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Claude Chabrol

Claude Henri Jean Chabrol (French: [klod ʃabʁɔl]; 24 June 1930 – 12 September 2010) was a French film director and a member of the French New Wave (nouvelle vague) group of filmmakers who first came to prominence at the end of the 1950s. Like his colleagues and contemporaries Jean-Luc Godard, François Truffaut, Éric Rohmer and Jacques Rivette, Chabrol was a critic for the influential film magazine Cahiers du cinéma before beginning his career as a film maker.

Claude Chabrol
Chabrol in 1985
Born
Claude Henri Jean Chabrol

(1930-06-24)24 June 1930
Died12 September 2010(2010-09-12) (aged 80)
Paris, France
OccupationFilm director
Years active1956–2010
Spouses
Agnès Goute
(m. 1956; div. 1962)
(m. 1964; div. 1980)
Aurore Paquiss
(m. 1983)
Children4, including Thomas

Chabrol's career began with Le Beau Serge (1958), inspired by Hitchcock's Shadow of a Doubt (1943). Thrillers became something of a trademark for Chabrol, with an approach characterized by a distanced objectivity. This is especially apparent in Les Biches (1968), La Femme infidèle (1969), and Le Boucher (1970) – all featuring Stéphane Audran, who was his wife at the time.

Sometimes characterized as a "mainstream" New Wave director, Chabrol remained prolific and popular throughout his half-century career.[1] In 1978, he cast Isabelle Huppert as the lead in Violette Nozière. On the strength of that effort, the pair went on to others including the successful Madame Bovary (1991) and La Cérémonie (1995). Film critic John Russell Taylor has stated that "there are few directors whose films are more difficult to explain or evoke on paper, if only because so much of the overall effect turns on Chabrol's sheer hedonistic relish for the medium...Some of his films become almost private jokes, made to amuse himself." James Monaco has called Chabrol "the craftsman par excellence of the New Wave, and his variations upon a theme give us an understanding of the explicitness and precision of the language of the film that we don't get from the more varied experiments in genre of Truffaut or Godard."[2]

Life and career edit

Early life edit

Claude Henri Jean Chabrol was born on 24 June 1930 to Yves Chabrol and Madeleine Delarbre in Paris and grew up in Sardent, France, a village in the region of Creuse 400 km (240 miles) south of Paris. Chabrol said that he always thought of himself as a country person, and never as a Parisian. Both Chabrol's father and grandfather had been pharmacists, and Chabrol was expected to follow in the family business. But as a child, Chabrol was "seized by the demon of cinema" and ran a film club in a barn in Sardent between the ages of 12 and 14.[1] It was at this time that he developed his passion for the thriller genre, detective stories and other forms of popular fiction.

Early years in Paris edit

After World War II, Chabrol moved to Paris to study pharmacology[3] and literature at the Sorbonne, where he received a licence en lettres. Some biographies also state that he briefly studied law and political science at the École Libre des Sciences Politiques.[2] While living in Paris Chabrol became involved with the postwar cine club culture and frequented Henri Langlois's Cinémathèque Française and the Ciné-Club du Quartier Latin, where he first met Éric Rohmer, Jacques Rivette, Jean-Luc Godard, François Truffaut and other future Cahiers du Cinéma journalists and French New Wave filmmakers. After graduating, Chabrol served his mandatory military service in the French Medical Corps, serving in Germany and reaching the rank of sergeant.[2] Chabrol has said that while in the army he worked as a film projectionist.[4] After he was discharged from the army, he joined his friends as a staff writer for Cahiers du Cinéma, who were challenging then-contemporary French films and championing the concept of Auteur theory. As a film critic, Chabrol advocated realism both morally and aesthetically, mise-en-scene, and deep focus cinematography, which he wrote "brings the spectator in closer with the image" and encourages "both a more active mental attitude on the part of the spectator and a more positive contribution on his part to the action in progress."[2] He also wrote for Arts magazine during this period.[4] Among Chabrol's most famous articles were "Little Themes", a study of genre films, and "The Evolution of Detective Films".[5]

In 1955 Chabrol was briefly employed as a publicity man at the French offices of 20th Century Fox, but was told that he was "the worst press officer they'd ever seen" and was replaced by Jean-Luc Godard, who they said was even worse. In 1956 he helped finance Jacques Rivette's short film Le coup du berger, and later helped finance Rohmer's short Véronique et son cancre in 1958. Unlike all of his future New Wave contemporaries, Chabrol never made short film nor did he work as an assistant on other directors' work before making his feature film debut. In 1957 Chabrol and Eric Rohmer co-wrote Hitchcock (Paris: Éditions Universitaires, 1957), a study of the films made by director Alfred Hitchcock through the film The Wrong Man.[2] Chabrol had said that Rohmer deserves the majority of the credit for the book, while he mainly worked on the sections pertaining to Hitchcock's early American films, Rebecca, Notorious, and Stage Fright.[4] Chabrol had interviewed Hitchcock with François Truffaut in 1954 on the set of To Catch a Thief, where the two famously walked into a water tank after being starstruck by Hitchcock. Years later, when Chabrol and Truffaut had both become successful directors themselves, Hitchcock told Truffaut that he always thought of them when he saw "ice cubes in a glass of whiskey."[6]

1957–1967: Early film career edit

The most prolific of the major New Wave directors, Chabrol averaged almost one film a year from 1958 until his death. His early films (roughly 1958–1963) are usually categorized as part of the New Wave and generally have the experimental qualities associated with the movement; while his later early films are usually categorized as being intentionally commercial and far less experimental. In the mid-sixties it was difficult for Chabrol to obtain financing for films so he made a series of commercial "potboilers" and spy spoofs, which none of the other New Wave filmmakers did.[7]

Chabrol had married Agnès Goute in 1952 and in 1957 his wife inherited a large sum of money from relatives. In December of that year Chabrol used the money to make his feature directorial debut with Le Beau Serge.[1] Chabrol spent three months shooting in his hometown of Sardent using a small crew and little known actors.[2] The film's budget was $85,000.[8] The film starred Jean-Claude Brialy as François and Gérard Blain as Serge, two childhood friends reunited when the recent medical school graduate François returns to Sardent and discovers that Serge has become an alcoholic after the stillbirth of his physically retarded first child. Despite suffering from tuberculosis, François drags Serge through a snowstorm to witness the birth of his second child, thus giving Serge a reason to live while killing himself in the process. Le Beau Serge is considered the inaugural film of the French New Wave Film movement that would peak between 1959 and 1962. Chabrol was the first of his friends to complete a feature film (although Jacques Rivette had already begun filming his first feature Paris nous appartient), and it immediately received critical praise and was a box office success. It won the Grand Prix at the Locarno Film Festival and the Prix Jean Vigo. Critics noticed similarities to Hitchcock's films, such as the motifs of doubling and re-occurrences and the "Catholic guilt transference" that Chabrol had also written about extensively in his and Rohmer's book the year earlier. Chabrol stated that he made the film as a "farewell to Catholicism",[9] and many critics have called his first film vastly different from any of his subsequent films.[2]

