Bluebeard (1963) Poster

(1963)

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7/10
Very interesting film detailing the life and crimes of the 'French Bluebeard'
TheLittleSongbird2 May 2015
Landru aka. Bluebeard may not be one of Claude Chabrol's best films, but it's still a good and interesting one that does a lot right. Landru and his life and crimes are fascinating but infamously shocking and complex, the film follows the subject very closely and deals with it also in a way that entertains and interests. If you are interested in Landru you're not going to be short-changed here and there's a good deal to like judging it as a film too.

As with all Chabrol films, Landru looks great. The colour photography is very handsome and tasteful, the period costumes are sumptuous and evocative and the scenery nothing short of exquisite. Chabrol handles the atmosphere, cultures and environment of early 20th century Paris masterfully to the extent one feels like they're actually there in the era. He also directs beautifully with charm and tension, Landru's scenes with his victims are both charming and chilling like Landru himself(in how he managed to get women to fall for him while being such an irredeemable monster on the inside) and his crimes wrench the gut in how shocking they are(even if some details are still ambiguous). The way Landru's written is enjoyable on the whole too, considering the subject Landru could easily have been melodramatic but the script opts for the sly and sardonic approach and does so cleverly and wittily, without being too cartoonish, that the most acidic moments are very juicy and the most cynical parts bite. The cast are stellar, with a brilliant Charles Denner, who cuts a very magnetic presence, whether funny, cold-hearted, cynical, urbane or charm-on-the-surface, and even looks eerily like Landru. Some may find that Landru is like a cartoon figure here but to me that added to how chilling a person he was. Michèle Morgan, Danielle Darrieux, Juliette Mayniel and Catherine Rouvel are beguiling and poignant, not with a lot to do but you really care what happens to them and Stephane Audran also really comes to life.

The film's not without its problems, once Landru is captured the pace does slacken and the film loses its charm, the trial being on the tedious side rather than suspenseful and would have benefited from tighter pacing and more developed writing. What also would have helped was having Landru arrested a little earlier and dwelling a little less on his methods, the film covers them well enough and I did wish that the same amount of detail went a little more into the trial. The music is also a little intrusive at times as well. Overall, lesser Chabrol, and I did prefer Charlie Chaplin's Monsieur Verdoux as a (loose?) version of the story, but still very interesting. The part of the film covering the arrest, trial and execution doesn't come over as strongly as the parts detailing his life and crimes but the look of the film, the atmosphere, the direction, most of the writing and the acting make it a most worthwhile film. 7/10 Bethany Cox
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5/10
Aesthetically pleasing, dramatically deadening
gridoon20242 August 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Vivid, intense colors and nice recreation of the period (France during, and a little after, WWI) make "Landru" a visually pleasing movie. But dramatically it's flat, and when the title character is finally captured by the police and put on trial, the film instead of picking up the pace becomes more dull and interminable. It has a distinguished cast of women but most of them just blend together (except maybe Stephane Audran; you can tell Chabrol likes her more than the others, because her character escapes their grisly fate!). As for Landru himself, he has a distinctive cartoonish style (especially that extra-pointy beard) which makes it hard to understand why so many women fall under his charm so quickly - especially since his foppish "good manners" are ridiculously obvious. Apart from a handful of good moments, and of course its look, "Landru" must be one of Chabrol's biggest misfires - black comedy is apparently not his forte (see also "High Heels"). ** out of 4.
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6/10
True to the facts but dull
guy-bellinger30 October 2004
Faithful - but uninspired - account of the notorious Landru case, which swept over post WWWI France.

The film follows the facts closely, from Henri Désiré Landru's "family life", seductions and murders to his trial and execution. Well if your objective was to get the main details of a famous serial murder case you will be satisfied. However a film lover could have expected something more fiery, more intense, more unsettling from Claude Chabrol than just that.

To tell the truth there is more to this movie than...just that. Indeed there are good production values, fine colours, slightly stylized settings and a stellar cast. Nevertheless, I couldn't help stifling a yawn now and then.

Why so? Maybe because such great ladies as Danielle Darrieux, Michèle Morgan, Mary Marquet, or Hildegard Knef are given almost nothing to do.Only Stéphane Audran stands out in the part of Landru's naïve young mistress, Fernande.

Charles Denner, on the other hand, oddly directed by Chabrol, is a physical lookalike of the "sieur de Gambais" but fails to deliver both charm and terror.

It looks as though Claude Chabrol ,who is so at ease with what I would call "domestic" monsters ( Jean Yanne in "Le Boucher" and "Que la Bête meure", Michel Bouquet in "La Femme infidèle" and several others )was petrified by his cold-hearted, cynical monster, with absolutely no redeeming features. He did not manage to bring life to his character.

Landru, too monstrous a monster , even for Chabrol ?
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7/10
based on the life and times of a notorious real-life criminal
myriamlenys18 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
The movie is based, and based quite faithfully, on the real-life time and crimes of one Henri-Désiré Landru, a Frenchman whose name lives on in infamy. During World War I Landru, already a crook and swindler, progressed to killing and even to serial killing, luring inoffensive women with promises of romance and marriage. He then proceeded to murder the women (where convenient, together with their children or pets) in order to steal their money and other belongings. Here Landru was helped by the profoundly patriarchal nature of his society : he lived in an era where nobody raised his eyebrows at the thought of a man taking care of the financial affairs of a wife, a fiancée, a lover.

