Suzanne's Career | |
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DVD cover
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Directed by | Éric Rohmer |
Produced by | Barbet Schroeder |
Written by | Éric Rohmer |
Starring |
Catherine Sée Philippe Beuzen Christian Charrière Diane Wilkinson |
Cinematography | Daniel Lacambre |
Edited by | Éric Rohmer |
Release date
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1963 |
Running time
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54 min |
Language | French |
Suzanne's Career is a 1963 film by Éric Rohmer. The original French title is La Carrière de Suzanne. It is the second movie in the series of the Six Moral Tales. A flirty Guillaume seduces a woman, named Suzanne, which becomes problematic to his friendship with the shy Bertrand especially when Guillaume's and Suzanne's relationship becomes strained.
Two young students in Paris, Bertrand who is timid, young, and in pharmacy school and his brash friend Guillaume, who is something of a womanizer, encounter the independent and articulate Suzanne in a café. Guillaume flirts with her using his wit and charm to seduce her. She quickly succumbs to Guillaume's coarse advances but after bedding her he is rapidly bored with her, however, continues to lead her on despite his complaining and flirting with other women.
Bertrand believes that Suzanne must have no self-respect in order to let herself be treated poorly by Guillaume but remains silent and continues to further Guillaume's antics. In an effort to regain Guillaume's attention, Suzanne cultivates an interest in the austere Bertrand, spending what little money she has on him. Bertrand ends up despising her even more after he and Guillaume ruin Suzanne financially. Throughout the entire movie, Bertrand has developed a crush on her prettier Irish friend Sophie. After a party, Suzanne has no money to get home so Bertrand reluctantly says she can sleep in the chair in his room. He means this literally, taking the bed himself for he had an exam in the morning. The next day he returns to his room to escort out the sleeping Suzanne only to find money missing from his room. Bertrand blames Suzanne, even though both Suzanne and Guillaume had a chance to take the money, but Sophie thinks it more likely he was robbed earlier by Guillaume.
A year later, when Bertrand is swimming with Sophie, they meet Suzanne with her new fiancé who is handsome, well-off and charming, which is everything she wanted to find in Guillaume but did not succeed. The two are really happy together and Bertrand has to admit that all along he had misjudged Suzanne and whether it was purposeful or not, she won because she took away any right he had to pity her and in the end, he claims that to be the best kind of revenge.
This film takes place in a time that lived in turmoil due to the Cold War and the Algerian War. The Algerian War was a fight for independence and for the people's rights from its colonial patron, France, where the film takes place. France believed that Algeria was "an integral part of France" that should remain intact with the country, however, the World Wars and the Vietnamese people's victory at Dien Bien Phu showed the Algerians that they could obtain their freedom using their nationalism and the Front de Libération National. This affected France as it lost many men fighting this eventual lost cause to the French and also ended France's era of imperialism.