Chabrol quickly followed this success up with Les Cousins in 1958. The film is a companion piece and a reversal to Le Beau Serge in many ways, such as having the responsible student Brialy now play the decadent and insensitive Paul while the reckless Blain now plays the hard-working law student Charles. In this film, the country cousin Charles arrives in the big city of Paris to live with his corrupt cousin Paul while attending school. This was the first of many Chabrol films to include characters named Paul and Charles, and later films would often include a female named Hélène.[10] More so than his first film, Les Cousins features many characteristics that would be seen as "Chabrolian", including the Hitchcock influence, a depiction of the French bourgeoisie, characters with ambiguous motives and a murder. It was also Chabrol's first film co-written with his longtime collaborator Paul Gégauff, of whom Chabrol once said "when I want cruelty, I go off and look for Gégauff. Paul is very good at gingering things up...He can make a character look absolutely ridiculous and hateful in two seconds flat." Les Cousins was another box office success in France and won the Golden Bear at the 9th Berlin International Film Festival.[2]

Chabrol formed his own production company AJYM Productions (acronym based on the initials of his wife's and children's names) at the time of making Le Beau Serge. After the success of Le Beau Serge and Les Cousins, Chabrol began funding many of the films of his friends. AJYM helped fund Eric Rohmer's feature debut The Sign of Leo, partially funded Rivette's Paris nous appartient, and Philippe de Broca's films Les Jeux de l'amour and Le farceur.[2] He also donated excess film stock from Les Cousins to Rivette to complete Paris nous appartient.[8] Chabrol was also a technical advisor on Jean-Luc Godard's feature debut Breathless and acted in small parts in many of his friends' and his own early films. For his support to the early careers of so many of his friends, Chabrol has been referred to as "the godfather of the French New Wave", although many film histories tend to overlook this contribution and dismiss Chabrol altogether.[2]

After two box office hits in a row, Chabrol was given a big budget to make his first color film, À double tour (Léda) in the spring of 1959. The film stars Jean-Paul Belmondo as Laszlo and Antonella Lualdi as Léda, two outsiders of a bourgeois family who experience different results when attempting to enter that family. Chabrol adapted the script with Paul Gégauff from a novel by Stanley Ellin, and the film is known for its oedipal sex triangle and murder scenario. The film was shot on location in Aix-en-Provence with cinematographer Henri Decaë and includes choppy, hand-held camera footage that is atypical of a Chabrol film despite being present in many of the New Wave films made at the same time. The film was both a box office and critical disappointment, and critic Roy Armes criticized "Chabrol's lack of feeling for his characters and love of overacting."[2]

In 1960 Chabrol made what is considered by many critics as his best early film, Les Bonnes Femmes. The film stars Bernadette Lafont, Clotilde Joano, Stéphane Audran and Lucile Saint-Simon as four Parisian appliance store employees who all dream of an escape from their mediocre lives, and the different outcomes for each girl. Most critics praised the film, such as Robin Wood and James Monaco. However some left-wing critics disliked Chabrol's depiction of working-class people and accused him of making fun of their lifestyles. The film was another box office disappointment for Chabrol. It was followed with two films that were also financially unsuccessful and which Chabrol has admitted to making purely for "commercial reasons". Les Godelureaux was made in 1960 and hated by Chabrol. The Third Lover (L'Œil du Malin), released in 1961, received better reviews than Chabrol's previous films, with critics pointing out that the films that Chabrol wrote without Paul Gégauff were much more compassionate and realistic than the ones with Gégauff. It was shot on location in Munich.[11] Although she had appeared in supporting roles in several Chabrol films before, The Third Lover was the first Chabrol film in which Stéphane Audran appeared as the female lead. They later married in 1964 and worked together until the late 1970s.[2]

In 1962 Chabrol made Ophelia, a loose adaptation of Hamlet that was another box office disappointment. Later that year he had a minor hit film with Landru, written by Françoise Sagan and starring Charles Denner, Michèle Morgan, Danielle Darrieux and Hildegard Knef. The film depicts the famous French serial killer Henri Désiré Landru, a story that had previously inspired Charlie Chaplin's film Monsieur Verdoux.[2]

From 1964 to 1967 Chabrol made six films and one short that were critically and commercially disastrous, and this period is considered a low point of his career. Four of these films were in the then-popular genre of spy spoof films, including Le Tigre aime la chair fraiche and Le Tigre se parfume à la dynamite. Chabrol had said that "I like to get to the absolute limit of principles...In drivel like the Tiger series I really wanted to get the full extent of the drivel. They were drivel, so OK, let's get into it up to our necks."[2] During this period a Variety headline read "Vital To Keep Making Pictures, and What Sort Not Relevant; Chabrol No 'Doctrinaire' Type."[12] In 1965 Chabrol also contributed to the New Wave portmanteau film Six in Paris with the segment "La Muette". Chabrol co-starred with Stéphane Audran as a middle aged couple dealing with their rebellious teenage daughter. In 1964 Chabrol also directed a stage production of MacBeth for the Théâtre Récamier.[2]

1968–1978: "Golden Era" edit

In 1968 Chabrol began working with film producer André Génovès and started to make more critically acclaimed films that would later be considered his "Golden Era". Most of these films revolved around themes of bourgeois characters and a murder is almost always part of the plot.[2] Unlike his earlier films, most of these films centered around middle aged people.[13] Chabrol often worked with the same people during this period including actors Audran and Michel Bouquet, cinematographer Jean Rabier, editor Jacques Gaillard, sound technician Guy Chichignoud, composer Pierre Jansen, set designer Guy Littaye, as well as producer Génovés and co-writer Paul Gégauff.[2]

In 1968 Chabrol made Les Biches, one of his most acclaimed works. The film stars Stéphane Audran as the dominant and bisexual Frédérique, who finds a young protege in the bisexual Why (Jacqueline Sassard), until they both become the lover of a young architect named Paul (Jean-Louis Trintignant). Why ends up killing Frédérique, but it is unclear whether she murdered her cheating lover or the person that her lover was cheating with. The film received critical praise and was a box office hit. Chabrol followed this with a similar film The Unfaithful Wife (La Femme infidèle), in which a husband named Charles murders the lover of his cheating wife. It was later remade in 2002 by director Adrian Lyne. Chabrol finished the decade with This Man Must Die (Que la bête meure) in 1969. Based on an original story by Cecil Day-Lewis, in the film Charles (Michel Duchaussoy) plots to kill Paul (Jean Yanne) after Paul killed Charles' son in a hit and run car accident. However the film's ending is left intentionally ambiguous, and Chabrol has stated that "you'll never see a Charles kill a Paul. Never." The film was especially praised for its landscape cinematography.[2]

