Film Review
With
La Fleur du mal, a masterfully composed psychological drama, acclaimed director
Claude Chabrol revisits his favourite theme: murder within the bosom of the provincial
Bourgeoisie. It is a subject which is evidently dear to the director's heart, for
it has given him the inspiration for some of his best films. The idea of an elite
group of individuals who foster an image of respectability and geniality to conceal their
low moral standards and thereby get away with (literally) murder is perfect material for
satire; it has occupied a prominent place in French films practically since the birth
of cinema. Chabrol's keen eye for detail and his acerbic wit have allowed him to
craft a portrait of the Bourgeoisie which is simultaneously fascinating, disturbing and
deliciously entertaining.
La Fleur du mal is primarily a sophisticated murder mystery, woven in typical Chabrolian
fashion, although somewhat more abstract than we are perhaps used to.
It
completes a trilogy which includes Chabrol's best psychological thrillers to date:
La Cérémonie
(1995) and
Merci pour le
chocolat (2000). In each of these films, a crime of the distant past is
purged by a murder, or attempted murder, committed in the present. This notion of
redemption is a recurring theme in Chabrol's cinema, but in
La Fleur du mal the
idea is developed more thoroughly and convincingly than previously - something which makes
it one of the director's most intellectually satisfying works to date.
What this trilogy of films also have in common is their setting. Each is centred
around an upper middle class family which is isolated from the rest of French society,
living within an hermetically sealed bubble, incapable of change and drained of humanity.
The errors of the past accumulate or are relived in a timeless present until, finally,
the bubble bursts in a sudden dramatic climax.
Although the setting, style and subject of
La Cérémonie, Merci
pour le chocolat and
La Fleur du mal are remarkably similar, their structure
and content are subtlely different. In contrast to the mounting dark intensity of
the first and the chilling suspense of the second, La
Fleur du mal is presented
far more as a black comedy than a thriller. Certainly, the scenes where the double-barrelled
Anne Charpin-Vasseur - played to perfection by Nathalie Baye - tries to canvas votes on
a low-income housing estate are hilarious, arguably the funniest scenes in any Chabrol
film. Yet, as ever in this unsettling Chabrolian world of double lives and double
meanings, there is also the sense of something terrible lurking beneath the surface, an
impression which the disorientating photography and haunting music skilfully evoke without
distracting too much from the drama or comedy being played out in the foreground.
All is certainly not well in the Charpin-Vasseur household.
The performances - from an exceptional cast - also add to this uneasy sense of "there's
more to this than meets the eye", particularly those of Suzanne Flon and Benoît
Magimel. Well into her eighties, Flon's screen presence is as strong as ever
it was in her fifty-plus year long career as an actress and her subtle, introspective
performance contributes a great deal to the film's depth and humanity. Skipping
a generation, Magimel is equally as impressive, proving himself ideal material for Chabrol's
slightly warped brand of cinema. He serves to hold together the film's many strands,
whilst providing a sympathetic character - a partial outsider - with whom the audience
can identify. The rest of the cast, which includes Chabrol's son, Thomas, should
also be commended for their contributions.
La Fleur de mal may not be quite as coherent or as viscerally shocking as some
of Chabrol's previous examinations of closeted Bourgeois amorality. However, it
is nonetheless an accomplished work, attractively filmed and, thanks to its well-scripted
and well-performed comic excursions, surprisingly entertaining.
© James Travers 2003
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Next Claude Chabrol film:
La Demoiselle d'honneur (2004)
Film Synopsis
François Vasseur returns to his well-to-do family home in Bordeaux after a four
year stay in the United States and finds little has changed. His stepmother,
Anne Charpin-Vasseur, is once more running in the local elections and his father, Gérard,
still manages the local pharmacy. He is even able to carry on his amorous liaison
with his stepsister, Michèle, as if he hadn't been away, much to the delight of
his aged Aunt Line. Yet this picture of unchanging Bourgeois respectability is threatened.
To ruin Anne's chances in her election, someone has been circulating a pamphlet which
resurrects old family scandals. Should Aunt Line have been cleared of murdering
her father, a Nazi sympathiser who was responsible for the death of her brother?
Was it prudent for Anne and Gérard to marry so soon after their respective spouses
died, together, in a tragic car accident? Does the Charpin-Vasseur family have a
natural affinity for deceit, incest and murder? Only one member of the family
knows the answer to these questions...
© James Travers
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