Les sept péchés capitaux
- 1962
- Tous publics
- 1h 53m
The vision of the seven deadly sins by seven French directors as follows: (1) Anger: In a gentle French town, several men find flies in their Sunday soups. They have arguments with their wiv... Read allThe vision of the seven deadly sins by seven French directors as follows: (1) Anger: In a gentle French town, several men find flies in their Sunday soups. They have arguments with their wives, that grows successively to the streets, country and world. (2) Gluttony: A family arri... Read allThe vision of the seven deadly sins by seven French directors as follows: (1) Anger: In a gentle French town, several men find flies in their Sunday soups. They have arguments with their wives, that grows successively to the streets, country and world. (2) Gluttony: A family arrives late for the buffet of the funeral of the father of the patriarch. (3) Envy: The maid ... Read all
- Suzon, prostitute (segment "Avarice, L'")
- (as Daniele Barraud)
- Nénesse - la belle-mère (segment "Gourmandise, La")
- (as Magdeleine Berubet)
Featured reviews
Title (Brazil): "Os Sete Pecados Capitais" ("The Seven Deadly Sins")
Godard has the best segment, he's got Eddy Constantine playing a loafer for a change, not his Lemmy Caution-like nerveless violence. The cheesy Hawaiian music suits the story well. It's more verite than we are used to from Godard. After Sloth, we get Pride from Roger Vadim, and the banality of the story is relieved by some good acting by Sami Frey and Marina Vlady. I always thought it was a shame Vlady wasn't more popular; she had a gorgeous sleek cat's face and could do comedy. Chabrol is last with Greed, and he shows the usual facility and empty social commentary we have come to expect from him.
Sylvain Dhomme and Eugene Ionesco start off with a surreal account of Anger in which a fly in the soup leads to the end of the world. Edouard Molinaro delivers a chic, languid story of a maid and a movie star in Envy that may be the finest of all. Philippe de Broca's tale of Gluttony is a gently Tatiesque farcical interlude. Popular winner though, and most amusing on the whole, has to be Godard's piece on Sloth - filmed with the same panache as Breathless, it has Eddie Constantine wearily playing himself getting picked up by a chick and taken home; she's soon walking around in the buff but he's too lazy (or depressed, or cool) to get undressed. Lust, by Jacques Demy (doing Truffaut/Doinel) has Jean-Louis Trintignant and friend imagining scenes from Bosch in a café. Lots of nudity here. Roger Vadim does a classy piece on two-way adultery in Pride, dripping with sophisticated images. In Chabrol's lengthier effort to finish off (Avarice), a prostitute oversells herself to a bunch of soldiers and so becomes the prize in their lottery - a good mix of style, smut and comedy.
Quality ideas and film-making, most of it beautifully shot. Not greatness, just all-round artistry.
Did you know
- TriviaThe producer had presided over an earlier compilation film of The Seven Deadly Sins a decade earlier, and wanted to retry the popular idea with some of the younger directors from the New Wave.
- ConnectionsEdited from La luxure (1961)
- How long is The Seven Deadly Sins?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- L'avarice
- Filming locations
- Paris, France(segment "L'Avarice")
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 53 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1