In 1970 Chabrol made The Butcher (Le boucher) starring Jean Yanne and Stéphane Audran. Yanne plays Popaul, a former war hero known for his violent behavior, much like that depicted in the prehistoric cave drawings that the characters look at in their Périgord community. The French newspaper Le Figaro called it "the best French film since the liberation." After another examination of bourgeois life in The Breach (La Rupture) in 1970, Chabrol made Just Before Nightfall (Juste avant la nuit) in 1971. The film stars Michel Bouquet as an ad executive named Charles who kills his mistress but cannot handle the guilt, so he confesses his crime to her husband (François Périer) and his wife (Stéphane Audran), expecting their condemnation. To his surprise they are only compassionate and forgiving to his crime and Charles cannot find relief from the guilt of what he has done. Later in 1971 Chabrol made Ten Days' Wonder (La Décade prodigieuse), based on a novel by Ellery Queen. The film was shot in English and starred Michel Piccoli, Anthony Perkins and Orson Welles. It received poor critical reviews. He followed this with the equally disliked Dr. Popaul, starring Jean-Paul Belmondo and Mia Farrow. Critics compared the film unfavorably with Chabrol's earlier film that centered on a "Landru-like" theme.[2] Critic Jacques Siclier said that "the novelty of Docteur Popaul comes from the offhandedness with which the criminal history is treated."[14]

Chabrol took a slight change of pace with his 1973 film Wedding in Blood (Les Noces rouges) by making his first film with political themes. The film stars Audran and Michel Piccoli as lovers who plot to murder Audran's husband, who is the corrupt gaullist mayor of their town. To their surprise the President of France orders that no investigation be made of the mayor's death, leading the murdering couple to suspect political interest in their crime.[2] In the spring of 1973 the French government banned the film for one month, allegedly so that it would not influence members of the jury of a controversial criminal trial.[15] Chabrol followed this political theme with Nada, in which a group of young anarchists kidnap an American ambassador. It was Chabrol's first film to not center on the bourgeois since Le Beau Serge.[16] Chabrol returned to more familiar ground in 1975 with A piece of pleasure (Une partie de plaisir). In this film screenwriter Paul Gégauff plays a writer with a troubled marriage that ends in tragedy. (In 1983, Gégauff was stabbed to death in real life by his second wife.) Gégauff's wife is played by his real-life first wife Danièle Gégauff (already divorced when this film was made) and his daughter is played by real life daughter Clemence Gégauff. The film received poor critical reviews, with Richard Roud calling it "rather interestingly loathsome."[2]

Chabrol ended his Golden Period with one of his most admired and his most controversial films Violette Nozière in 1978. The film starred a young Isabelle Huppert as a real life Parisian girl from a respectable petit-bourgeois family in the 1930s. At night Violette sneaks out to pick up men and eventually contracts syphilis, which she convinces her parents must be hereditary before she kills them. The film was controversial in France but praised in other countries.[2]

1979–2009: Later work edit

In the 1980s and 1990s Chabrol engaged himself with many different projects for both TV and the silver screen. His films Poulet au vinaigre (1985) and Masques (1987) were entered into the 38th Cannes Film Festival[17] and 37th Berlin International Film Festival respectively.[18] Madame Bovary (1991) was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film and for the Academy Award for Best Costume Design. It was also entered into the 17th Moscow International Film Festival.[19] La Cérémonie (1995) is perhaps his most acclaimed film from this period, as it was nominated for numerous César Awards and was entered into the 52nd Venice International Film Festival among other. His 1999 film The Color of Lies was entered into the 49th Berlin International Film Festival.[20]

In 1995 Chabrol was awarded the Prix René Clair from the Académie française for his body of work.

Chabrol continued directing films and TV series well into the 2000s.

Personal life edit

 
The grave of Claude Chabrol, Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris

Chabrol's first marriage to Agnès Goute (1956–1962) produced a son, Matthieu Chabrol, a composer who scored most of his father's films from the early 1980s. He divorced Agnès to marry the actress Stéphane Audran, with whom he had a son, actor Thomas Chabrol. They remained married from 1964 to 1978. His third wife was Aurore Paquiss, who has been a script supervisor since the 1950s. He had four children.[21] Chabrol was a known gourmet chef and shot 10 Days Wonder in Alsace only because he wanted to visit its restaurants. Although he acknowledges the influence of Alfred Hitchcock in his work, Chabrol has stated that "others have influenced me more. My three greatest influences were Murnau, the great silent film director...Ernst Lubitsch and Fritz Lang."[2]

Chabrol died on 12 September 2010 of leukemia.[22][23] He is buried in Pere Lachaise Cemetery in north-eastern Paris.

