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Paul Guimard

‘The Things of Life’ succeeds in its refusal to be cleverer than necessary
The Things of Life (Les Chose de la Vie)

Directed by Claude Sautet

Written by Paul Guimard, Claude Sautet

France, 1970

Claude Sautet’s films often get lost in the New Wave shuffle. Alongside contemporaries Bertrand Tavernier and Alain Cavalier, his cinema was alive and kicking in the 1960s, though he didn’t come into his own as director until later in the decade.

1970′s The Things of Life is a non-chronological look at the transience of life. Starring Sautet regular Romy Schneider (The Trial, César and Rosalie) and French stalwart Michel Piccoli (Contempt, Belle du Jour, The Grand Buffet) as on-again, off-again lovers, the film is framed by a terrifically shot car crash where Sautet effectively uses repetitious action and slow-motion for emphasis.

With the opening of the film Sautet concentrates his camera on a lone car wheel in the grass. The simple shot is important. It mirrors the circular...
See full article at SoundOnSight
  • 3/28/2011
  • by Neal Dhand
  • SoundOnSight
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