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The Unfaithful Wife

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Unfaithful Wife
Film poster
Directed byClaude Chabrol
Written byClaude Chabrol
Produced byAndré Génovès
Starring
CinematographyJean Rabier
Edited byJacques Gaillard
Music by
Production
companies
  • Les Films de La Boétie
  • Cinegai
Distributed byCompagnie Française de Distribution Cinématographique
Release date
  • 22 January 1969 (1969-01-22) (France)
Running time
98 minutes
LanguageFrench

The Unfaithful Wife (French: La Femme infidèle) is a 1969 French–Italian crime drama film written and directed by Claude Chabrol and starring Stéphane Audran and Michel Bouquet.[1] The story follows a businessman who discovers his wife has been unfaithful.

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Transcription

Plot

Insurance broker Charles Desvallées lives in a beautiful house in the countryside near Paris with his wife Hélène and their young son. Hélène often goes to Paris, allegedly for shopping, beauty treatments and cinema sessions. By accident Charles discovers she was not at the hairdresser as she had claimed. He gradually grows more suspicious about the way she employs her time and asks a private investigator to follow her. The investigator reports that his wife regularly sees a writer called Victor Pégala at his home in Neuilly-sur-Seine.

On a day his wife is busy hosting a birthday party for their son, Charles pays Pégala a visit. At first he tells the confused writer jovially that he and his wife have an open marriage and sits and talks pleasantly with him. He asks for a tour of the small flat. On seeing the bed his demeanour changes. He spots a giant cigarette lighter at the bedside, which had been a third anniversary present to his wife from him. He suddenly grabs a stone bust and kills Pégala with two violent blows to the head. Charles then meticulously cleans up and removes all fingerprints. He takes away Pégala's body in his car and disposes of it in a pond.

The following days, Hélène appears to feel unwell. Two detectives turn up to interrogate her about Pégala, who has been reported missing by his ex-wife. Hélène's name has been found in his address book, but she pretends that he had been only a distant acquaintance. In the evening, the detectives return and interrogate both Hélène and Charles, who denies having even heard of the man before.

Later, Hélène finds a photograph of Pégala in her husband's jacket pocket with his name and address on the back. After burning it, she joins her family in the garden, looking tenderly at Charles. When the two detectives show up again, Charles tells Hélène that he loves her and goes to speak to the men. In the last shot, presumably seen from Charles' point of view, the camera moves back from Hélène and their son while zooming in on them, implying that Charles is taken away from them.

Cast

Reception

Although commercially unsuccessful in France with only 682,295 admissions,[2] The Unfaithful Wife was quickly picked up by US distributor Allied Artists and premiered in New York on 9 November 1969.[3] Roger Greenspun of The New York Times called it a "calmly and thoughtfully perverse" film born from a "unique cinematic imagination",[4] and Vincent Canby included it in his "Ten Best" list.[3]

In later years, the critics' opinion was equally positive. Paul Taylor of Time Out magazine titled it "one of Chabrol's mid-period masterpieces, a brilliantly ambivalent scrutiny of bourgeois marriage and murder."[5] Derek Malcolm wrote in The Guardian that "Chabrol displays an irrestistible logic and an ironic humour", and "what could have been just another thriller becomes... also a passionate love story, with its share of intense irony and a pervading sense of the quirkiness of fate."[6] TV Guide called it "arguably the best of Chabrol's superb, Hitchcockian studies of guilt, love, and murder among the French elite", adding that "Michel Bouquet and Stéphane Audran […] give perhaps the finest performances of their careers."[7]

Influences

Reviewers have repeatedly pointed out the influence of Alfred Hitchcock's films on The Unfaithful Wife, in particular Vertigo[8][9] and Psycho.[10] The last shot of Charles' wife and son makes use of the dolly zoom technique first used in Vertigo,[8][9] while the cleaning of the murder site and the disposal of Pégala's body in the pond have been compared to similar scenes (the cleaning of the bathroom and the sinking of the victim's car) in Psycho.[10] Still, Chabrol denied the notion that his film was in any way "Hitchcockian".[11]

Awards

See also

References

  1. ^ "La Femme infidèle (1968) Claude Chabrol". Ciné-Ressources (in French). Retrieved 13 June 2023.
  2. ^ JP. "La Femme infidèle (1968)". JPBox-Office. Retrieved 24 August 2011.
  3. ^ a b Tino, Balio (2010). The Foreign Film Renaissance on American Screens, 1946–1973. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 260.
  4. ^ Greenspun, Roger (10 November 1969). "Screen: Unfaithful Wife". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  5. ^ Taylor, Paul. "The Unfaithful Wife (1968)". Time Out London. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  6. ^ Malcolm, Derek (28 April 1999). "Claude Chabrol: La Femme Infidele". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  7. ^ "La Femme Infidele Reviews". TV Guide. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  8. ^ a b Morgenstern, Joseph; Kanfer, Stefan, eds. (1970). Film 69/70. Simon & Schuster. p. 122. ISBN 9780671206086.
  9. ^ a b Dousteyssier-Khoze, Catherine (2018). Claude Chabrol's Aesthetics of Opacity. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9780748692606.
  10. ^ a b Miller, D. A. (2021). Second Time Around: From Art House to DVD. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231195591.
  11. ^ Beach, Christopher, ed. (2020). Claude Chabrol: Interviews. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781496826756.
  12. ^ "Awards for 1969". National Board of Review. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 13 June 2023.
  13. ^ Ebert, Roger (10 May 2002). "Unfaithful". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 12 June 2023.

External links

This page was last edited on 12 April 2024, at 22:34
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