Filmography edit

As director edit

As actor edit

  • 1956: La Sonate à Kreutzer (by Éric Rohmer)
  • 1958: Le Beau Serge (by Claude Chabrol) – La Truffe
  • 1959: Web of Passion (by Claude Chabrol) – Passerby (uncredited)
  • 1960: Les Bonnes Femmes (by Claude Chabrol) – Un nageur à la piscine (uncredited)
  • 1960: Les Jeux de l'amour (by Philippe de Broca) – Le forain
  • 1960: Trapped by Fear (by Jacques Dupont) – Invité à la soirée (uncredited)
  • 1961: Wise Guys (by Claude Chabrol) – Un consommateur (uncredited)
  • 1961: Saint Tropez Blues (by Marcel Moussy) – Le réalisateur empruntant des propos de Pierre Kast
  • 1961: Les menteurs (by Edmond T. Gréville) – Le réceptionniste de l'hôtel (uncredited)
  • 1961: Paris Belongs to Us (by Jacques Rivette) – Un homme à la party (uncredited)
  • 1962: Les Ennemis (by Édouard Molinaro) – Le moniteur de gymnastique (uncredited)
  • 1962: The Seven Deadly Sins (by various directors) – Le pharmacien (segment "Avarice, L'") (uncredited)
  • 1962: The Third Lover (by Claude Chabrol) – Man in peep show (uncredited)
  • 1964: Les durs à cuire ou Comment supprimer son prochain sans perdre l'appétit (by Jacques Pinoteau) – Le psychiatre
  • 1965: Six in Paris (by various directors) – The father (segment "La Muette")
  • 1965: Marie-Chantal contre le docteur Kha (by Claude Chabrol) – Customer complaining of his fruit juice
  • 1965: Our Agent Tiger (by Claude Chabrol) – Le médecin radiologue (uncredited)
  • 1966: Brigitte et Brigitte (by Luc Moullet) – Le cousin obsédé de Petite Brigitte
  • 1967: La route de Corinthe (by Claude Chabrol) – Alcibiades (uncredited)
  • 1968: La Petite Vertu (by Serge Korber) – Le client du club 22 / Man at the bar in the night club (uncredited)
  • 1968: Les Biches (by Claude Chabrol) – Filmmaker (uncredited)
  • 1970: La Rupture (by Claude Chabrol) – Un passager dans le tramway (uncredited)
  • 1970: Sortie de secours (by Roger Kahane)
  • 1971: Aussi loin que l'amour (by Frédéric Rossif) – L'homme au poteau (uncredited)
  • 1972: Un meurtre est un meurtre (by Étienne Périer) – Le contrôleur des wagons-lits / Railway Guard
  • 1974: Le permis de conduire (by Jean Girault) – Le réceptionniste de l'hôtel (uncredited)
  • 1974: La Bonne Nouvelle (Short, by André Weinfeld) – Le curé / The Priest
  • 1976: Folies bourgeoises (by Claude Chabrol) – Le client chez l'éditeur (uncredited)
  • 1977: Animal (by Claude Zidi) – Le metteur en scène
  • 1978: Violette Nozière (by Claude Chabrol) – Récitant du commentaire final (uncredited)
  • 1981: Les folies d'Élodie (by André Génovès) – Un invité au vernissage
  • 1984: Thieves After Dark (by Samuel Fuller) – Louis Crépin dit :Tartuffe
  • 1984: Polar (by Jacques Bral) – Théodore Lyssenko
  • 1986: Suivez mon regard (by Jean Curtelin) – Le téléphage
  • 1986: Je hais les acteurs (by Gérard Krawczyk) – Lieberman
  • 1987: Sale destin (by Sylvain Madigan) – Le commissaire
  • 1987: Jeux d'artifices (by Virginie Thévenet) – Le père de Jacques
  • 1987: L'été en pente douce (by Gérard Krawczyk) – The priest
  • 1988: Alouette, je te plumerai (by Pierre Zucca) – Pierre Vergne
  • 1992: Sam suffit (by Virginie Thévenet) – M. Denis
  • 1997: Rien ne va plus (by Claude Chabrol) – Le croupier (voice, uncredited)
  • 1999: The Color of Lies (by Claude Chabrol) – Emmanuel Solar (voice, uncredited)
  • 2006: Avida (by Benoît Delépine and Gustave Kervern) – Le zoophile débonnaire
  • 2008: Lucifer et moi (by Jean-Jacques Grand-Jouan) – L'homme de la rue
  • 2010: Gainsbourg, vie héroïque (by Joann Sfar) – Le Producteur Musique de Gainsbourg
  • 2012: Le Jour des corneilles (by Jean-Christophe Dessaint) – Le docteur (voice)
  • 2018: The Other Side of the Wind (by Orson Welles) – Himself (final film role)

TV work edit

  • Histoires insolites (1974), 5 episodes
  • Nouvelles de Henry James (1974), 2 episodes – based on stories by Henry James
  • Il était un musicien (1978), 3 episodes
  • Madame le juge [fr] (1978), 1 episode
  • "Jeunesse et Spiritualité" Cyprien Katsaris (1979)
  • Fantômas [fr] (1980), 2 episodes – Remake of Fantômas
  • Le système du docteur Goudron et du professeur Plume (1981) – based on The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether by Edgar Allan Poe
  • Elective Affinities [fr] (1982) – based on Elective Affinities by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
  • M. le maudit (1982, short)
  • La danse de mort (1982) – based on The Dance of Death by August Strindberg
  • Les dossiers secrets de l'inspecteur Lavardin (1988), 2 episodes
  • Les redoutables (2001), 1 episode
  • Chez Maupassant (2007), 2 episodes – based on stories by Guy de Maupassant
  • Au siècle de Maupassant: Contes et nouvelles du XIXème siècle (2010), 2 episodes

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Great Directors Critical Database: Claude Charbol 10 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine at Senses of Cinema
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Wakeman, John. World Film Directors, Volume 2. The H. W. Wilson Company. 1988. 194–199.
  3. ^ "Allmovie Biography". Allmovie.com. 4 August 2011. Retrieved 25 August 2011.
  4. ^ a b c Monaco, James. The New Wave. New York: Oxford University Press. 1976. p. 253.
  5. ^ Monaco. pp. 255–256.
  6. ^ Baecque, Antoine de and Toubiana, Serge. Truffaut: A Biography. New York: Knopf. 1999. ISBN 978-0375400896. p. 195.
  7. ^ Monaco. p. 255.
  8. ^ a b Monaco. p. 254.
  9. ^ Monaco. p. 261.
  10. ^ Monaco. p. 262.
  11. ^ Monaco. p. 266.
  12. ^ Monaco. p. 268.
  13. ^ Monaco. p. 269.
  14. ^ Monaco. p. 280.
  15. ^ Monaco. p. 281.
  16. ^ Monaco. p. 282.
  17. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Chicken with Vinegar". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 28 June 2009.
  18. ^ "Berlinale: 1987 Programme". berlinale.de. Retrieved 28 February 2011.
  19. ^ . MIFF. Archived from the original on 3 April 2014. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  20. ^ "Berlinale: 1999 Programme". berlinale.de. Retrieved 29 January 2012.
  21. ^ "Claude Chabrol". The Daily Telegraph. 12 September 2010. Retrieved 12 September 2010.
  22. ^ The New York Times
  23. ^ Thursby, Keith (13 September 2010), "Claude Chabrol, 1930–2010: Filmmaker was a founder of New Wave movement", Los Angeles Times: AA5

External links edit

  • Claude Chabrol at IMDb
  • Interview with Chabrol on La Cérémonie
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 12 March 2005)
  • Surfer on the New Wave – Interview with Chabrol from 2001

