If Claude Sautet is most known for his films about middle class, he signs there an excellent movie about the father-son relationship, both belonging to the working class. Patrick Dewaere is the "bad" son, returning home from the US and prison, with a drug addict and trafficker past. He's great, just right the whole movie. As always, I'm tempted to say. Yves Robert, the father, is a discovery for me as an actor and a good surprise. I knew him merely as director - he directed a handful of popular success. His play was at Dewaere's height and scenes with both of us together a real delight. The supporting roles, with Brigitte Fossey and Jacques Durilho, are also very good and give us some of the nicest scenes (the opera!).
The movie in itself stays a classic Sautet if I can say, even in this different settings, letting place to the characters, time to take its course. Showing the simple things of life. Kindliness for his characters. Caring for the little details. I don't know if this is because he is focused on this relationship and not on the description of a certain world, or if this is because he films a social background he knows less and with a generation that is not his, but it works really well, better than most of his middle-class movies.
If the misunderstanding between father and son is the motor of the movie, everyone knowing them, including the spectator, can only witness how similar they are but never at the same wavelength. Sautet adds nice secondary plots and manages a beautiful movie until a wonderful ending.
Plot summary
Bruno is released from prison. He looks for a job and tries to start a new life. His first stop is at his father's apartment.
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Movie Reviews
Like father like son?
Sautet looks at working class life
This is one of the more effective films by Sautet, a director who made commercial pictures with Romy Schneider all through the 70's. While I admired the artistry of Les choses de la vie and Cesar et Rosalie, I was a little put off by the rich decors and bourgeois sentiments. Un mauvais fils is a look at blue collar workers--Rene Calgagni is the foreman on a construction site, his son Bruno works first in trucking, then as a furniture maker, then in a bookstore. Madeleine, Rene's girlfriend runs a dry cleaning shop. Bruno is trying to remake his life after the prison sentence, and the difficulties of re-insertion into society are well-described by Sautet.
Patrick Dewaere gives a restrained performance, lacking most of the extraverted action that made Series noire and La meilleure facon de marcher so memorable. Yves Robert, despite the mustache that reminds us of Stalin, is very affecting as the severe father who doesn't know what to do with his errant son. Jacques Dufilho, playing a gay bookseller with many whimsical moments, earned the Cesar award for best supporting actor. Brigitte Fossey, playing a heroin addict who can't quite stay away from the drug even as she becomes involved with Bruno, has some fine scenes.
Sautet the Master
Another masterful film from Claude Sautet. There is sense of real life being lived, through so many small and telling observations about characters. Sautet uses locations, surrounding and dialog to create this realistic world, and his credible characters populate it. Of course, without top flight actors, it might not work as well. Patrick Dewaere gives what seems a definitive performance as the son whose life had gone off track, but who now honestly intends to make a go of things. As his father, Yves Robert is brilliant as well: the look of surprised recognition when we first see him, and the scene that follows it, are perfect examples of character and plot revelation achieved with seemingly minimal effort. The film does not take the expected turns, so we can anticipate and be surprised along the way. Brigitte Fossey, Claire Maurier and the unforgettable Jacques Dufilho (who won an award for this film) as the opera-loving friend who understands something about life) form an ensemble that could hardly be improved upon. This is a film that's much more than just a movie. It's a deep entry into disorderly and sometimes painful real lives.