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L'important c'est d'aimer

  • 1975
  • 16
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
5.1K
YOUR RATING
Romy Schneider and Fabio Testi in L'important c'est d'aimer (1975)
Official Trailer
Play trailer1:34
1 Video
79 Photos
DramaRomance

Servais Mont, a photographer, meets Nadine Chevalier who earns her money starring in cheap soft-core movies. Trying to help her, he borrows the money from the loan sharks to finance the thea... Read allServais Mont, a photographer, meets Nadine Chevalier who earns her money starring in cheap soft-core movies. Trying to help her, he borrows the money from the loan sharks to finance the theatrical production of 'Richard III' and gives Nadine a part. Nadine is torn apart between S... Read allServais Mont, a photographer, meets Nadine Chevalier who earns her money starring in cheap soft-core movies. Trying to help her, he borrows the money from the loan sharks to finance the theatrical production of 'Richard III' and gives Nadine a part. Nadine is torn apart between Servais, for whom she is falling in love, and her husband Jacques, to whom she has moral ob... Read all

  • Director
    • Andrzej Zulawski
  • Writers
    • Christopher Frank
    • Andrzej Zulawski
  • Stars
    • Romy Schneider
    • Fabio Testi
    • Jacques Dutronc
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    5.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Andrzej Zulawski
    • Writers
      • Christopher Frank
      • Andrzej Zulawski
    • Stars
      • Romy Schneider
      • Fabio Testi
      • Jacques Dutronc
    • 21User reviews
    • 53Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    That Most Important Thing: Love
    Trailer 1:34
    That Most Important Thing: Love

    Photos79

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    Top cast41

    Edit
    Romy Schneider
    Romy Schneider
    • Nadine Chevalier
    Fabio Testi
    Fabio Testi
    • Servais Mont
    Jacques Dutronc
    Jacques Dutronc
    • Jacques Chevalier
    Claude Dauphin
    Claude Dauphin
    • Mazelli
    Roger Blin
    • Le père de Servais
    Gabrielle Doulcet
    • Madame Mazelli
    Michel Robin
    Michel Robin
    • Raymond Lapade
    Guy Mairesse
    • Laurent Messala
    Katia Tchenko
    Katia Tchenko
    • Myriam
    Nicoletta Machiavelli
    Nicoletta Machiavelli
    • Luce
    Klaus Kinski
    Klaus Kinski
    • Karl-Heinz Zimmer
    Paul Bisciglia
    Paul Bisciglia
    • L'assistant-metteur en scène
    Henri Coutet
    • Le père de Jacques
    • (scenes deleted)
    Sylvain Levignac
    • Le premier homme dans la brasserie
    • (as Sylvain)
    Andrée Tainsy
    Andrée Tainsy
    • La mère de Jacques
    • (scenes deleted)
    • (as Andree Tainsy)
    Olga Valéry
    Olga Valéry
    • La femme au godemiché
    Jacques Boudet
    Jacques Boudet
    • Robert Beninge
    Robert Dadiès
    • Le médecin à l'hôpital
    • (as Robert Dadies)
    • …
    • Director
      • Andrzej Zulawski
    • Writers
      • Christopher Frank
      • Andrzej Zulawski
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews21

    7.05K
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    Featured reviews

    Kirpianuscus

    vulnerabilities

    A simple story about an actress, her sentimental dilemma , dark atmosphere and one of the most powerful roles of Romy Schneider. In same measure, a dark exploration of compromisses , limits of intense love and pure addiction, Fabio Testi reminding a young Andrei Batalov and offering fair portrait of vulnerable young photographer, under pressure of parent, friend, protectors and the woman who he loves and her, brilliant acted by Dutronc, husband.

    A great film , gloomy, bitter but pure honest , proposing not exactly pleasant ways but the truths defining, in its basic dates, its essence.

    In short, not comfortable, near bizarre but fascinating for the precise images of vulnerability .
    6lasttimeisaw

    a pessimistic account of love, in its purest but strangely tepid manifestation

    Hardly anything witty about love has dawned on Zulawski's third feature, an almost exclusively chamber drama, where a burgeoning attraction between a pornography photographer Servais Mont (Testi) and a second-rate actress Nadine Chevalier (Schneider), has barely taken off from the platonic struggle, because Nadine is married to Jacques (Dutronc), to whom she bears a tangible fusion of gratitude, responsibility and affection, which complicates their situation into a torrid emotional abyss so as to testify that love is indeed the most inscrutable, unpredictable, yet the most important thing.

    Crammed in the high-ceiling, antique-looking Parisian apartments and loci like theatre, bar and hospital, its mise-en-scène strains to stay claustrophobic, fluid and quivering, signals the characters' shaky states, but, Zulawski and the screenwriter Christopher Frank fail to let their emotions run the full gamut to reach out its dazzled viewers, a stately but shallowly anaemic Testi cannot portray a role, whose inner depth is apparently out of his league, fumbles and routinely daydreams from scene to scene, his fervent gaze can not justify Servais' actions, his thoughts, and the limp dialogue doesn't help either.