claude, chabrol, chabrol, redirects, here, other, people, with, surname, chabrol, surname, occitanian, custom, chabròl, claude, henri, jean, chabrol, french, klod, ʃabʁɔl, june, 1930, september, 2010, french, film, director, member, french, wave, nouvelle, vag. Chabrol redirects here For other people with the surname see Chabrol surname For the Occitanian custom see chabrol Claude Henri Jean Chabrol French klod ʃabʁɔl 24 June 1930 12 September 2010 was a French film director and a member of the French New Wave nouvelle vague group of filmmakers who first came to prominence at the end of the 1950s Like his colleagues and contemporaries Jean Luc Godard Francois Truffaut Eric Rohmer and Jacques Rivette Chabrol was a critic for the influential film magazine Cahiers du cinema before beginning his career as a film maker Claude ChabrolChabrol in 1985BornClaude Henri Jean Chabrol 1930 06 24 24 June 1930Paris FranceDied12 September 2010 2010 09 12 aged 80 Paris FranceOccupationFilm directorYears active1956 2010SpousesAgnes Goute m 1956 div 1962 wbr Stephane Audran m 1964 div 1980 wbr Aurore Paquiss m 1983 wbr Children4 including ThomasChabrol s career began with Le Beau Serge 1958 inspired by Hitchcock s Shadow of a Doubt 1943 Thrillers became something of a trademark for Chabrol with an approach characterized by a distanced objectivity This is especially apparent in Les Biches 1968 La Femme infidele 1969 and Le Boucher 1970 all featuring Stephane Audran who was his wife at the time Sometimes characterized as a mainstream New Wave director Chabrol remained prolific and popular throughout his half century career 1 In 1978 he cast Isabelle Huppert as the lead in Violette Noziere On the strength of that effort the pair went on to others including the successful Madame Bovary 1991 and La Ceremonie 1995 Film critic John Russell Taylor has stated that there are few directors whose films are more difficult to explain or evoke on paper if only because so much of the overall effect turns on Chabrol s sheer hedonistic relish for the medium Some of his films become almost private jokes made to amuse himself James Monaco has called Chabrol the craftsman par excellence of the New Wave and his variations upon a theme give us an understanding of the explicitness and precision of the language of the film that we don t get from the more varied experiments in genre of Truffaut or Godard 2 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early life 1 2 Early years in Paris 1 3 1957 1967 Early film career 1 4 1968 1978 Golden Era 1 5 1979 2009 Later work 2 Personal life 3 Filmography 3 1 As director 3 2 As actor 4 TV work 5 References 6 External linksLife and career editEarly life edit Claude Henri Jean Chabrol was born on 24 June 1930 to Yves Chabrol and Madeleine Delarbre in Paris and grew up in Sardent France a village in the region of Creuse 400 km 240 miles south of Paris Chabrol said that he always thought of himself as a country person and never as a Parisian Both Chabrol s father and grandfather had been pharmacists and Chabrol was expected to follow in the family business But as a child Chabrol was seized by the demon of cinema and ran a film club in a barn in Sardent between the ages of 12 and 14 1 It was at this time that he developed his passion for the thriller genre detective stories and other forms of popular fiction Early years in Paris edit After World War II Chabrol moved to Paris to study pharmacology 3 and literature at the Sorbonne where he received a licence en lettres Some biographies also state that he briefly studied law and political science at the Ecole Libre des Sciences Politiques 2 While living in Paris Chabrol became involved with the postwar cine club culture and frequented Henri Langlois s Cinematheque Francaise and the Cine Club du Quartier Latin where he first met Eric Rohmer Jacques Rivette Jean Luc Godard Francois Truffaut and other future Cahiers du Cinema journalists and French New Wave filmmakers After graduating Chabrol served his mandatory military service in the French Medical Corps serving in Germany and reaching the rank of sergeant 2 Chabrol has said that while in the army he worked as a film projectionist 4 After he was discharged from the army he joined his friends as a staff writer for Cahiers du Cinema who were challenging then contemporary French films and championing the concept of Auteur theory As a film critic Chabrol advocated realism both morally and aesthetically mise en scene and deep focus cinematography which he wrote brings the spectator in closer with the image and encourages both a more active mental attitude on the part of the spectator and a more positive contribution on his part to the action in progress 2 He also wrote for Arts magazine during this period 4 Among Chabrol s most famous articles were Little Themes a study of genre films and The Evolution of Detective Films 5 In 1955 Chabrol was briefly employed as a publicity man at the French offices of 20th Century Fox but was told that he was the worst press officer they d ever seen and was replaced by Jean Luc Godard who they said was even worse In 1956 he helped finance Jacques Rivette s short film Le coup du berger and later helped finance Rohmer s short Veronique et son cancre in 1958 Unlike all of his future New Wave contemporaries Chabrol never made short film nor did he work as an assistant on other directors work before making his feature film debut In 1957 Chabrol and Eric Rohmer co wrote Hitchcock Paris Editions Universitaires 1957 a study of the films made by director Alfred Hitchcock through the film The Wrong Man 2 Chabrol had said that Rohmer deserves the majority of the credit for the book while he mainly worked on the sections pertaining to Hitchcock s early American films Rebecca Notorious and Stage Fright 4 Chabrol had interviewed Hitchcock with Francois Truffaut in 1954 on the set of To Catch a Thief where the two famously walked into a water tank after being starstruck by Hitchcock Years later when Chabrol and Truffaut had both become successful directors themselves Hitchcock told Truffaut that he always thought of them when he saw ice cubes in a glass of whiskey 6 1957 1967 Early film career edit The most prolific of the major New Wave directors Chabrol averaged almost one film a year from 1958 until his death His early films roughly 1958 1963 are usually categorized as part of the New Wave and generally have the experimental qualities associated with the movement while his later early films are usually categorized as being intentionally commercial and far less experimental In the mid sixties it was difficult for Chabrol to obtain financing for films so he made a series of commercial potboilers and spy spoofs which none of the other New Wave filmmakers did 7 Chabrol had married Agnes Goute in 1952 and in 1957 his wife inherited a large sum of money from relatives In December of that year Chabrol used the money to make his feature directorial debut with Le Beau Serge 1 Chabrol spent three months shooting in his hometown of Sardent using a small crew and little known actors 2 The film s budget was 85 000 8 The film starred Jean Claude Brialy as Francois and Gerard Blain as Serge two childhood friends reunited when the recent medical school graduate Francois returns to Sardent and discovers that Serge has become an alcoholic after the stillbirth of his physically retarded first child Despite suffering from tuberculosis Francois drags Serge through a snowstorm