Biography: life and films
In a filmmaking career which spanned more than fifty years and around seventy
films for cinema and television, Claude Chabrol was one of the most
highly regarded and prolific of French film directors.
A leading figure in the French New Wave, he tackled a wide variety
of subjects, including literary adaptations, character studies, crime
dramas and spy thrillers, but is best-known for his psychological
thrillers.
Born on 24th June 1930, the son of a pharmacist, Claude Chabrol enjoyed a comfortable middle-class
upbringing. He studied law before discovering a passion for
cinema which brought him into contact with François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard and
Eric Rohmer. These were a group of dedicated cinephiles who, along with Chabrol, would initiate
a radical shift in filmmaking technique in the late 1950s, each becoming a
major player in the French New Wave. All four
young men began by writing critiques in the influential journal
Les Cahiers du cinéma, in
which they vehemently condemned the current trend of quality French cinema and praised
independent directors who embodied the principle of the
auteur.
One director whom Chabrol admired greatly was Alfred Hitchcock, the British
filmmaker who had found great success in Hollywood with his suspense thrillers.
It was Chabrol and Rohmer who first claimed Hitchcock as a shining example of the auteur,
in an essay they published in 1957.
Hitchcock would have a profound and lasting influence on Chabrol when he
came to make his own films.
With money inherited by his wealthy wife, Chabrol was able to start making
his own films. His first film,
Le Beau Serge (1958),
heralded not just the start of Chabrol's long career as a director
but also the beginning of the French New Wave, which would see an insurgence of talent and a radically
new approach to filmmaking in French cinema. Chabrol's use of inexperienced, unknown actors,
crude editing, extensive location filming and a feeling of spontaneity are
emblematic of the films of the French New Wave, although these characteristics were
less a stylistic choice and more down to inexperience and lack of resources.
In the early stage of his career, Claude Chabrol was far less successful than his contemporaries,
particularly Truffaut and Godard, in drawing audiences and attracting criticism (good
and bad). Although something of an eccentric, he was probably one of the most
conventional of the New Wave film directors, avoiding the extreme subjectivity of
Godard, the languid lyricism of Rohmer and the emotional intensity of Truffaut.
However, from early on, Chabrol's films displayed a distinctive style
which showed a keen understanding of human nature and a natural flair for storytelling. It was the
content of his early films, more than style, which shocked cinema audiences. Both
Les Bonnes femmes (1960) and
L'Oeil du malin (1962) were condemned as
being irresponsible and immoral, although today they are considered two of Chabrol's finest achievements.
The majority of Claude Chabrol's films are
psychological thrillers in an apparently idyllic bourgeois setting, and it is
here that the Hitchcock influence can be seen most readily. Each of these films
features a victim and a predator, and it is usually the latter with whom the audience is
led to sympathise. The predator is often presented as a victim of circumstances
and, no matter how bad the crime, his or her actions can always be vindicated. This
can be seen most clearly in Chabrol's best films of this genre,
L'Oeil
du malin,
Le Boucher (1970),
Que la bête meure (1969)
and
La Ceremonie.
Even in those films which are not classifiable as thrillers, Chabrol's style,
ironic, sombre and somewhat twisted, brings a dark
thriller-like feel to his subject. His powerful historic drama,
Une affaire de femmes (1988) is as compelling and disturbing as the director's most intentionally
shocking thrillers, as is his version of
Madame Bovary (1991),
and also
Betty (1992),
his chilling analysis of a woman in mid-life crisis.
Chabrol's cinema is also characterised by some exemplary performances
from immensely talented actors, showing that, just like his own idols, John Ford
and Alfred Hitchcock, he is able to get the absolute best from his actors.
Many actors reappear again and again in Chabrol's films, particularly Stéphane
Audran (Chabrol's wife for many years), Jean Yanne and Isabelle Huppert, something
which helped to define that distinctive Chabrol brand of cinema.
Towards the end of his career, Claude Chabrol showed a late
flourishing, returning to themes that are characteristic of his oeuvre:
the insidious venality of the bourgeois milieu and the perversity of
human nature. His best films from this era include the trilogy
that comprised
La Cérémonie
(1995),
Merci pour le chocolat (2000)
and
La Fleur du mal (2003).
His last film was
Bellamy
(2009), a thriller featuring Gérard Depardieu. During this
period, Chabrol continued working for French television, his last work
being episodes in the anthology series
Au siècle de Maupassant.
On 12th September 2010, Claude Chabrol died, aged 80. His legacy
is an impressive body of work that has justly earned him the reputation
of one of France's finest and best-known filmmakers.
© James Travers 2010
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