Film Review
Judging by the end result, hallucinogenic drugs probably had a part to
play with the conception and realisation of
La Rupture, one of Claude Chabrol's
weirder films. It is one of those oddities which fall somewhere
in the uncharted territory between psychological thriller and "theatre
of the absurd" black comedy, and consequently has you wetting yourself
for two entirely different reasons. Not only is this one of
Chabrol's most chilling and experimental films, it is also one of his
most compelling, and the main reason for this are the spellbinding
performances from its leads, Stéphane Audran and Jean-Pierre
Cassel.
La Rupture belongs to a cycle
of dramatic thrillers which Claude Chabrol made in the late 1960's,
early '70s (regarded by many as his finest period) which explore such
themes as marital infidelity, deception, revenge and manipulation, all
with a distinctively acerbic tone and a certain amount of dark
humour. Other films in this cycle include the masterful
triad of
Le Boucher (1969),
La
Femme infidèle (1969) and
Que
la bête meure (1969). What these films have in
common is a wryly cynical view of human nature and the portrayal of the
bourgeoisie as a corrupting influence on society.
La Rupture shows this most clearly,
since the story is essentially a morality play about the unwarranted
power that those who have money end up having over those who do
not. The ownership and abuse of power are central to much of
Chabrol's oeuvre and we can see an obvious connection between the
malign manoeuvrings of the well-heeled middle classes and the
machinations of the evil genius Dr Mabuse in the Fritz Lang
films. The principal villain in
La Rupture (the wicked step-father
played by Michel Bouquet) is Mabuse in all but name, a man who believes
he is God simply because he has money.
As well as the Mabuse reference,
La
Rupture also involves three characters who recur in many of
Claude Chabrol's early films - the impassive, mysterious
Hélène and a mutually destructive duo compromising the
controlling Paul and the pathetic victim Charles. Of these,
Hélène is the most interesting character - partly because
her motivations are often shrouded in ambiguity, and partly because she
appears to be the fixed point about which the drama revolves, strangely
disconnected from what happens around her. In
La Rupture, Hélène is
the personification of the ideal woman (no wonder then that Chabrol
cast his wife Stéphane Audran in the part), someone who is
incapable of being corrupted and manipulated and who is entirely
untainted by malice. Or is she? How quickly we forget that
scene when we first see her, when she is manically smashing her
husband's head in with a frying pan...
The film's title is not without interest. The epithet
La Rupture is one that could be
applied to the French New Wave, which saw the emergence of many new
filmmakers in French cinema in the late 1950s, early 1960s, each having
a radically different vision of the Seventh Art from his
predecessors. Claude Chabrol was one of this herd of firebrands,
although his auteur wings were clipped at an early stage (through lack
of funds) and his work soon tended to be far more conventional than
most of his contemporaries.
In the context of this film,
La
Rupture initially appears to refer to the dramatic breakdown in
the relationship between Hélène and Charles. In
fact, it has more to do with the attempt by Charles's indignant father
to create a permanent breach between his family, which represents
order, culture and moral perfection, and Hélène, whom he
regards as gutter trash simply because she doesn't have a Diners' Club
card. Hélène's resolve to sever her ties with the
bourgeois world she has grown to despise represents another kind of
rupture, one that gives her moral superiority and a measure of
invulnerability. If that sounds familiar, try substituting the
name Hélène for Diana, to get another well-known tale of
marital rift with a tragic outcome...
For Chabrol himself, another "rupture" (i.e. break from what went
before) is the film's excessive visual stylisation (which borders on
expressionism) and playful theatricality. These excesses are a
little off-putting at first but turn out to be appropriate for a film
whose central theme is mind control, since they provide a visual
metaphor for what is happening to the victims in the drama, and also
their subjective viewpoint. And what is a filmmaker but a kind of
arch-manipulator? He is after all someone who sets out to
shape our view of the world through the images he shows us...
© James Travers 2008
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Next Claude Chabrol film:
Le Boucher (1970)