to witness the birth of his second child thus giving Serge a reason to live while killing himself in the process Le Beau Serge is considered the inaugural film of the French New Wave Film movement that would peak between 1959 and 1962 Chabrol was the first of his friends to complete a feature film although Jacques Rivette had already begun filming his first feature Paris nous appartient and it immediately received critical praise and was a box office success It won the Grand Prix at the Locarno Film Festival and the Prix Jean Vigo Critics noticed similarities to Hitchcock s films such as the motifs of doubling and re occurrences and the Catholic guilt transference that Chabrol had also written about extensively in his and Rohmer s book the year earlier Chabrol stated that he made the film as a farewell to Catholicism 9 and many critics have called his first film vastly different from any of his subsequent films 2 Chabrol quickly followed this success up with Les Cousins in 1958 The film is a companion piece and a reversal to Le Beau Serge in many ways such as having the responsible student Brialy now play the decadent and insensitive Paul while the reckless Blain now plays the hard working law student Charles In this film the country cousin Charles arrives in the big city of Paris to live with his corrupt cousin Paul while attending school This was the first of many Chabrol films to include characters named Paul and Charles and later films would often include a female named Helene 10 More so than his first film Les Cousins features many characteristics that would be seen as Chabrolian including the Hitchcock influence a depiction of the French bourgeoisie characters with ambiguous motives and a murder It was also Chabrol s first film co written with his longtime collaborator Paul Gegauff of whom Chabrol once said when I want cruelty I go off and look for Gegauff Paul is very good at gingering things up He can make a character look absolutely ridiculous and hateful in two seconds flat Les Cousins was another box office success in France and won the Golden Bear at the 9th Berlin International Film Festival 2 Chabrol formed his own production company AJYM Productions acronym based on the initials of his wife s and children s names at the time of making Le Beau Serge After the success of Le Beau Serge and Les Cousins Chabrol began funding many of the films of his friends AJYM helped fund Eric Rohmer s feature debut The Sign of Leo partially funded Rivette s Paris nous appartient and Philippe de Broca s films Les Jeux de l amour and Le farceur 2 He also donated excess film stock from Les Cousins to Rivette to complete Paris nous appartient 8 Chabrol was also a technical advisor on Jean Luc Godard s feature debut Breathless and acted in small parts in many of his friends and his own early films For his support to the early careers of so many of his friends Chabrol has been referred to as the godfather of the French New Wave although many film histories tend to overlook this contribution and dismiss Chabrol altogether 2 After two box office hits in a row Chabrol was given a big budget to make his first color film A double tour Leda in the spring of 1959 The film stars Jean Paul Belmondo as Laszlo and Antonella Lualdi as Leda two outsiders of a bourgeois family who experience different results when attempting to enter that family Chabrol adapted the script with Paul Gegauff from a novel by Stanley Ellin and the film is known for its oedipal sex triangle and murder scenario The film was shot on location in Aix en Provence with cinematographer Henri Decae and includes choppy hand held camera footage that is atypical of a Chabrol film despite being present in many of the New Wave films made at the same time The film was both a box office and critical disappointment and critic Roy Armes criticized Chabrol s lack of feeling for his characters and love of overacting 2 In 1960 Chabrol made what is considered by many critics as his best early film Les Bonnes Femmes The film stars Bernadette Lafont Clotilde Joano Stephane Audran and Lucile Saint Simon as four Parisian appliance store employees who all dream of an escape from their mediocre lives and the different outcomes for each girl Most critics praised the film such as Robin Wood and James Monaco However some left wing critics disliked Chabrol s depiction of working class people and accused him of making fun of their lifestyles The film was another box office disappointment for Chabrol It was followed with two films that were also financially unsuccessful and which Chabrol has admitted to making purely for commercial reasons Les Godelureaux was made in 1960 and hated by Chabrol The Third Lover L Œil du Malin released in 1961 received better reviews than Chabrol s previous films with critics pointing out that the films that Chabrol wrote without Paul Gegauff were much more compassionate and realistic than the ones with Gegauff It was shot on location in Munich 11 Although she had appeared in supporting roles in several Chabrol films before The Third Lover was the first Chabrol film in which Stephane Audran appeared as the female lead They later married in 1964 and worked together until the late 1970s 2 In 1962 Chabrol made Ophelia a loose adaptation of Hamlet that was another box office disappointment Later that year he had a minor hit film with Landru written by Francoise Sagan and starring Charles Denner Michele Morgan Danielle Darrieux and Hildegard Knef The film depicts the famous French serial killer Henri Desire Landru a story that had previously inspired Charlie Chaplin s film Monsieur Verdoux 2 From 1964 to 1967 Chabrol made six films and one short that were critically and commercially disastrous and this period is considered a low point of his career Four of these films were in the then popular genre of spy spoof films including Le Tigre aime la chair fraiche and Le Tigre se parfume a la dynamite Chabrol had said that I like to get to the absolute limit of principles In drivel like the Tiger series I really wanted to get the full extent of the drivel They were drivel so OK let s get into it up to our necks 2 During this period a Variety headline read Vital To Keep Making Pictures and What Sort Not Relevant Chabrol No Doctrinaire Type 12 In 1965 Chabrol also contributed to the New Wave portmanteau film Six in Paris with the segment La Muette Chabrol co starred with Stephane Audran as a middle aged couple dealing with their rebellious teenage daughter In 1964 Chabrol also directed a stage production of MacBeth for the Theatre Recamier 2 1968 1978 Golden Era edit In 1968 Chabrol began working with film producer Andre Genoves and started to make more critically acclaimed films that would later be considered his Golden Era Most of these films revolved around themes of bourgeois characters and a murder is almost always part of the plot 2 Unlike his earlier films most of these films centered around middle aged people 13 Chabrol often worked with the same people during this period including actors Audran and Michel Bouquet cinematographer Jean Rabier editor Jacques Gaillard sound technician Guy Chichignoud composer Pierre Jansen set designer Guy Littaye as well as producer Genoves and co writer Paul Gegauff 2 In 1968 Chabrol made Les Biches one of his most acclaimed works The film stars Stephane Audran as the dominant and bisexual Frederique who finds a young protege in the bisexual Why Jacqueline Sassard until they both become