    Ms. Schneider, won Best Actress in the first-ever César Awards, is palpably more tapped into her role, sending off her raw charisma into her inwardly paralysed psyche, she tries to be frank with her own feelings, desire, dignity and pride at her own peril, but there are too many smoke and mirrors around to indulgently mystify an uncompounded, and fragmented story-line, the only thing to ameliorate the faint exasperation is when the pure dramatic sequences take the stage: Kinski's spit-fire flare-up is a mood-enforcer, Dutronc stands out in his chummy whims and delightfully erratic behavioural conundrum, a peculiar man who withdraws into a reprieve from, in an obvious tenor, a husband's functionality (abruptly falls into slumber so that his wife can only hopelessly play with herself to slake her desire), but also hatches up something seemingly unspeakable and inexplicable with Servais through an undertone of self-abandonment and total capitulation, in a muscle-versus-quirk contest over the same woman.

    Zulawski's highbrow ambition to extract something refine and sophisticated out of the triangular deadlock doesn't consummately do the trick, in the end, Servais has to pay his debt with his blood and internal bleeding, from a father figure Mazelli (Dauphin), in his case, love IS the most important thing, if he can endure all the pain both physically and mentally, to demonstrate his unconditional devotion.

    Georges Delerue's score is ever so conspicuous whenever a close-up is zoomed in between Servais and Nadine, to cloyingly illustrate their passion, otherwise, it remains forbidding and sinister, circles around a pessimistic account of love, in its purest but strangely tepid manifestation.
    taylor9885

    Shouting, weeping, and all to no avail

    This is a film for manic-depressives or people on amphetamines, maybe. I have rarely seen such frenetic activity outside of martial-arts pictures, yet the story is simple: a woman tires of her limp husband (Dutronc)and tries to start up with a much more masculine type (Testi). The milieu is the porn movie business which Schneider's character works in, interwoven with the classical theatre world she would like to belong to.

    Romy Schneider got the Cesar award for her performance here; she pulls out all the stops to create this gifted but battered-by-life character. Pity that Zulawski couldn't craft a more balanced film around her.
    10audrius-darguzis

    Love is pain.

    A very simple, and (thus) extremely powerful film. And, sadly, underrated. It's a mind-opening experience. It doesn't say anything new or different on the subject, its simplicity and consistence shows loud and clear that...love is nothing but pain, but it's the only thing worth fighting (living; feeling pain) for; the only thing that sets you free. When Schneider's personage finds an earlier repulsive photograph dying in his desolated apartment you get to feel that now she cannot not love him... A very sincere, believable, touching film resembling real life and real love. Every actor's work is praise-worth, and worth the film's title. They knew what each of them were talking about. And no wonder Kinski took part in this. (The mood of this film is somehow similar to Last Tango in Paris.) You can almost feel wounded along with these 'people' that are being thrashed by love.
    10fagerard

    Watch this underrated masterpiece of the 70s

    Romy Schneider was absolutely right to consider this film as her major professional achievement. Thanks to Christopher Franck's remarkable adaptation from his own awarded novel LA NUIT AMERICAINE (not to be mistaken with Truffaut's well-known DAY FOR NIGHT) and to Georges Delerue's haunting soundtrack, Zulawski is here at his paramount, because his usual romantic excesses perfectly fit this time the subject. As for the cast, all the actors have never been so right in the part they've been chosen for : from Fabio Testi to Jacques Dutronc, from Klaus Kinsky to Claude Dauphin, not to mention Michel Robin. The scene in the bar, just after the theatrical premiere of Shakespeare's RICHARD III, when the whole crew reads the articles dedicated to their play, almost looks like a mirror of Zulawski himself, as most of his works have been misunderstood, if not definitely "killed" by the critics. if you happen to belong to the happy few who sincerely praise L'IMPORTANT C'EST D'AIMER, try to see some day the films that writer Christopher Franck personally directed from other novels of his about the same bohemian milieu, specially JOSEPHA, featuring Miou Miou & Claude Brasseur.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Romy Schneider considered this movie her best work.
    • Quotes

      Jacques Chevalier: J'ai rêvé de toi. Tu me versais du Coca-Cola dans l'oreille... Une vilaine mort, croyez-moi !

    • Alternate versions
      Italian video version excludes some violent and explicit erotic scenes and runs 105 min.
    • Connections
      Featured in La mano negra (1980)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 12, 1975 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
      • West Germany
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • La merci!
    • Filming locations
      • Paris, France
    • Production companies
      • Albina Productions S.a.r.l.
      • Rizzoli Film
      • TIT Filmproduktion GmbH
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $19,120
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,370
      • Jul 16, 2017
    • Gross worldwide
      • $19,120
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 49m(109 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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