Diabolique
Movie Review:
This
is the sort of movie which makes my job a little easier.
Everything about this movie depends on its twist ending,
and since I won`t reveal it, I won`t have to describe so
much. All I can really say about this classic is that it
contains a nifty plot, and demonstrates the evil of humanity
in callous terms.
The
headmaster of a boy`s boarding school, actually owned by
his wife (Vera Clouzot) and her dowry given to him in marriage,
proves himself to be a tyrannical and wicked man. He slaps
his wife around often, preying on her emotional and physical
weaknesses. And he flaunts his affairs in front of her,
including a recently broken affair with one of the teachers,
a tall, strong blonde played by Simone Signoret. The wife
and the teacher have become kindred spirits in that they`ve
both faced the headmaster`s abuse, and eventually, with
the aggressive, insinuating power of the teacher, they both
concoct a devious plan of murder.
The
wife and the teacher sneak out of the school and head to
the teacher`s apartment. The wife phones the headmaster
wanting a divorce. He, of course, heads over there to aggressively
talk her out of it. First with kind words, then with slaps.
What he doesn`t know, however, is that a bottle of wine,
which he eventually drinks, is laced with a sedative. He
passes out, and the teacher, with very squeamish, reluctant
help from the wife, drowns him in the bathtub.
The
two then attempt to sneak the body back to the school, and
make it seem like a nasty accident. Typically, there are
many instances where it seems they will get caught. But
they successfully return the body and throw it into the
swimming pool.
So
the plan has succeeded. Or has it? What originally was a
slow but well-plotted thriller turns into something bizarre.
The body simply....goes missing. The headmaster`s suit he
wore on his death is returned from the cleaners. And a retired
inspector wanders in from somewhere, grilling the wife`s
already fragile state into something bordering on madness.
Both the wife and the teacher are at a loss to explain why
everything is happening this way. And then the movie reaches
its final act.
As
I`ve said, everything depends upon the trick ending, which
truly is shocking. You will try to figure it out, and, in
some cases, you may be right, since it seems that the truth
is staring us right in the face. But I seriously doubt that
a person without any prior knowledge of the ending could
ever guess it and be absolutely correct when it arrives.
As well, the revelation discloses a story about as creul
and heartless as they come. While most thrillers of the
Hollywood mode will at least attempt to paint a rosy picture
somewhere amid the chaos, none of that relief ever finds
its way here. The characters are either evil, weak, or detached,
and there is no way out of these ingrained traits, which
will disappoint or disturb some viewers. But while this
is not a happy movie, it`s a great one, filled with twisty
writing, intense psychological portraits, and a perfectly
realized ending.
David
Macdonald
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