the lover of a young architect named Paul Jean Louis Trintignant Why ends up killing Frederique but it is unclear whether she murdered her cheating lover or the person that her lover was cheating with The film received critical praise and was a box office hit Chabrol followed this with a similar film The Unfaithful Wife La Femme infidele in which a husband named Charles murders the lover of his cheating wife It was later remade in 2002 by director Adrian Lyne Chabrol finished the decade with This Man Must Die Que la bete meure in 1969 Based on an original story by Cecil Day Lewis in the film Charles Michel Duchaussoy plots to kill Paul Jean Yanne after Paul killed Charles son in a hit and run car accident However the film s ending is left intentionally ambiguous and Chabrol has stated that you ll never see a Charles kill a Paul Never The film was especially praised for its landscape cinematography 2 In 1970 Chabrol made The Butcher Le boucher starring Jean Yanne and Stephane Audran Yanne plays Popaul a former war hero known for his violent behavior much like that depicted in the prehistoric cave drawings that the characters look at in their Perigord community The French newspaper Le Figaro called it the best French film since the liberation After another examination of bourgeois life in The Breach La Rupture in 1970 Chabrol made Just Before Nightfall Juste avant la nuit in 1971 The film stars Michel Bouquet as an ad executive named Charles who kills his mistress but cannot handle the guilt so he confesses his crime to her husband Francois Perier and his wife Stephane Audran expecting their condemnation To his surprise they are only compassionate and forgiving to his crime and Charles cannot find relief from the guilt of what he has done Later in 1971 Chabrol made Ten Days Wonder La Decade prodigieuse based on a novel by Ellery Queen The film was shot in English and starred Michel Piccoli Anthony Perkins and Orson Welles It received poor critical reviews He followed this with the equally disliked Dr Popaul starring Jean Paul Belmondo and Mia Farrow Critics compared the film unfavorably with Chabrol s earlier film that centered on a Landru like theme 2 Critic Jacques Siclier said that the novelty of Docteur Popaul comes from the offhandedness with which the criminal history is treated 14 Chabrol took a slight change of pace with his 1973 film Wedding in Blood Les Noces rouges by making his first film with political themes The film stars Audran and Michel Piccoli as lovers who plot to murder Audran s husband who is the corrupt gaullist mayor of their town To their surprise the President of France orders that no investigation be made of the mayor s death leading the murdering couple to suspect political interest in their crime 2 In the spring of 1973 the French government banned the film for one month allegedly so that it would not influence members of the jury of a controversial criminal trial 15 Chabrol followed this political theme with Nada in which a group of young anarchists kidnap an American ambassador It was Chabrol s first film to not center on the bourgeois since Le Beau Serge 16 Chabrol returned to more familiar ground in 1975 with A piece of pleasure Une partie de plaisir In this film screenwriter Paul Gegauff plays a writer with a troubled marriage that ends in tragedy In 1983 Gegauff was stabbed to death in real life by his second wife Gegauff s wife is played by his real life first wife Daniele Gegauff already divorced when this film was made and his daughter is played by real life daughter Clemence Gegauff The film received poor critical reviews with Richard Roud calling it rather interestingly loathsome 2 Chabrol ended his Golden Period with one of his most admired and his most controversial films Violette Noziere in 1978 The film starred a young Isabelle Huppert as a real life Parisian girl from a respectable petit bourgeois family in the 1930s At night Violette sneaks out to pick up men and eventually contracts syphilis which she convinces her parents must be hereditary before she kills them The film was controversial in France but praised in other countries 2 1979 2009 Later work edit In the 1980s and 1990s Chabrol engaged himself with many different projects for both TV and the silver screen His films Poulet au vinaigre 1985 and Masques 1987 were entered into the 38th Cannes Film Festival 17 and 37th Berlin International Film Festival respectively 18 Madame Bovary 1991 was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film and for the Academy Award for Best Costume Design It was also entered into the 17th Moscow International Film Festival 19 La Ceremonie 1995 is perhaps his most acclaimed film from this period as it was nominated for numerous Cesar Awards and was entered into the 52nd Venice International Film Festival among other His 1999 film The Color of Lies was entered into the 49th Berlin International Film Festival 20 In 1995 Chabrol was awarded the Prix Rene Clair from the Academie francaise for his body of work Chabrol continued directing films and TV series well into the 2000s Personal life edit nbsp The grave of Claude Chabrol Pere Lachaise Cemetery in ParisChabrol s first marriage to Agnes Goute 1956 1962 produced a son Matthieu Chabrol a composer who scored most of his father s films from the early 1980s He divorced Agnes to marry the actress Stephane Audran with whom he had a son actor Thomas Chabrol They remained married from 1964 to 1978 His third wife was Aurore Paquiss who has been a script supervisor since the 1950s He had four children 21 Chabrol was a known gourmet chef and shot 10 Days Wonder in Alsace only because he wanted to visit its restaurants Although he acknowledges the influence of Alfred Hitchcock in his work Chabrol has stated that others have influenced me more My three greatest influences were Murnau the great silent film director Ernst Lubitsch and Fritz Lang 2 Chabrol died on 12 September 2010 of leukemia 22 23 He is buried in Pere Lachaise Cemetery in north eastern Paris Filmography editAs director edit Le Beau Serge 1958 Prix Jean Vigo 1959 Les Cousins 1959 Golden Bear 1959 A double tour 1959 based on The Key to Nicholas Street by Stanley Ellin Les Bonnes Femmes 1960 Les Godelureaux 1961 based on novel of the same title by Eric Ollivier Les Sept peches capitaux 1962 Short L Œil du Malin 1962 Ophelia 1963 loosely based upon Shakespeare s character Landru 1963 based upon the true story of Henri Desire Landru Les plus belles escroqueries du monde 1964 Short Le Tigre aime la chair fraiche 1964 La Muette 1965 Short Marie Chantal contre le docteur Kha 1965 loosely based upon Jacques Chazot s character Our Agent Tiger 1965 La Ligne de demarcation 1966 based upon the memoir by Gilbert Renault Le Scandale 1967 La route de Corinthe 1967 based on novel of the same title by Claude Rank fr Les Biches 1968 loosely based on The Talented Mr Ripley by Patricia Highsmith La Femme infidele 1969 Que la bete meure 1969 based on The Beast Must Die by Cecil Day Lewis Le Boucher 1970 La Rupture 1970 based on The Balloon Man by Charlotte Armstrong Juste avant la nuit 1971 based on The Thin Line by Edward Atiyah La Decade prodigieuse 1971 based on Ten Days Wonder by Ellery Queen Dr Popaul 1972 based on Murder at Leisure by Hubert Monteilhet Les Noces rouges 1973 Nada also known as The Nada Gang 1974 based on Nada by Jean Patrick Manchette Une partie de plaisir 1975 Les innocents aux mains sales 1975 based on The Damned Innocents by