Love at the Top
Love at the Top
R | 26 January 1975 (USA)
Love at the Top Trailers

Nicolas Mallet, an inconspicuous and shy bank employee, one day successfully invites Marie-Paul, a young woman he hadn’t known before, in the streets of Paris to a café and sleeps with her the next day. When he tells his surprised friend Claude about the incident, the disillusioned and handicapped writer starts to guide him, leading Nicolas on a dazzling social ascent.

Reviews
cinemajesty

Film Review: "Le mouton enragé" (1974)Second collaboration of Romy Schneider (1938-1982) & Jean-Louis Trintignant, who's screen chemistry undeniable becomes evident in one of the most provocative picture of 1970s directed by Michel Deville, sending his leading character by the name of Nicolas Mallet into a feminine realm of the senses through contemporary Parisian society. Triggerd by the researching writer, the character of Claude Fabre, portrayed with undermining vicious by actor Jean-Pierre-Cassel (1932-2007), Nicolas transforms from a shy bank clerk into women-intercoursing beast, seeking the the social benefit with any encounter and pushing the limits with charm and fox-like intuition to run through a labyrinth of moral pitfalls, daring educational slaps in direction of actress Jane Birkin, who delivers a visual witnessing of a young lost woman finding to herself in treaties by a man, who clearly brought up with the skill of evasion. Director Michel Deville takes a script based on a novel by Roger Blondel makes exciting, erotic and socially controversial, creating a timeless piece of cinema open for discovery.© 2017 Felix Alexander Dausend (Cinemajesty Entertainments LLC)

... View More
talltale-1

LOVE AT THE TOP--the utterly wrongheaded American title for the superb French film "Le Mouton Enrage" (which means, I think, The Rabid Sheep)-- is such an original movie, the fact that it dates back to 1974 seems all the more astounding. This film was far ahead of its time; even by today's highest standards, it accomplishes things that seem rich and new. Filmed by the hugely underrated director Michel Deville, it rather defies description in the way it combines social critique, comedy, mystery, love, sex and satire into one wholly original mix--leaving for the end a major but subtle surprise to render all that has gone before suddenly sad and more understandable. The cast is splendid, ditto the writing and theme. But it's Deville's delicious tone, keeping you constantly off-balance but enrapt, that pushes this "lost" film to a very high level indeed. (The written interview with the director on the "Special Features" section of the DVD is definitely worth reading if you have the time.)

... View More
Tom DeFelice

Nicolas Mallet is a failure. A teller in a bank, everyone walks all over him. Then his friend, a writer who's books no one likes, has a plan to change his life. Our hero tells his boss he is quitting. He intends to spend the rest of his life making a great deal of money and sleeping with a great many women. And he manages to do just that.If it were not for the amount of death (murder/suicide/natural causes) in the film, this would be a farce. There are numerous jabs at marriage, politics, journalism and...life.Jean-Louis Trintignant is a likable amoral rogue. Romy Schneider is at her most appealing. Definitely worth a look.

... View More
wobelix

This is a comedy of morals, so occasionally a gentle touch of bitterness occurs, but a lightness soften all sarcasm and irony flows till all of a sudden one moment will halt your heart and changes everything.This film, marvelously written and directed, is a gem that shines perfectly, with beautiful acting by all. Jean-Louis Trintignant is exquisite as usual, and Romy Schneider is a pearl, perfect and glowing, that is not to be missed. A truly wonderful film !!

... View More