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Les Diaboliques [Blu-ray] [1954]
 
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Les Diaboliques [Blu-ray] [1954]

Simone Signoret , Vera Clouzot , Henri-Georges Clouzot    Suitable for 12 years and over   Blu-ray
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (32 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Actors: Simone Signoret, Vera Clouzot, Jean Brochard
  • Directors: Henri-Georges Clouzot
  • Format: PAL
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: 12
  • Studio: Arrow Academy
  • DVD Release Date: 18 April 2011
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (32 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B004CSKD62
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 299,888 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review

Legend has it that Henri-Georges Clouzot beat out Alfred Hitchcock to secure the rights to this novel, which proved to be a veritable blueprint for an icy masterpiece of murder, mystery and suspense. Véra Clouzot plays the sickly wife of a callous headmaster of a provincial boarding school going to seed, and the commanding Simone Signoret is the headmaster's mistreated mistress. Together they plot and carry out his murder, a brutal drowning that director Clouzot documents in chilly detail, but the corpse disappears and a nosy detective starts sniffing around the grounds as threatening notes taunt the women. Clouzot's thriller is as precise and accomplished a work as anything in Hitchcock's canon, a film of gruelling suspense and startling shocks in an overcast, grey world of decay, but his icy manipulations lack the human dimension and emotional resonance of the master of suspense. Many critics have accused the film of being misanthropic, and Clouzot's attitude toward his characters is bitter at best, contemptuous at worst. The viewer is left on the outside looking in, but the razor precision and terrifying twists deliver a sleek, bleak spectacle worthy of attention. --Sean Axmaker, Amazon.com

Product Description

After the success of The Wages of Fear (Le salaire de la peur) Henri-Georges Clouzot cemented his reputation with his masterpiece, Les diaboliques.

Based on a novel by Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac (who also wrote the novel on which Hitchcock s Vertigo is based), Les diaboliques tells the story of a sadistic headmaster (Paul Meurisse) who brutalises his wife and mistress (Véra Clouzot and Simone Signoret) and their plot to murder him. Superbly edited with nail-biting suspense, the two women murder the headmaster and dump the body in the swimming pool, but when the pool is drained no corpse is found. An unsettling and beautifully-paced study of betrayal, mistrust and guilt, Les diaboliques is atmospherically shot in black and white, its murky tones hauntingly echo the moral ambiguity of its principals.

An acknowledged influence on Alfred Hitchcock and Stanley Kubrick among others, Les diaboliques is presented on Blu-ray for the first time in the UK.

Special Features:

  • Brand new High Definition transfer of the film from a new restoration of the original negative
  • Audio commentary by Susan Hayward, author of Les diaboliques (Cine-file French Film Guides)
  • Original Trailer
  • Filmed interview with Ginette Vincendeau, French cinema scholar, critic and author
  • Original Trailer
  • Brand new writing on the film by author and critic Brad Stevens and a re-printed interview with Clouzot by Paul Schrader illustrated with stills and rare original set drawings by Léon Barsacq.
  • Artwork presentation packaging including original posters and a newly commissioned artwork cover

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
38 of 38 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:DVD
Les Diaboliques is an unsettling and beautifully-paced study of betrayal, mistrust and guilt. Set in a decaying boarding school, it shows the grim course of a peculiar relationship between two female teachers (Simone Signoret and Véra Clouzot) and its sadistic headmaster . Atmospherically shot in black and white, its murky tones hauntingly echo the moral ambiguity of its principals. Director Henri-Georges Clouzot expertly keeps the viewer gripped in a manner that recalls (or even prefigures) Hitchcock at his very best. The end caption of the film pleads with the audience not to reveal the ending of the film to any of their friends, and once you've seen it you'll understand why. This is a truly influential, intelligent, and unforgettable film.
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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful
By C. O. DeRiemer HALL OF FAME TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:DVD
The story goes that a fellow told Alfred Hitchcock that after his daughter saw Psycho she refused to take a shower and that after she saw Diabolique she refused to get in a bathtub. Well, Hitchcock said, send her to the dry cleaners.

Diabolique is one of the most masterful scary movies you could hope to see. Even after 50 years, when the twist is probably well known, the movie is so well crafted and so well acted that it still carries me along. It takes place in a second-rate French boarding school for boys run by a sneering brute named Michel Delasalle (Paul Meurisse). His wife, Christine Delasalle (Vera Clouzot), who actually has the money in the family, is a weak woman with a bad heart, whom he abuses and humiliates. He openly has taken as a mistress a teacher in the school, Nicole Horner (Simone Signoret), whom he has smacked around one too many times. Christine and Nicole hatch a plan to lure Delasalle to Nicole's house some distance from the school. There, they will drug and drown him, then carry him back to the school and pitch his body into the unused, scum covered water of the school's swimming pool. When the body is discovered, it will be called a suicide or an accident. The two women pull it off...but when the pool is drained, there is no body. Then the suit Delasalle was wearing is delivered to the school by a laundry. A student is given a penalty and says it was the headmaster. A Delasalle appears to have registered at a local hotel. The two women don't know what is happening, and the strain begins to tell on them. They begin to bicker and blame each other. Nicole leaves the school. Christine must stay, but she is showing signs of emotional and physical collapse. Then the plot really begins.

