Les Ferrailleurs (1971): Claude Sautet - Max Et
Michel Piccoli plays Max with a terrifying, wax-like stillness. He is a man who has replaced blood with procedure. His inability to respond to Lily’s genuine warmth provides the film's tragic core.
The film explores the "policeman’s paradox." Max is so obsessed with the law that he becomes a criminal mastermind to uphold it, blurring the line between the protector and the predator. Claude Sautet - Max et les ferrailleurs (1971)
The film follows Max (Michel Piccoli), a wealthy, detached detective born into a family of judges. Frustrated by criminals who escape justice through technicalities, he decides to "create" a crime he can actually punish. Michel Piccoli plays Max with a terrifying, wax-like
(1971) stands as a chilly, clinical masterpiece of French noir, marking a pivotal moment in Claude Sautet’s career where he traded the romanticism of Les Choses de la vie for a haunting study of obsession and manipulation. The Plot: A Trap Built on Ice The film explores the "policeman’s paradox
He targets a group of petty, disorganized scrap-metal thieves (the ferrailleurs ) led by an old acquaintance, Abel (Bernard Fregier). Max goes undercover, encouraging them to rob a bank while simultaneously manipulating Abel's girlfriend, Lily (Romy Schneider), into falling for him to ensure the trap is perfectly set. Key Themes & Style
The chemistry between —Sautet’s frequent collaborators—is at its most strained and fascinating here, making the film's shocking, nihilistic ending one of the most memorable in French cinema.
While often overshadowed by the films of Jean-Pierre Melville, Max et les ferrailleurs is arguably more psychologically complex. It isn't just about a heist; it’s a character study of a man who destroys everything he touches because he cannot endure the "untidiness" of human nature.