Le Bonheur 1965 Work

Believing that true happiness should be shared, François confesses the affair to Thérèse during a family picnic in the countryside. Thérèse listens quietly, smiles, and assures him that she understands. She even participates in an intimate moment with him afterward. However, while François naps under the trees, Thérèse wanders off and drowns in a nearby lake. Whether her death is an accident or suicide is left intentionally ambiguous.

Working with legendary cinematographers Jean Rabier and Claude Beausoleil, Varda modeled the film’s aesthetic after French Impressionist painters, explicitly referencing the works of Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Édouard Manet. The screen overflows with hyper-saturated primaries: le bonheur 1965

The story follows François (played by Jean-Claude Drouot), a young carpenter who lives a seemingly perfect life in a Parisian suburb with his wife, Thérèse (Claire Drouot), and their two young children. Their days are filled with bucolic picnics and domestic harmony. Believing that true happiness should be shared, François

Le Bonheur (Varda, 1965). Thérèse's hands, from a sequence early in However, while François naps under the trees, Thérèse