A psychedelic, rave-filled poster for Claude Chabrol's The Butcher |
We follow the fairly young school teacher and school leader Hélène for a time in a small, French village, while a brutal killer of women rages, and she is being courted by the town's war veteran butcher.
Le Boucher is an absolutely excellent crime thriller with a soft romance, which seems to crystallize everything that's good in French master filmmaker Claude Chabrol's (This Man Must Die (1969)) movies and in modern French films in general, and which concludes in an intense and sharply modern ending.
Besides brilliant acting from the two leads, Stéphane Audran (Babette's Feast (1987)) and Jean Yanne (Weekend (1967)), Butcher is both photographed (by Jean Rabier (The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (1964))) and told (in Chabrol's own script) with a rare, grown-up integrity and an unassuming elegance. The atmosphere of the little village is indescribably pleasant, and the film takes its time getting us into the town's pace, so that it feels like actually going to such a town for a short time.
What makes the film stand out is not least its reluctance to shape answers to the mysteries of the killings, which leaves us either dumbfounded or to make ends meet on our own as to the dark holes in human nature that these misdeeds point to. Le Boucher is Chabrol's best film, a true thriller classic and a cinematic masterpiece.
Related post:
Claude Chabrol: Top 10: Best French movies
Jean Yanne and Stéphane Audran in Claude Chabrol's Le Boucher |
The title still from Claude Chabrol's Le Boucher |
Budget: Unknown
Box office: Unknown - but 1.1 mil. people saw it in theaters in France alone
= Uncertainty
What do you think of Le Boucher?
Other thrillers and/or Chabrol-films that you can compare it to?
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