(1983): L'argent

: As Yvon descends into prison life and crime, he transforms from a victim into a ruthless murderer. Bresson’s "Cinematography" Style

: Yvon is arrested for passing the bill. Though he is innocent, the lie costs him his job, his family, and eventually, his soul.

: Two wealthy students use the fake bill to pay for a picture frame. L'Argent (1983)

: The shop owner, realizing the fraud, passes it to an innocent fuel worker, Yvon Targe.

Robert Bresson’s final film, L’Argent (1983), is a brutal, clinical masterpiece that examines how a single lie can trigger an unstoppable chain of moral decay. Based on Leo Tolstoy's novella The Forged Coupon , it strips away any sentimentality to show a world governed entirely by transactional greed. The Plot: A Virus of Greed : As Yvon descends into prison life and

L'argent: The Weight of the World - The Criterion Collection

Bresson famously used "models" instead of actors, demanding they recite lines without emotion. : Two wealthy students use the fake bill

The film begins with a small act of teenage rebellion: a counterfeit 500-franc note.