Film Review
Jean Faurez's
Histoires
extraordinaires is pretty unique in French cinema, the only
example of a portmanteau horror film (if we overlook the subsequent
1968 Anglo-Franco-Italian film of the same title directed by Federico
Fellini, Louis Malle and Roger Vadim). Although anthology films
would become enormously popular in France in later decades, at the time
Faurez made his film, in the late 1940s, the genre was quite rare and
seldom (if ever) delved into the realm of the fantastic. Alberto
Cavalcanti's
Dead of Night (1945) was the
first horror anthology film, and it would be two decades before the
British company Amicus started churning out its horror anthologies,
beginning with
Dr. Terror's House of Horrors
(1965). For some reason, this kind of film never caught on in
France, which makes Faurez's film all the more interesting.
Histoires extraordinaires
takes as its starting point Thomas De Quincey's famous essay
On Murder Considered as one of the Fine
Arts, using this as an effective framing device and the subject
for the first of four meticulously crafted short films on the theme of
murder. The three tales of suspense and terror that follow this
nerve-racking introduction are taken from Edgar Allan Poe's short
stories
The Tell-Tale Heart,
The Cask of Amontillado and
Thou Art the Man. It is these
three chilling excursions into macabre fantasy, so evocative of Poe's
work, that make the film worth revisiting. There is an
undercurrent of black humour to all of them, but each is swathed in dark
and fearful expectancy, with at least one moment that is guaranteed to
chill the blood.
The film's retelling of of Poe's
The
Tell-Tale Heart is the creepiest of the four stories and is on a
par with Jules Dassin's earlier adaptation
for MGM. The confined setting, eerily photographed as a Gothic
fantasy, and terrifying close-ups of the victim's film-coated eye take
on a nightmarish reality as the protagonist (an unhinged Guy Decomble)
succumbs to insanity.
The Cask
of Amontillado is much lighter in vein and, with a tipsy Jules
Berry merrily arrayed in a fool's apparel, might well be mistaken for a
comedy, until Fernand Ledoux gets out his trowel and starts to immure
his co-star. As Berry slowly disappears behind a wall of stone
the humour gradually melts into horror, and the fact that Ledoux had no
apparent motive for bricking up his drinking buddy (apart from the fact
that he is a totally irritating personality) heightens our
revulsion. It's a crude metaphor for the kind of thing that goes
on quite a lot in showbusiness, apparently.
The last of the four stories (based on Poe's
Thou Art the Man) is the most
rewarding, a deft murder mystery that has a particularly macabre
ending. A man named Truffaut kills a friend for his fortune,
arranges for someone else to be arrested for his murder, and gets a
nasty comeuppance when he opens a crate of wine. To say any more
would be to give away the film's chief surprise. Suffice it to
say that the quaint little shocker this segment has in store is
virtually unrivalled in French cinema. Bizarrely, having
subjected us to this gruesome litany of bloodcurdling crime, the film
ends on a light note, its framing story wrapped up with an odd musical
number composed by Van Parys. Deliciously weird, a total one-off,
Histoires extraordinaires has
for too long been buried (like the unfortunate Fortunato) in its
nitre-encrusted crypt. Its transmigration onto DVD is long
overdue, so that we may follow Poe's example and go on dreaming dreams
no mortal ever dared to dream before...
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
France, at the time of the Second Empire. One dreary night, three
gendarmes regale a new recruit with tales of murder and intrigue with
which they have had first hand experience. Once the terror of
Paris, Guillaume the Ripper revelled in his murderous art, but by
prolonging the agony of his final victims in a girls' boarding school
he brought about his own downfall. Then there was the madman who
murdered his old employer because he could no long endure the accusing
vulture-like stare of one of his eyes. Having disposed of the
body, the lunatic was so tormented by the sound of a beating heart that
he confessed his crime to the police. Most bizarre was the case
of Fortunato, who, having been led into a wine cellar in a drunken
state, was casually immured by a supposed friend of his, apparently for
no reason whatsoever. Most macabre of all was the mysterious
affair involving Barnabé, a wealthy Englishman whose unexplained
disappearance benefited a friend named Charles Truffaut. At a
banquet organised by Barnabé's valet, Truffaut gets a nasty
surprise when he opens a crate of Château-Margaux...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.