Tag Archives: Jean-Pierre Cassel

extreme forms of the struggle of the classes (film: La cérémonie – Claude Chabrol, 1995)

Claude Chabrol‘s ‘La cérémonie‘, adapted from a novel by Ruth Rendell, ends about where Stanley Kubrick’s and Anthony Burgess’ ‘A Clockwork Orange’ begins. The ceremony in the title is a shocking act of violence, and I won’t say more to … Continue reading

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the indiscrete wickedness of the bourgeoisie (film: La rupture – Claude Chabrol, 1970)

Some of the most scathing cinematic critiques of the bourgeoisie and the social order it dominated were created in the years after the student uprisings of 1968. They did not always take the form of explicitly political films, and one … Continue reading

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the improbable lover (film: Le mouton enragé – Michel Deville, 1974)

Michel Deville quietly left us and this world a few weeks ago, and his disappearance would have gone unnoticed, for me at least, if some television stations had not marked the sad event by programming some of his films. A … Continue reading

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