Love at the Top explained

Love at the Top
Native Name:
Director:Michel Deville
Screenplay:Christopher Frank
Producer:Léo L. Fuchs
Cinematography:Claude Lecomte
Editing:Raymonde Guyot
Music:Saint-Saëns
Distributor:S.N. Prodis
Runtime:105 minutes
Language:French

Love at the Top (French: '''Le Mouton enragé'''|lit=The Rabid Sheep) is a 1974 satirical comedy-drama film directed by Michel Deville from a screenplay by Christopher Frank,[1] based on the 1956 novel Le Mouton enragé by Roger Blondel.

Plot

Nicolas Mallet is a modest bank employee resigned to social mediocrity for the security that his job gives him. Introverted and dull, with the assistance and under the guidance of a former high school friend, novelist Claude Fabre, he will become a confident seducer, an opportunist upstart with no defined ambition. In the aftermath of the oil crisis, the Bel Ami of the 1970s experienced a remarkable social rise, relying exclusively on women whom he seduced almost unwittingly, while being remotely guided by Fabre. Going to seek power from those who rule him, knowing how to make himself indispensable, he will succeed in his ascent and favor that of his first conquest. It is only at the end of the film that we discover the real reasons behind Fabre's manipulative attitude.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Love at the Top . 17 February 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160225092006/http://www.nytimes.com/movies/movie/127154/Le-Mouton-Enrage/overview . 25 February 2016 . Movies & TV Dept. . . Brennan . Sandra . 2016.