 |
 |
 |
 |
|
|
|
 |
Format: VHS Aug 1987 Not Rated Recording Mode: (unknown) Sound: HiFi 108 min. UPC: 082589011134 |
 |
|
|
|
 |
 |
Details

Movie Description New Wave master Claude Chabrol takes his favored subject of bourgeois crime and duplicity into the realm of farce and animation with his odd film, BLUEBEARD. The film is based on the true story of Henri Landru, a middle class Parisian furniture dealer during WWII who systematically seduced, conned and murdered more than ten women. Chabrol's icily stylized film depicts Landru as an aloof, bearded dandy, placing ads in the local paper in order to lure wealthy widows into his clutches. After declaring his undying passion for the lonely women, Landru would bring them to his secluded country villa, persuade them to grant him power of attorney and then murder them. Chabrol transforms this horrifying tale into a highly stylized spectacle. The sets are elaborately decorated in gentle pastel hues of purple and green. The acting is detached. And the pace is almost comedic with its sight gags and punchlines. True to Chabrol's style, the humorous elements of Landru's misdeeds do not deflate the film's unblinking revelation that the most vile and monstrous tendencies of human nature are often masked behind a well-mannered exterior. By pushing his normal style into the realm of parody, the horror hidden within everyday events becomes even more compelling, and the characters become even more real.
Synopsis An episodic, ghoulish biography of Henri-Desire Landru, the infamous "Bluebeard" murderer in WWI France. Landru responded to personal newspaper ads, wooed lonely women, lured them to his country chateau, murdered them and stole their money. When finally captured, Landru claimed that he was only thinking of the welfare of his family and besides, compared to deaths incurred in the war, his crimes were a drop in the bucket.
Film Notes Theatrical release: 1963.
An episodic, ghoulish biography of Henri-Desire Landru, the infamous "Bluebeard" who was murderer in WWI France.
Landru responded to personal newspaper ads, wooed lonely women, lured them to his country chateau, murdered them and stole their money. When finally captured, Landru claimed that he was only thinking of the welfare of his family and besides, compared to deaths incurred in the war, his crimes were a drop in the bucket.
|
|
|
Other Editions
|
|
|
Similar Items on eBay

|
|