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Film Still

Happiness

Le bonheur

France

1965

80 Min
Color
1.66:1
French
  • Currently 4.0/5 Stars.
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DIR Agnès Varda

PROD Mag Bodard

SCR Agnès Varda

DP Jean Rabier, Claude Beausoleil

CAST Jean-Claude Drouot, Claire Drouot, Marie-Françoise Boyer

ED Janine Verneau

Synopsis

Though married to the good-natured, beautiful Thérèse (Claire Drouot), young husband and father François (Jean-Claude Drouot) finds himself falling unquestioningly into an affair with an attractive postal worker. One of Agnès Varda’s most provocative films, Le bonheur examines, with a deceptively cheery palette and the spirited strains of Mozart, the ideas of fidelity and happiness in a modern, self-centered world. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Original

Agnès Varda

Agnès Varda has been called the “Grandmother of the New Wave,” a well-meaning if curious tribute for a woman who directed her first feature film at the age of 26. Born in Brussels, Varda studied literature and psychology at the Sorbonne, and art history at the École du Louvre. She’d originally wanted to be a museum curator, but a night-school course in photography changed her mind. Rapidly establishing herself as a top-rank still photographer, Varda became the official cameraperson for the Theatre Festival of Avignon and the Theatre National Populaire, and then pursued a career as a photojournalist.

Encouraged by filmmaker Alain Resnais, Varda made her movie directorial bow in 1955 with La Pointe Courte. She based the film on a William Faulkner short story, to which she was attracted because of its parallel plotlines (a recurring device in her later films). That same year, she accompanied another future New Wave director, Chris Marker, to China as visual advisor for his Dimanche… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 15 wall posts.
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Vlad Martínez

8Jan12

Hubris as a double-barreled gun with a funny knockback...

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christinatolfsen

4Oct11

A classic movie by Agnès Varda that tells the story of Francois and Therese, a disturbingly happy young couple.

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Elif

1Sep11

Such lovely colors, such idiotic characters.

Laura and chanandre like this

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Benjamin C.

20Jun11

Bright and sunny, with a bitter center, Le Bonheur is a film about infidelity, naivety, and of course, the true meaning of 'Happiness'. Varda uses bright costumes and colorful flowers to juxtapose the dark nature of the plot, and the tragedy that occurs towards the end. She mocks her subjects, as she tells the audience that this type of happiness is unobtainable. But until then, we can stop and smell the roses.

Ilestlouis likes this

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Fans

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Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.
W184

La Varda

By Ryland Walker Knight on June 7, 2010

The Auteurs—MUBI's center for film curation—is collaborating with Agnès Varda to show the filmmaker's shorts and features online, many of which

read article
W184

Movie Posters of the Week: The Films of Agnès Varda

By Adrian Curry on June 4, 2010

To celebrate the Le cinema d’Agnès Varda, the virtual retrospective currently running on The Auteurs, I thought I'd take a look at Varda’s

read article
W184

Le cinéma d'Agnès Varda

By Notebook on June 3, 2010

Photo by Fabrizio Maltese/EF Press/fabriziomaltese.com. One of most exhilarating moments for us in Cannes a few weeks ago was announcing

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Lists

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Reviews

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Obsessione without the noir?

By Paul Jazz on June 16, 2011

A real revelation. I suppose it can be seen as a cheery update of Obsessione and The Postman rings twice, in the sense that it deals with the old story of infidelity, but in this case there is no hint…  read review

Untitled

By Bobby Myers on October 8, 2009

Disregarding the coy and poetic indictment of selfish pursuits of happiness and looking at the film from a purely audiovisual standpoint, this to me is the ideal summer film.

While I enjoyed…  read review

Untitled

By Maicol Andrés Ordoñez on March 24, 2009

Bah! Agnes Varda is the truest Impressionist filmmaker in cinema. I think she describes her film perfectly when she defines the Impressionist painters as artists who see the sadness behind the beauty…  read review

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Le Bonheur

56 posts by 15 people 11 months ago

DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.