

87 minutes
9/13/1950
Documentary filmmaker Védrès' first semi-fictional feature was released in France in 1949 as La Vie Commence Demain. The film made it to the U.S. in 1952 as Life Begins Tomorrow. Made in cooperation with UNESCO, the film speculates on the future of mankind after the advent of Atomic Energy. Many prominent French artists and intellects contribute to the narration: Jean-Pierre Aumont plays The Man of Today, Andre Labarthe is the Man of Tomorrow, and Jean-Paul Sartre, Daniel Agache, Jean Rostand, Le Corbusier, Pablo Picasso and Andre Gide are respectively seen as "The Existentialist," "The Psychiatrist,' "The Biologist," "The Architect," "The Artist" and "The Author". Film clips of hospitals, schoolrooms, scientific laboratories, and even nightclubs are woven into Védrès' fascinating tapestry.

Pablo Picasso
as Self

Jean-Pierre Aumont
as The Man of Today

Jean-Paul Sartre
as Self

Charles-Édouard Jeanneret-Gris
as Self

Frédéric Joliot-Curie
as Self

Darius Milhaud
as Self

Charlie Chaplin
as Self (archive footage)

Albert Einstein
as Self (archive footage)

Franklin D. Roosevelt
as Self (archive footage)

George Bernard Shaw
as Self (archive footage)

Marie Curie
as Self (archive footage)

Joseph Stalin
as Self (archive footage)
Jacques Prévert
as Self (uncredited)

Jean Cau
as Self - Sartre's secretary (uncredited)

Françoise Gilot
as Self - Picasso's companion (uncredited)
André Gide
as Self
Jean Rostand
as Self
André Labarthe
as Self
Daniel Lagache
as Self
Irène Joliot-Curie
as Self (archive footage)
Marcel Petiot
as Self (archive footage)