Film Review
Ophélia and
Landru (released within a month of
one another early in 1963) brought a decisive end to the first, most
inspired phase of Claude Chabrol's career and very nearly ended his
filmmaking career for good. A string of box office failures, of
which
Landru was one of the
most spectacular, made it virtually impossible for Chabrol to find
financial backing for the films he wanted to make and in the end he was
compelled to direct vacuous potboilers like
Le Tigre aime la chair fraiche (1964)
just to stay in the business. Watching Chabrol's early films
today, you cannot help wondering how this came about. Just how
could audiences and critics fail to warm to such diverse and
interesting film as
Le Beau Serge (1958),
Les
Bonnes femmes (1960) and
L'Oeil
du malin (1962)? The explanation probably had far more
to do with Chabrol's overt anti-bourgeois agenda than the inherent
quality of these films. Something was rotten in the state
of French society, but French audiences did not wish to be reminded of
the fact.
Landru is certainly one of
Chabrol's most scathing assaults on the well-heeled middle-classes and
is a virtual prototype for many of his subsequent anti-bourgeois
pieces. The film's almost theatrical stylisation, with its garish
set and costume designs, exposes the superficiality and stifled
vulgarity of the bourgeois milieu more brilliantly than any
subsequent Chabrol offering. The film is based on the true story
of a notorious serial killer of the WWI era, Henri Landru, who was
ultimately guillotined for murdering eleven people and disposing of
their bodies in his kitchen stove. Landru's story had previously
been adapted for cinema as
Monsieur Verdoux (1947) by
Charlie Chaplin (interestingly, this film was also a spectacular
failure and almost ended Chaplin's career). Like Chaplin, Chabrol
approached the subject as a black comedy, in a way that makes the
character Landru appear both monstrous and humane, the archetypal
sympathetic villain. The film's main strength is a deliciously
ironic screenplay by Françoise Sagan, the celebrated author of
Bonjour tristesse - this was her
one and only original screenwriting credit (although she did write
several plays for the stage). Sagan's distinctly feminine
perspective brings credibility to what is a fairly incredible story,
convincingly portraying all of Landru's victims as vulnerable women
who are so desperate for love that they become blind to their seducer's
faults and the dangers they risk.
Landru has an exceptional cast
that includes two of the great icons of French cinema, Danielle
Darrieux and Michèle Morgan, oddly chosen to play two of
Landru's victims. In his first major screen role, Charles
Denner gives an extraordinary performance as the seductive murderer
Landru - how easily does he succeed in humanising a character who,
initially, appears to be an abject grotesque. Like his victims,
we grow to see beyond Landru's troll-like appearance and observe the
soul of the frustrated poet beneath - just as his veneer of bourgeois respectability
conceals his murderous intent. It should be noted that the
deceptive nature of surface impressions is one of the central themes,
if not the main theme, of Chabrol's oeuvre. The casting of
Stéphane Audran as Landru's nubile mistress perhaps reveals
something of how Chabrol regarded himself - he was romantically
interested in the actress at the time and would marry her the following
year (having divorced his first wife, whose money had helped launch him
on his filmmaking career). Audran would feature in many of the
director's subsequent films and perfectly encapsulated the
contradictions of the bourgeois milieu which would underpin much of
Chabrol's later work.
Landru
is both an end and a beginning. It marks the end of its
director's experimental period but it contains many of the ingredients
that would come to predominate in his subsequent films.
Although sadly overlooked today, it is one of Claude Chabrol's most
entertaining and chilling films.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Claude Chabrol film:
Ophélia (1963)
Film Synopsis
Whilst Europe is being ravaged by the 1914-18 war, Henri Désiré
Landru is busy making a dishonest living to keep himself, his wife, his mistress
and his four children in the bourgeois manner to which they have all grown
accustomed. Landru has cultivated the image of a perfectly respectable
man about town and no one would think him capable of even the most inconsequential
of crimes. After the war, the law soon catches up with him and he is
arrested for the murder of ten women and one boy. As he awaits his execution,
Landru contents himself with the fact that only he knows the full details
of his litany of crime.
How he used to relish luring lonely middleclass women to his house at Gambais,
on the leafy outskirts of Paris. With so few men to amuse them - most
of his sex was happily getting itself maimed and butchered on the battlefields
of Europe - Landru had an easy job seducing his victims and then killing them
in the privacy of his own home. Disposing of the bodies was always a
problem - surely the neighbours would sooner or later become curious about
the amount of smoke coming out of his chimney?
Landru is not your usual run-of-the-mill psychopath. He derives no
pleasure from killing. He only does it because he needs the money.
And it comforts him to know that, before he murdered them, burned their bodies
and helped himself to their life savings, his hapless victims had a pleasant
few days in his company. The unfortunate Henri protests his innocence
right up until the end, but sadly no one seems willing to accept his lies
any longer. This man of culture and breeding, this arch-seducer who
believed he was providing a badly needed service to the abandoned women of
Paris, is destined to die on the scaffold like a common murderer. It
all seems so terribly unjust...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.