Film Review
Monsieur Verdoux is Charles
Chaplin's most maligned and most consistently underrated film, which is
paradoxical since it clearly shows the actor-director at his most
polished and versatile. Not only is the film one of Chaplin's
most sophisticated, in terms of narrative style and cinematic
technique, it is also the film in which Chaplin makes his most virulent
attack on contemporary society. The darkest of Chaplin's
comedies,
Monsieur Verdoux
shocked American audiences when it was first released, and not without
reason.
The idea for the film came from Orson Welles, who had intended to make
a drama documentary on the life of the infamous French serial killer
Henri Désiré Landru, who was executed in 1922 for the
murder of 10 women and one child. Chaplin was unwilling to play
the lead in a full-length film under another director but saw merit in
the concept. Over a four year period, he developed a black
comedic treatment of the Landru story, and this became the screenplay
for
Monsieur Verdoux.
Escalating production costs and scarcity of film in the immediate
aftermath of WWII meant that Chaplin had to forego his usual technique
of improvisation and experimentation. For the first time, he
worked from a complete script and meticulously planned shooting
schedule, supplemented by carefully worked out sketches to minimise the
time taken to set up and shoot each scene. As a consequence,
Monsieur Verdoux was the Chaplin
feature film with the shortest shooting time, just under three
months. Chaplin was keen to achieve an authentic French look for
the sets and, to that end, he engaged the well-known French filmmaker
Robert Florey to work as his associate director.
Monsieur Verdoux courted
controversy from the moment it was released, being provocative on two
counts. First, Chaplin portrays the serial killer Verdoux not as
a villain but as a highly sympathetic individual, an amoral character
who sincerely believes that the taking of human life is not immoral if
it is undertaken for purely commercial reasons. Verdoux is the
victim of an unsympathetic world in which he is right and everyone else
is wrong (or at least unwilling to accept the truth). The
final scene in which Verdoux is led off to the guillotine immediately
calls to mind the final shots of Chaplin's previous films in which the
Tramp, his most famous character, walks off into the distance.
Chaplin is compelling us to empathise with a man who has killed a dozen
women for profit.
More contentious was Chaplin's attempt to make some kind of moral
equivalence between Verdoux's exploits and the mass murder that is
routinely practised in warfare. "One murder makes a villain,
millions a hero. Numbers sanctify," Verdoux boldly states in his
defence. Even today, these words have a chilling resonance;
imagine how keenly they were felt, particularly by their author, in the
year after the Americans dropped atom bombs on Japan. It was hard
for a man of Chaplin's intellect and sensibility not to be cynical in
the face of this gruesome reality. But, at a time when America
was slipping into Cold War paranoia, it was a dangerous sentiment to
air.
The critical and public reaction to
Monsieur Verdoux in the United
States on its first release was overwhelmingly negative. The film
earned Chaplin the reputation of a Communist sympathiser and he would
become the most high profile victim of the anti-Communist onslaught on
Hollywood in the late 1940s, early 1950s. The
experience would sour Chaplin's relationship with the US and, when he
went off to England in 1952 to attend the London premiere of his next
film,
Limelight, he was
denied reentry into the country.
He did not return to the United States until 1972.
Whilst
Monsieur Verdoux was
an unmitigated flop in America, it was, however, very successful in
Europe. Today, opinion remains divided over how the film compares with
Chaplin's other great films. It certainly lacks the overt
slapstick of the director's more popular works and is altogether a
different kind of film. What we see here is a darker, far more
cynical Chaplin than is visible in any of his earlier films, but should
the change from Charlot to Verdoux surprise us? It was after all
Chaplin who famously remarked that tragedy and comedy are really the
same thing, just viewed from two different perspectives. No film
demonstrates this notion of duality more forcefully than
Monsieur Verdoux, the first film
that Chaplin made once nuclear Armageddon had become
a distinct possibility, if not the inevitable fate for mankind.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Charles Chaplin film:
Limelight (1952)