So many elements, for me, really work. Everything in the film looks tawdry and worn. The swimming pool water is filthy and covered with slime. Every now and then small bubbles break the surface. The photography (and the film is shot in black and white) feature deep shadows, dark nights, candles. A shoe will appear, half hidden; a doorknob slowly turns; a bathtub looks like it could use a scrubbing. And there is no background music to speak of, just the quiet sounds of things moving and breathing. At the same time, the activities of the boys in the school are well developed and we come to recognize several of them. They bring us back a bit from the sense of something terrible happening, then we slip back into the movie.

Clouzot, in my opinion, has done a terrific job of building a sense of dread, but at the same time keeping us off balance by disguising what may be happening. Even though the "secret" of the plot is by now well known, Clouzot's craftsmanship keeps us (or at least me) watching. He spends whatever time he needs to build a scene or create an atmosphere. Watch how the serving of fish at the start of the movie is used to create whole stories about the school, the life of the boys, the situation of the teachers, and the characters of Michel Delasalle and his wife. Watch how Clouzot builds a creepy sense of dread when Christine goes to the morgue to identify what she thinks may be her husband's body. The sequence takes us from Christine trying to establish why she thinks the body is her husband's to the two attendants taking a cheap wooden casket from the basement of the morgue to the viewing room. At some point we realize that we are getting nervous ourselves about what might be in that box.

The end of the movie, when it was released initially in the United States, had people leaping three feet off their seats. That probably won't happen now to a new viewer, but the movie remains, in my opinion, a very fine piece of work.
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful
By Budge Burgess TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:DVD
Based on a novel by Boileau & Narcejac. "Les Diaboliques" is a highly influential French psychological drama - the staccato music at the start has the monotonous tension which is generated at the beginning of 'Psycho', and the film was much enjoyed by Hitchcock himself.

Set in the Institution De Lasalle, a school for boys, the building itself is presented in silhouette, an ominous precursor of Hitchcock's Bates' hotel. The theme is that of the eternal triangle. The wife, Vera Clouzot, owns the school and wants rid of her husband, the school's tyrannical headmaster. The mistress, Simone Signoret, another teacher at the school, has tired of her affair and also wants rid of him.

The viewer is sympathetic. The husband is a brute of a man who beats his women, terrorises the school's staff, and rules the children like a despot. If ever a man needed killing! But how can two frail women hope to kill such a man and not be caught. Signoret has a cunning plan! The relationship between the women builds in intensity as they hatch their plot and lure him to the chosen killing ground. Will they succeed? Will they get away with it?

This is a superbly paced drama, tightly directed, the tension built layer by layer. It's a sophisticated plot which, despite its 1954 vintage, has lost none of its appeal - it was remade as 'Diabolique' in 1996 (with Sharon Stone and Isabelle Adjani). The themes are eternal. Red herrings litter the plot. False trails lead off in every direction. And yet you can watch it again and again and still enjoy the interaction between the characters and the confusion which seems to plague their existence.

A first class thriller, character driven with intense performances from the cast, taut direction and editing, and atmospheric black and white photography. A film which deserves a wider audience ... and which no self-respecting French teacher should fail to show to their class!

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
h.g.clouzot at his best
what critiria does anyboby use for deciding what their favourite film ever is?
if it is that you watch it so many times that you can recite each line before it is spoken on... Read more
Published 2 months ago by adam.rose
'DIABOLICAL'
To be honest, I really do not think I am going to waste my time giving this film a review. It was a waste of time watching it. I recommend you do not waste your money. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Paulmar
It's just not that good ...
Apologies, I know that I'm in a minority, but I didn't think much of this film, nor of the Blu-ray edition. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Mr Ons
les diaboliques
SO DELIGHTED TO FIND BOXED SET VERSION IN BLUE RAY AND ORDINARY DVD FORMAT GREAT VALUE SUPER QUALITY PROMPT DELIVERY GOOD PRICE
Published 5 months ago by FOZZY
I Still Nearly Jumped Off the Sofa
"Diabolique," ("Les Diaboliques") (1954), is widely considered a masterpiece of suspense; a black and white, tight 114 minute French classic from Henri-Georges Clouzot, (Wages of... Read more
Published 9 months ago by Stephanie DePue
Please Do Not Keep This Review to Yourself
If you went back 10 years and told my former self that I would watch and enjoy a slice of French film noir from the 1950s, I would have looked upon you with derision and a fair... Read more
Published 10 months ago by Sam
Wonderful thriller - no need for a remake !!
What can I say about Les Diaboliques ? I love it. The haunting music, the dark, foreboding atmosphere; from the very first moment of the movie it grips you and won't let go until... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Jane2212
well worth watching
You have to like this film, it has such well crafted characters and a really odd atmosphere. The tension isn't all it is sometimes cracked up to be in other reviews, but the ending... Read more
Published 12 months ago by Reader
Blu-Ray Review
Many reviews here pretty much give every plot detail away, as far as the Blu-Ray version is concerned, great picture, fantastic (5 star) film, extras are thorough - but the... Read more
Published 12 months ago by lomesa
stunning - and startling ; a deserved classic
This famous old film is as a good as people say it is. I watched it because it appeared on a list of 'Top Ten' films in various genres in 'The Guardian' - and they were right! Read more
Published 14 months ago by Mr. Ian A. Macfarlane
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