance his journey and head home with Therese and the boys, but little goes as planned, and he arrives in Paris without his wife and running from the law with two kids in tow. An underworld boss who owes Abel some favors helps him put together a plan to travel across France in an ambulance to avoid suspicion, and recruits a headstrong young gangster, Eric (Jean-Paul Belmondo), to serve as Abel's driver and right-hand-man. En route, Abel tries to settle some old score with criminal associates who betrayed him. Based on a novel by Jose Giovanni, Classe Tous Risques was the first feature film from Sautet, who previously had worked as an assistant director for some of France's most prestigious filmmakers. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Lino Ventura, Jean-Paul Belmondo, (more)

- 1960
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French director Georges Franju's Eyes Without a Face (Les Yeux Sans Visage) is an unsettling, sometimes poetic horror film. Pierre Brasseur plays a brilliant plastic surgeon, Prof. Genessier, who has vowed to restore the face of his daughter, Christiane (Edith Scob), who was mutilated in an automobile accident. With the help of his assistant (Alida Valli), he kidnaps young women, surgically removes their facial features, and attempts to graft their beauty onto his daughter's hideous countenance. This naturally has an adverse effect on the "donors," some of whom commit suicide rather than go through life faceless. Franju's haunting, muted handling of basic horror material is what lifts Eyes Without a Face out of the ordinary and into the realm of near-classic. When the film failed to draw crowds under its original title, however, the distributors decided to exploit it as a two-bit "scare" flick with the new title The Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Pierre Brasseur, Alida Valli, (more)

- 1955
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