The Bohemian Life

  • France La Vie de bohème (more)
France / Germany / Sweden / Finland, 1992, 100 min

Directed by:

Aki Kaurismäki

Based on:

Henri Murger (book)

Screenplay:

Aki Kaurismäki

Cinematography:

Timo Salminen

Cast:

Matti Pellonpää, Evelyne Didi, André Wilms, Kari Väänänen, Christine Murillo, Jean-Pierre Léaud, Carlos Salgado, Alexis Nitzer, Sylvie Van den Elsen (more)
(more professions)

VOD (1)

Plots(1)

This deadpan tragicomedy about a group of impoverished, outcast artists living the bohemian life in Paris is among the most beguiling films by Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki. Based on stories from Henri Murger’s influential mid-nineteenth-century book "Scènes de la vie de bohème" (the basis for the opera La bohème), the film features a marvelous trio of Kaurismäki regulars - André Wilms, Matti Pellonpää, and Kari Väänänen - as a writer, painter, and composer who scrape by together, sharing in life’s daily absurdities. Gorgeously shot in black and white, La vie de bohème is a vibrantly scrappy rendition of a beloved tale. (Criterion)

(more)

Reviews (5)

Marigold 

all reviews of this user

English Proud but painful misery. Compassion and vanity. A beautiful rhapsody about poor "artists" whose greatest art is life itself - polite, unconditional, ceremonial in every bar. This is probably Kaurismäki's most tragic film (if we set aside last year's Le Havre) and also one of his directorial highlights. ()

Dionysos 

all reviews of this user

English Did Malevich's "Black Square" deal a deadly blow to painting as such and does the painter Rodolfo admit it? And yet he still continues to paint? This is called a love for creation as such, a love that all the main characters have more than enough of. However, it does not mean that there is no longer any room for human love. It can only be torn from a life in timelessness when the surrounding world speaks up, in the form of money, from which (unfortunately) artists must draw their livelihood. A funny, melancholic, and at the end bittersweet glimpse into the lives of three men who could have lived both 150 years ago and yesterday. ()

Ads

kaylin 

all reviews of this user

English The main reason I like Aki Kaurismäki's film is that the visuals he used are a perfect match for the story presented. Black and white cinematography doesn't suit every film nowadays, but if an author decides to use it, they usually have a good reason for it. Aki Kaurismäki knew this and it makes the film nice to watch. Plot-wise, it may not necessarily be captivating. ()

gudaulin 

all reviews of this user

English I like Kaurismäki's melancholic comedies set in an urban environment and shot in black and white. However, Aki's penchant for melodramatic tragedy with increasingly swelling sentiment is a big problem for me. In The Bohemian Life, you can find both - I value the first half more, where the comedic elements are more prevalent. The second half wants to be moving. I must note that I have always had a distant attitude towards bohemians. I considered them pleasure-seeking and hypocritical. No matter how alternative they appeared, they were dependent on the bourgeois surroundings that sustained and protected them. The film can be regarded as a tribute to the artistic environment of which Kaurismäki was a part. And it is also an expression of respect for his partner, Paula Oinonen, who is the author of the paintings by the painter Rodolf. For me, the director's work with the environment is probably the most interesting aspect. His selection of interiors and exteriors allows for creating an illusion of timelessness and connecting 19th-century Paris with the modern era. For a moment, you feel like you are walking the streets of the 1930s with the typical characters of the Parisian outskirts and then suddenly stop on the sidewalk next to a modern car. Overall impression: 75%. ()

Malarkey 

all reviews of this user

English My first encounter with Aki Kaurismäki and right off the bat, one of his most difficult movies. It was amazing to watch the emotions and actions of those French bohemians. One might think that they’re nuts. So what, they really are nuts. Eventually, fate catches up with them and at that point, it doesn’t even matter how careless they are about the world around them. I must also applaud the amazing black-and-white atmosphere of the Parisian streets. It was a joy to watch them and it helped shape the atmosphere a lot… obviously. ()

Gallery (26)