Richard Neely Les Magiciens 1976 based on Initiation au meurtre by Frederic Dard Folies bourgeoises 1976 Alice ou la Derniere Fugue 1977 Les Liens de sang 1978 based on Blood Relatives by Ed McBain Violette Noziere 1978 based upon a true French murder case in 1933 Le Cheval d orgueil 1980 based upon an autobiography of the same title by Per Jakez Helias Les Fantomes du chapelier 1982 based on novel of the same title by Georges Simenon Le Sang des autres 1984 based on novel of the same title by Simone de Beauvoir Poulet au vinaigre 1985 Cop au Vin Chicken with Vinegar Inspecteur Lavardin 1986 Masques 1987 Le cri du hibou 1987 based on The Cry of the Owl by Patricia Highsmith Une affaire de femmes 1988 based upon the true story of Marie Louise Giraud Jours tranquilles a Clichy 1990 based upon an Quiet Days in Clichy by Henry Miller Docteur M 1990 Madame Bovary 1991 based on Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert Betty 1992 based on novel of the same title by Georges Simenon L Œil de Vichy 1993 Documentary L Enfer 1994 adapted from the screenplay of the same title by Henri Georges Clouzot La Ceremonie 1995 based on A Judgement in Stone by Ruth Rendell Rien ne va plus aka The Swindle 1997 Au cœur du mensonge aka The Color of Lies 1999 Merci pour le chocolat aka Nightcap 2000 Prix Louis Delluc 2000 based on The Chocolate Cobweb by Charlotte Armstrong The Flower of Evil aka La fleur du mal 2002 La Demoiselle d honneur 2004 based on The Bridesmaid by Ruth Rendell L ivresse du pouvoir 2006 La Fille coupee en deux 2007 Bellamy 2009 As actor edit 1956 La Sonate a Kreutzer by Eric Rohmer 1958 Le Beau Serge by Claude Chabrol La Truffe 1959 Web of Passion by Claude Chabrol Passerby uncredited 1960 Les Bonnes Femmes by Claude Chabrol Un nageur a la piscine uncredited 1960 Les Jeux de l amour by Philippe de Broca Le forain 1960 Trapped by Fear by Jacques Dupont Invite a la soiree uncredited 1961 Wise Guys by Claude Chabrol Un consommateur uncredited 1961 Saint Tropez Blues by Marcel Moussy Le realisateur empruntant des propos de Pierre Kast 1961 Les menteurs by Edmond T Greville Le receptionniste de l hotel uncredited 1961 Paris Belongs to Us by Jacques Rivette Un homme a la party uncredited 1962 Les Ennemis by Edouard Molinaro Le moniteur de gymnastique uncredited 1962 The Seven Deadly Sins by various directors Le pharmacien segment Avarice L uncredited 1962 The Third Lover by Claude Chabrol Man in peep show uncredited 1964 Les durs a cuire ou Comment supprimer son prochain sans perdre l appetit by Jacques Pinoteau Le psychiatre 1965 Six in Paris by various directors The father segment La Muette 1965 Marie Chantal contre le docteur Kha by Claude Chabrol Customer complaining of his fruit juice 1965 Our Agent Tiger by Claude Chabrol Le medecin radiologue uncredited 1966 Brigitte et Brigitte by Luc Moullet Le cousin obsede de Petite Brigitte 1967 La route de Corinthe by Claude Chabrol Alcibiades uncredited 1968 La Petite Vertu by Serge Korber Le client du club 22 Man at the bar in the night club uncredited 1968 Les Biches by Claude Chabrol Filmmaker uncredited 1970 La Rupture by Claude Chabrol Un passager dans le tramway uncredited 1970 Sortie de secours by Roger Kahane 1971 Aussi loin que l amour by Frederic Rossif L homme au poteau uncredited 1972 Un meurtre est un meurtre by Etienne Perier Le controleur des wagons lits Railway Guard 1974 Le permis de conduire by Jean Girault Le receptionniste de l hotel uncredited 1974 La Bonne Nouvelle Short by Andre Weinfeld Le cure The Priest 1976 Folies bourgeoises by Claude Chabrol Le client chez l editeur uncredited 1977 Animal by Claude Zidi Le metteur en scene 1978 Violette Noziere by Claude Chabrol Recitant du commentaire final uncredited 1981 Les folies d Elodie by Andre Genoves Un invite au vernissage 1984 Thieves After Dark by Samuel Fuller Louis Crepin dit Tartuffe 1984 Polar by Jacques Bral Theodore Lyssenko 1986 Suivez mon regard by Jean Curtelin Le telephage 1986 Je hais les acteurs by Gerard Krawczyk Lieberman 1987 Sale destin by Sylvain Madigan Le commissaire 1987 Jeux d artifices by Virginie Thevenet Le pere de Jacques 1987 L ete en pente douce by Gerard Krawczyk The priest 1988 Alouette je te plumerai by Pierre Zucca Pierre Vergne 1992 Sam suffit by Virginie Thevenet M Denis 1997 Rien ne va plus by Claude Chabrol Le croupier voice uncredited 1999 The Color of Lies by Claude Chabrol Emmanuel Solar voice uncredited 2006 Avida by Benoit Delepine and Gustave Kervern Le zoophile debonnaire 2008 Lucifer et moi by Jean Jacques Grand Jouan L homme de la rue 2010 Gainsbourg vie heroique by Joann Sfar Le Producteur Musique de Gainsbourg 2012 Le Jour des corneilles by Jean Christophe Dessaint Le docteur voice 2018 The Other Side of the Wind by Orson Welles Himself final film role TV work editHistoires insolites 1974 5 episodes Nouvelles de Henry James 1974 2 episodes based on stories by Henry James Il etait un musicien 1978 3 episodes Madame le juge fr 1978 1 episode Jeunesse et Spiritualite Cyprien Katsaris 1979 Official site Fantomas fr 1980 2 episodes Remake of Fantomas Le systeme du docteur Goudron et du professeur Plume 1981 based on The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether by Edgar Allan Poe Elective Affinities fr 1982 based on Elective Affinities by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe M le maudit 1982 short La danse de mort 1982 based on The Dance of Death by August Strindberg Les dossiers secrets de l inspecteur Lavardin 1988 2 episodes Les redoutables 2001 1 episode Chez Maupassant 2007 2 episodes based on stories by Guy de Maupassant Au siecle de Maupassant Contes et nouvelles du XIXeme siecle 2010 2 episodesReferences edit a b c Great Directors Critical Database Claude Charbol Archived 10 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine at Senses of Cinema a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Wakeman John World Film Directors Volume 2 The H W Wilson Company 1988 194 199 Allmovie Biography Allmovie com 4 August 2011 Retrieved 25 August 2011 a b c Monaco James The New Wave New York Oxford University Press 1976 p 253 Monaco pp 255 256 Baecque Antoine de and Toubiana Serge Truffaut A Biography New York Knopf 1999 ISBN 978 0375400896 p 195 Monaco p 255 a b Monaco p 254 Monaco p 261 Monaco p 262 Monaco p 266 Monaco p 268 Monaco p 269 Monaco p 280 Monaco p 281 Monaco p 282 Festival de Cannes Chicken with Vinegar festival cannes com Retrieved 28 June 2009 Berlinale 1987 Programme berlinale de Retrieved 28 February 2011 17th Moscow International Film Festival 1991 MIFF Archived from the original on 3 April 2014 Retrieved 2 March 2013 Berlinale 1999 Programme berlinale de Retrieved 29 January 2012 Claude Chabrol The Daily Telegraph 12 September 2010 Retrieved 12 September 2010 The New York Times Thursby Keith 13 September 2010 Claude Chabrol 1930 2010 Filmmaker was a founder of New Wave movement Los Angeles Times AA5External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Claude Chabrol Claude Chabrol at IMDb Biography on newwavefilm com Senses of Cinema Great Directors Critical Database Interview with Chabrol on La Ceremonie Roger Ebert interviews Chabrol in 1971 at the Wayback Machine archived 12 March 2005 Surfer on the New Wave Interview with Chabrol from 2001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Claude Chabrol amp oldid 1214409369, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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