Film Review
An inaugural figure of the French New Wave, Claude Chabrol went on to
specialise in dissecting the moral failings of the French bourgeoisie
in a series of popular comedies and thrillers. Between these two
phases of Chabrol's career, he had a few notable failures (
L'Oeil du malin,
Ophélia,
Landru)
which forced him to take on some commercial films if he was to continue
working as a film director. When spy thrillers were at their peak
in the mid-1960s (following the success of the first James Bond
movies), Chabrol became a box office winner again with his three
entries in the genre,
Le Tigre aime la chair fraîche
(1964),
Marie-Chantal contre Dr. Kha
(1965) and
Le Tigre se parfume à la dynamite
(1965).
Released on 25th August 1965,
Marie-Chantal
contre Dr. Kha is the more colourful of Chabrol's spy thrillers,
a Franco-Spanish-Italian production whose title is a sly allusion to
James
Bond contre Dr No, although its content and style owe more
to the recent
Fantômas films. As with
Chabrol's other genre work, critical reaction to the film was mixed,
some seeing it as an easily forgotten minor offering, others rating it
a jubilant cousin of Georges Lautner's
Les Tontons flingueurs
(1963). It is certainly a world apart from the kind of films for
which Chabrol is now known, a kitsch adventure with more than a touch
of the weirdly absurd, in which its director's humour is at its most
caustic.
Chabrol couldn't resist making several references to his English
counterpart, Alfred Hitchcock (the director he is most frequently
compared with), and even turns in a Hitchcock-style cameo. One of
the camera operators on the film was a young Claude Zidi, who would
later become a film director in his own right, helming a string of box
office hits that included
Les Bidasses en folie (1971),
L'Aile ou la cuisse (1976),
La Zizanie (1978) and
Les Ripoux (1984). The
pleasing score, well-suited to the film's extravagant, comic-book feel,
was provided by Pierre Jansen and Michel Colombier.
The eponymous heroine, Marie-Chantal Froidevaux des Chatenets, is
portrayed with seductive charm by Marie Laforêt, wrong-footing
her enemies by pretending to be an empty-headed bimbo whereas she is in
fact a smart and efficient operative, a more than adequate rival for
agent 007. The impressive cast line-up includes Francisco Rabal
(a frequent collaborator with Luis Buñuel), Serge Reggiani,
Roger Hanin, Charles Denner and Stéphane Audran (Chabrol's wife
at the time). The villain of the piece - somewhere between Fu
Manchu and a SPECTRE member - is superbly played by the
American-armenian actor Akim Tamiroff.
Marie-Chantal contre Dr. Kha
may be pretty inconsequential fare when set against most of
Chabrol's other work but it was a moderate success on its first release
(attracting just under one million spectators in France) and offers
some entertainment value, providing it isn't taken too seriously.
© Willems Henri (Brussels, Belgium) 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Claude Chabrol film:
Paris vu par... (1965)
Film Synopsis
A man named Dumont is on a train heading for Switzerland when he is killed
by secret agent Bruno Kerrien. The latter finds what he is after in
the dead man's possession - an odd-looking item of jewellery in the shape
of a blue panther's head with rubies for its eyes. Realising that several
other spies are after this curious object, Kerrien wastes no time passing
it on to Marie-Chantal, a woman he meets for the first time in the restaurant
car. She is taking a holiday with her cousin, Hubert de Ronsart, and
gladly agrees to look after the harmless curio for a few days.
As Marie-Chantal checks into her next hotel, she has no idea that agents
from all over the world are on her heels, each intent on recovering the mysterious
object in her possession. Most determined of these is Dr Kha, who has
had Kerrien in his sights and ends up killing him. Before Kerrien dies,
he manages to get Marie-Chantal to agree to deliver the jewel to Ali Kadou,
a souk trader in the Moroccan town of Agadir. She isn't deceived for
a moment when a strange woman, Olga, shows up claiming to be Kerrien's wife.
Olga is in fact in league with the ruthless Dr Kha!
With his prize now within his grasp, Dr Kha sends his dependable henchman
Sparafucile after his enemies. Ali Kadour is killed and Marie-Chantal narrowly
escapes with the help of a man named Castillo. Olga succeeds in stealing
the jewel, and it is only then that Marie-Chantal discovers just why so many
people are so keen to get their hands on it. Castillo reveals that
the object contains an incredibly potent virus which has the power to wipe
out all life on earth. It is indeed fortunate that Marie-Chantal took
the precaution of removing the ruby eyes from the panther-head jewel, as
these contain the killer virus. If these were to fall into the hands
of Dr Kha no one would be safe. The entire world would be at his mercy...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.