To begin with the good, the movie provides the viewer with a good overview of the methods and ruses of Landru. The second half also contains some good trial scenes. (Note the episode where a defence lawyer's trick backfires rather nastily. In the courtroom as in life, it does not do to be too clever...) The cast is impressive, the performances are fine, and the outstanding costumes establish a strong sense of character, time and place.

Touches of imagination provide the movie with additional life and colour. For instance, there's a clever use of music. This includes a clever use of the superb "Mon coeur s'ouvre à ta voix" aria by Camille Saint-Saëns. In the opera, the cruel and callous Delila seduces and captures her male prey with promises of love, tenderness, union. In the movie, it's the cruel and callous male who ensnares the unsuspecting female... There's also a sense of black humour at work. This makes for an interesting combination of subject matter and style, as the late Landru seems to have been a man of considerable, although very dry wit.

So it's certainly an enjoyable movie. However, it needs to be said that "Landru" suffers from superficiality : it does not explore the full and shocking horror of the various crimes. By the same token it does not dig deep into Landru's twisted psyche. (This last one may be an unjust comment, as serial killers seem to work on different principles than the rest of us - it is possible that, behind all the masks and mirrors, "there is no there there', meaning that you don't get a recognizable soul capable of being explored. But still.)
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A favourite of Stanley Kauffmann's...
axpalm27 December 2018
Kauffmann was a distinguished critic and one I read avidly over many years. He loved this film. Out of respect for him I was curious to see it and now, I'm sorry to say, have and feel disappointed.

For one, very disappointed in Jean Rabier's flat colours - too pale orange and boring browns. The film looks like a mediocre Hollywood musical. Which is doubly sad because the costumes are spot on. One would think that with Claude Chabrol at the helm, the Belle Epoque would have been conveyed so well.

Charles Denner is a bit stiff, mannequin-like in the lead role but still impressive due to his intensity and voice. His voice, like so many first-rate French actors, is his best instrument - deep, rich, wonderful to hear. Less stiffness in body movements would have rounded out a first-class performance.

The women are wonderful - Danielle Darreaux, Michele Morgan, Catherine Rouvel, etc. Luminous and moving, even under the flat colours.

There are occasional Chabrol pleasures to be had now and then - the opening shot of Denner's head at the family dinner table followed by the WW1 newsreel, his time in bed with his lover and his walks with the other women were impressive and promised much but alas, the work felt repetitive, even predictable and never did come together for me. It felt more like a teasing theatrical matinee play than a gripping film about a notorious serial killer, caught between the beauties and horrors of his age.
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8/10
A good movie.
RodrigAndrisan6 May 2019
Claude Chabrol was a very good and very prolific French film director. He worked uninterruptedly between 1958 and 2010, sometimes also producing three feature films per year. Named "The French Hitchcock," he had in my opinion his own unmistakable style. Charles Denner was an excellent French actor who made memorable roles in some of the best French films of all time, working with the greatest directors, Truffaut, Lelouch, Marcel Carné, Costa-Gavras. One of my favorite films of all time is "The Man Who Loved Women" (1977) L'homme qui aimait les femmes (original title). In this "Landru" Denner does also an extraordinary role. Along with him, many great names of the French cinema, Stéphane Audran, Michèle Morgan, Danielle Darrieux, etc. Jean-Pierre Melville, the great director, makes a small excellent role. Mario David, who usually makes in most of the movies the slapstick idiot, here he makes a very good and subtle Prosecuter. Very funny scene when, waiting in front of the door to arrest Landru, one of the policemen says, "He sings out of tune!" Do not go to Gambais, Yvelines, France, Landru may still be active, you can never know with the French...
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4/10
French serial murder...maybe
BandSAboutMovies5 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Also known as Landru, this movie finds French New Wave director Claude Chabrol telling the absolutely true story of serial killer Henri Désiré Landru. Nicknamed the Bluebeard of Gambais, Landry kiled at least seven women in the village of Gambais, as well as at least three other women and a young man at a house he rented in Vernouillet. He also had met or been in romantic correspondence with 283 women during the First World War, many of whom he swindled out of money. The true number of Landru's victims - as their remains were never found - could possibly be even higher. After a trial - which had no small amount of controversy due to a lack of bodies for evidence - Landru was executed by the guillotine. Somehow, his severed head ended up in Los Angeles' Museum of Death.

Played by Charles Denner, this monster of a man seems respectable until you get to his scheme: lure wealthy old women with the hopes of romance to his home, get their money and then chop them up and set the bodies ablaze.

After this movie was released, Chabrol was sued for defamation by Fernande Segret, Landru's last mistress, who was not pleased by how Stéphane Audran played her or the fact that she was not consulted or asked for permission for her name to be used. She'd used the money she made from telling the story to be a teacher in Lebanon for forty years and came back to France only to learn that she was the subject of a major motion picture. Segret received modest damages and retired to a care home in the town of Flers, where she later killed herself in 1968, drowned herself in the moat at the Chateau de Flers on the anniversary of Landru's marriage proposal to her.

She wasn't the only person unhappy with Audran. Producer Carlo Ponti hated her acting so much that he screamed, "Who's that slut who's playing Fernande?" Chabrol slapped Ponti and shouted back, "That's my woman!"

This was the fourth box office failure that Chabrol would endure after Les Bonnes Femmes, The Third Lover and Ophélia. As a result, he was forced to make more commercial movies rather than the ones he wanted to make. The same thing happened to Charlie Chaplin, whose take on the same story - 1947's Monsieur Verdoux - also was a big time bomb.
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