Film Review
Here is a film that certainly lives up to its name.
Traitement de choc starts out as a
pretty conventional psychological thriller but ends in quite a shocking
manner, revealing itself to be a modern vampire flick - and a creepy
one at that. The film was directed by auteur maverick Alain
Jessua, who is perhaps best known for his intense and very disturbing
drama
La Vie à l'envers (1964),
which was nominated for the Golden Lion at the Venice Film
Festival. Jessua's filmmaking career soon
fizzled out after some impressive early works but his
films remain interesting for both their diversity and their slightly off-the-wall
treatment of contemporary issues.
Traitement de
choc can easily be dismissed as a cynical attempt to cash in on
the vampire craze of the early 1970s, but it also serves as a pretty
incisive attack on western consumerism, condemning the way that the
rich exploit the poor to enhance their own standard of living, like
vampires preying on the innocent.
The film offers a formidable pairing in Alain Delon and Annie Girardot,
two of France's most high profile actors at the time. Delon was
at the height of his popularity and had already become an international
screen icon, best known for his tough gangster roles in such films as
Le
Samouraï (1967) and
Borsalino (1970).
Giradot was not such a big star but had proven to be an immensely
versatile performer, able to take on straight dramatic roles and
comedic parts with equal aplomb. The two actors first appeared
together in Luchino Visconti's
Rocco and His Brothers (1960),
when both were virtual unknowns, and would work together one more time,
on José Giovanni's
Le Gitan
(1975).
Both Delon and Girardot are extremely well-matched to the parts they
play in this film. Delon has a sinister Mephistophelean quality,
exuding evil menace beneath his surface charm as the aptly named Dr
Devilers, whilst Girardot gives a good impression of someone being
slowly driven out of her mind as the dark truth behind her anti-ageing
therapy becomes apparent. Neither performance can be described as
subtle but Girardot's histrionics and Delon's comic book villainy are
undoubtedly fitting for this chilling excursion into the macabre.
When it was first released,
Traitement
de choc performed noticeably less well at the box office than
other Alain Delon films of this era. Critics were quick to
condemn the beach scene where most of the cast (Delon and
Girardot included) remove all their clothes and frolic about in the
nude (mercifully in long shot). This now notorious scene was
later used to promote the film outside France and gave it its
alternative English language title
Doctor
in the Nude. Well, all's fair in love and marketing...
© James Travers 2000
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Alain Jessua film:
Armaguedon (1977)
Film Synopsis
A stressed-out retail manager Hélène Masson decides to
submit herself to a course of therapy at a centre run by the secretive
Dr Devilers. At first, Hélène is encouraged by
Devilers' apparent success with his other patients. But then she
becomes concerned when one of her fellow patients commits
suicide. Later, one of the Portuguese serving boys disappears
after asking her for help. Hélène soon realises
that something is seriously wrong...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.