Le Bonheur 1965 ✅

Varda, a former photographer, utilizes a palette that was revolutionary for 1965. The film is saturated with primary colors—vibrant reds, deep blues, and mustard yellows—reminiscent of Impressionist paintings by Renoir or Van Gogh.

Varda employs a unique visual language to contrast with the film's dark undertones: le bonheur 1965

What follows is the film’s most shocking sequence. Rather than a dramatic fight or tears, Thérèse takes the children for a walk. She walks into a pond. She drowns. The death is aesthetically beautiful—sunlight filtering through the trees, the water still—but emotionally annihilating. Varda, a former photographer, utilizes a palette that

– A smart reviewer might note how the film's saturated colors, Mozart, and impressionist paintings mirror the protagonist's own belief that he's simply expanding happiness. The review would point out that Varda isn't endorsing this – she's dissecting a male fantasy of "plenitude" that erases women's interiority. Rather than a dramatic fight or tears, Thérèse

: François, a young carpenter, believes happiness is purely "additive". Already living an idyllic life with his wife, Thérèse, and two children, he starts an affair with Émilie, a postal worker. He views this new love not as a betrayal, but as an expansion of his joy—"more flowers, more apples" in his orchard. The Tragic "Substitution"

Varda famously said, "I wanted to film happiness so directly that it would become unbearable." She succeeded. The film ends with François and Émilie discussing jam. The children call her "Maman." The audience is left screaming internally.

Le Bonheur(1965) dir. Agnès Varda I loved the ambience of the movie