Film Review
Just as
Ophélia (1963)
would be Claude Chabrol's re-interpretation of Shakespeare's
Hamlet, so
L'Oeil du malin is obviously
derived from the Bard's other great play,
Othello, a tragic tale in which a
man of dangerous passions is manipulated into destroying the thing he
holds most dear, his young wife. Chabrol's Iago, a mediocre
journalist named Albin Mercier, isn't so much a cynical Machiavellian
schemer as a pathetic psychotic who becomes consumed with the idea of
inveigling his way into the lives of a seemingly harmonious couple so
that he can usurp the man in the affections of his wife. Mercier
is a composite of
Psycho's Norman Bates and
Plein
soleil's Tom Ripley, a social inadequate who, still living
in the shadow of his domineering mother, must destroy the thing he craves
if he cannot possess it entirely. The most visually striking and
disturbing of Chabrol's early (New Wave era) films,
L'Oeil du malin explores themes
which would come to predominate in the director's oeuvre and pretty
well serves as a template for his subsequent psychological
thrillers.
"Things are never quite what they seem" is the phrase that most aptly
sums up Claude Chabrol's cinema. The seemingly placid bourgeois
setting, inhabited by what appears to be the model married couple, is
no more than a
trompe l'oeil
which masks the unsavoury truth lying just beneath the surface.
The perfect world that Mercier sees and grows to envy is just an
illusion, a mirage that is largely of his own creation. When he
succeeds in entering this world, what the journalist finds is sordid
imperfection that he cannot endure, so, like an artist confronted with
his own failure, he must tear up the canvas, destroy this false vision
of paradise. Mercier is like a pathetic child who smashes a
mirror because he cannot stand the sight of his own reflection.
Like Norman Bates, he is trapped in a bubble of self-loathing, forever
alienated from the world around him by his vigorously repressed sexuality and
contempt for other people's happiness.
Psycho is not the only
Hitchcockian influence in the film. References to
Rear Window (1954),
The Wrong Man (1956),
Vertigo
(1958) and
North by Northwest (1959) are
so easily spotted that no one could fail to recognise
L'Oeil du malin as a fond homage to
Hitchcock. When he was a critic, Claude Chabrol (along with Eric
Rohmer) was instrumental in establishing Hitchcock's credentials as a
film auteur. Previously, few critics had taken Hitchcock
seriously, indeed most regarded him merely as a jobbing populist
filmmaker. It is therefore appropriate and hardly surprising that
Hitchcock should be the director who would have most impact on Chabrol
when he began to make his own films. Indeed, Chabrol would
ultimately earn himself the epithet of the France's answer to Alfred
Hitchcock.
L'Oeil du malin is the one
Chabrol thriller in which the familiar Hitchcockian themes and motifs
are most readily apparent. The central character (Jacques
Charrier in arguably his best screen role) is a psychotic paranoiac
with voyeuristic tendencies, Norman Bates in all but name; the heroine
(Stéphane Audran, a Chabrol regular) is an attractive blonde and
unattainable object of desire who inevitably goes the same way as Janet
Leigh; and the third member of the ill-fated ménage-à
trois (an excellent Walter Reyer) is Hitchcock's recurring Wrong Man,
the innocent who takes the rap when he falls prey to a cruel conspiracy
of circumstances. The suitably voyeuristic photography and slick
editing build the suspense and create an aura of stifling menace,
almost as effectively as Hitchcock. You could even swear that the
eerily discordant score had been composed by Bernard Herrmann.
Although
L'Oeil du malin is
strongly reminiscent of Hitchcock's later films, Chabrol does manage to
impose his own personality and style on the film, notably his antipathy
for the false bourgeois milieu, along with the subtle irony and shards
of dark humour that would come to characterise much of his subsequent
work. Chabrol takes the familiar premise of many a thriller and
cleverly inverts it for his own ends. It is not paradise
destroyed by an incursion of evil that he shows us, but rather a
paradise mired in evil that destroys the innocent outsider. It is
not the characters in Chabrol's films who are morally warped and prone
to evil; it is the world in which they exist, a world of privilege that
wallows in decadence and complacency, the perfect breeding ground for
vice and murderous intent. Beneath the veil of bourgeois calm and
respectability we are sure to find the visage of another Medusa.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Claude Chabrol film:
Landru (1963)
Film Synopsis
Embittered by his failure to make a success of his career as a journalist,
Albin Mercier enjoys nothing more than bringing misery to others, particularly
those who have made something of their lives. He has an ideal chance
to do just this in the course of a stay in Bavaria, where he is tasked with
compiling an article on life in modern Germany. Here, he strikes up
an acquaintance with the celebrated writer Andréas Hartman and his
enchanting wife Hélène. These two seem to be the model
of a settled and contented bourgeois couple. They are obviously devotedly
attached to each other and live in comfort and security. Albin relishes
the challenge of destroying their perfect world.
Within no time, by exercising his customary charm, the journalist has gained
his victims' confidence and is a welcome guest in their house. Albin
begins his attack by trying to seduce Hélène, but this gets
him nowhere. Undeterred, he follows her on one of her frequent trips
to Munich and is delighted to see her in the company of another man - obviously
her secret lover. After taking photographs of the adulterous couple,
Albin attempts to blackmail Hélène but again he fails to drive
a wedge between her and her husband. He has only one course left open
to him: he must tell Andréas about his wife's infidelity. Albin's
vile scheme works far better than he had dared imagine...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.