L'Argent
L'Argent

L'Argent (1983)

7.0 ? May 18, 1983 1h 25m

Overview

A forged 500-franc note is passed from person to person and shop to shop, until it falls into the hands of a genuine innocent who doesn't see it for what it is—which will have devastating consequences on his life.

Genres

Crime Drama

Release Date

May 18, 1983

Rating

7.0 /10

Runtime

1h 25m

Official Trailer from YouTube

Christian Patey

Yvon Targe

Vincent Risterucci

Vincent Risterucci

Lucien

Sylvie Van Den Elsen

Grey Haired Woman

Michel Briguet

Michel Briguet

Grey Haired Woman's Father

Caroline Lang

Caroline Lang

Elise

Marc Ernest Fourneau

Norbert

Jean-Frédéric Ducasse

un client du magasin

Didier Baussy

le photographe

Jeanne Aptekman

Yvette

François-Marie Banier

François-Marie Banier

le compagnon de cellule d'Yvon

Alain Aptekman

Gilles Durieux

CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

7.0/10

Jan 01, 2023

The sentiment of this film is rather horribly - and effectively - cynical. A dodgy 500 Franc note is being circulated amongst businesses and people who know it isn't real. Until, that is, is falls into the hands of honest delivery driver "Yvon" (Christian Patey) who has no idea that he is about to become the victim of this scam. His boss insists that the pretty skint man make good the loss and his options are limited. Petty crime seems the obvious solution and so he hooks up with some would-be bank robbers. Needless to say, that goes awry and soon the young lad is facing a lengthy prison term and his marriage starts to dissolve before his eyes. Proof, if it were ever needed, that prison isn't always the best solution - the youngster starts to despair, and upon his release that frustration and angst leads him to a far greater crime. There is something unpleasantly venal about this whole thing. The young man is wittingly used by others but hasn't the wits of his own to appreciate, until it is too late, that he is little better than a pawn in a rather inhuman and depressing cycle of greed and indifference. Patey delivers well here, as does Robert Bresson in creating an atmosphere that suffocates any semblance of hope and demonstrates the compelling addiction of corruption - exactly, I suspect, as Tolstoy intended in his original story. In the end, I found this to be more of a powerful character study of one young man who, there but for the grace of God, could be any one of us!

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