
Honoré Panisse is dying, cheerfully, with friends, wife, and son at his side. He confesses to the priest in front of his friends; he insists that the doctor be truthful.


Is it worth your time? If you have any patience for black-and-white films where the stakes are mostly just people sitting around tables drinking coffee, then yes, absolutely. You should watch César. If you need explosions or a plot that moves at the speed of a jet engine, you are going to be bored out of your mind with...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Marcel Pagnol

Dallas M. Fitzgerald
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"Is it worth your time? If you have any patience for black-and-white films where the stakes are mostly just people sitting around tables drinking coffee, then yes, absolutely. You should watch César. If you need explosions or a plot that moves at the speed of a jet engine, you are going to be bored out of your mind within ten minutes. This isn't a thriller like or Twelve Miles Out. It's just life, unfolding at the pace of a Sunday afternoon. The whole thing centers on Panisse dying. He’s so che..."
Marcel Pagnol
France

