Cesar Ve Rosalie May 2026
The performances remain benchmarks. Montand, at 51, is a force of nature, balancing comic bravado with raw hurt. Sami Frey’s David is the rare “nice guy” who is not a saint but a man weaponizing his own fragility. And Schneider, just a year after the devastating Max and the Junkmen (also with Montand), gives Rosalie a weary, searching intelligence. She never plays the victim; she plays a woman who knows she is her own worst enemy.
Sautet frames these confrontations with the precision of a behavioral anthropologist. He is less interested in plot mechanics than in the micro-gestures of longing: the way Rosalie touches her neck when she is lying; the way César’s hands, so gentle with a cigarette, become fists around a wine glass; the way David looks at the floor when he loses yet another argument by default. Cesar ve Rosalie
More than fifty years later, César and Rosalie remains a sharp, unsentimental masterpiece—a film for anyone who has ever been caught between the thunder and the silence, and still cannot decide which one is home. is available on Blu-ray from Kino Lorber and streams periodically on The Criterion Channel. The performances remain benchmarks
The film’s most radical choice is its ending, which I will not spoil here except to say that it rejects every convention of romantic resolution. Sautet understood that love is not a problem to be solved but a condition to be endured. César and Rosalie arrived at a moment when French cinema was deconstructing the couple. Eric Rohmer was analyzing moral tales, and François Truffaut was tracing obsessive love in Adele H. But Sautet’s film feels less intellectual and more viscerally true. You believe these people exist because you have met them—or been them. And Schneider, just a year after the devastating
Philippe Sarde’s jazz-tinged score—alternately breezy and melancholic—underscores the film’s bittersweet thesis: that the most passionate relationships are often the least sustainable. That we love not wisely, but too well, and too loudly, and too late.
