A short analysis of the film | Merci Pour Le Chocolate (Sub) [VHS] | Isabelle Huppert, Jacques Dutronc
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Merci Pour Le Chocolate (Sub) [VHS]
Isabelle Huppert
,
Jacques Dutronc
First Run Features, 2003
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based on 12 reviews
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highly recommended
Very good French thriller with a somewhat rushed ending...
"
Merci
pour
le chocolat", directed by Claude Chabrol, is an interesting French thriller with an abrupt ending, that is nonetheless worth your time. The reasons for that are many, including a superb cast, an engaging story, and a director that manages to make the spectator part of the story. You are not in the movie, but you feel involved in what is happening...
The story begins when Jeanne (Anna Mouglalis), a young and talented pianist, learns that she might be the lost daughter of André Polonski (Jacques Dutronc). Jeanne is intrigued by the idea, specially due to the fact that André is a very famous pianist, and she wants to learn from him. Jeanne visits André's house, meeting him, his new wife Mika (Isabelle Huppert), and a son from a previous marriage, Guillaume. Even though André is certain that Jeanne is not his daughter, he is interested in her, inviting the young woman to his home. That kind gesture sets off a chain of events that are dangerous, specially for Jeanne, and that could be linked to the death of André's previous wife, Lisbeth.
What is going to happen? And can appearances be utterly deceiving? "Merci pour le chocolat" makes you ask yourself those questions more than once. On the whole, I think that this is a very good movie, and I recommended it to those who love good thrillers and don't mind a somewhat rushed ending.
Belen Alcat
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A little spilled chocolate goes a long way.
So far, I've seen maybe 7 Chabrol films (older and recent ones) and this is easily the most enjoyable one yet. Actually, I wasn't expecting much, after some mixed reviews here, but found the DVD for a decent price used at a local store, and gave it a shot. While I think Chabrol films are all well above average, and in terms of Amazon ratings, you can always bank on a 4 star rating, but this one had a little more. I really enjoyed watching these characters, and this little plot they've become nestled into is very intriguing. I think it helps that all the actors, especially Huppert, play their parts to a tee.
Stunningly beautiful, but unknown to the US actress, Anna Mouglalis, serves as the centerpiece of the film, which revolves around the question of whether or not she was switched at birth with the Polonski's baby boy, who was born on the same day. Pianist Andre Polonski is initially told by nurses that he has a girl, only to find out they made a mistake and he has a son. Mouglalis's character, Jeanne, who also becomes a pianist, goes to meet the father that may have been hers, and sets off a jealousy issue with Andre's new wife, Mika, played by Huppert. This triggers emotions from the past, and poses a question about the death of Andre's first wife. It also sets up one of the best scenes in the film: a moving recollection by Andre's son, Guillame, about the night his mother died.
Upon Jeanne's first encounter with Mika, some suspense immediately builds, in a very stylish scene where Jeanne is looking at a picture of Andre's first wife, a near reflection of herself as she resembles her, and sees Mika purposely spill a thermos of
chocolate
on the floor. This gets Jeanne to purposely dip her sleeve into it and later have her forensic lab boyfriend analyze it and find that it contains a tranquilizer.
The direction of the film, building suspense, dry wit, and superb acting performances, all make for an extremely satisfying French film. It is much more lighter than other Chabrol films, and more dialogue driven, without much culmination in the suspense. The violence found in his other films is nowhere to be found. It's more on the black comedy side, then a true suspense thriller, and nothing points to this more than the
sub
tle humor found in the ending. From the low key remarks by Andre (remember that he's just had some sleeping medicine as well), to what happens to Jeanne and Andre's son, to the revealing scene where Huppert gets up from the couch, only to find she was just resting her head in the center of a black afghan, knitted in the form of spider web.
I don't think the film is to be taken as seriously as other Chabrol thrillers, and thus, the somewhat abrupt ending shouldn't be frowned upon for coming up short. I thought it was satisfying enough, and ends the film quite nicely. Let's face it, French films don't EVER end like A
merci
an films do. I think it's a unique and tidy end to one delicious film! My only gripe was not how it ended, rather when it ended. I would have loved to see more interaction between the characters before it reached it's conclusion. I'll just have to watch it again!
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A short analysis of the film
**Be forewarned that this review is in part an analysis of the movie "
Merci
pour
le chocolat" and therefore contains several spoilers. So if you haven't seen the film and don't want to know anything about the plot development, please don't read this review.**
Part of the problem with this very interesting movie is carelessness or deliberate ambiguity on the part of director Claude Chabrol. The celebrated French master of cinema really is a bit like Alfred Hitchcock in the way he put this film together. He doesn't care so much about the consistency of detail or logic, instead what he strives for, as did Hitchcock, is effect. Begin with a tantalizing premise, build tension, and then come up with a striking ending.
The premise, that of a psychologically disturbed woman of high social and economic status (Mika Muller, played with her usual haunting skill by Isabelle Huppert), whose bizarre nature forces her to poison those around her, satisfies the formula nicely. The tension is maintained by our need to find out exactly what she is doing and why and how it will affect the husband André (Jacques Dutronc), the son Guillaume (Rodolphe Pauly), and the young pianist, Jeanne Pollet (Anna Mouglalis). The ending which is heavily symbolic and deeply psychological however may disappoint some viewers. Note that as the closing credits run down the screen, Mika cries and then curls up catatonically on the couch next to a black Afghan in the shape of a spider web. She is the spider at the side of the web waiting for something to fall into it. She can't help herself. That is her nature. And that is why she cries for herself. And notice that her husband does not hate her or rage against her. Instead he seems to have pity upon her as he plays a funereal piece on the piano.
Personally what disappointed me--although I still think this is an excellent film--is the way the ambiguity about Jeanne's paternity is handled. Obviously we can tell by the photos on the wall of the tragically deceased Lisbeth that Jeanne is indeed her daughter since she looks exactly like her. In fact in the next scene Jeanne unconsciously apes the pose in the photo by putting the palms of her hands to either side of her face as André watches. Another problem with the film is that nobody except the audience seems struck by the exact similarity.
Additionally, the truth of her paternity is obscured by Jeanne's mother saying that the mixup at the maternity ward was straightened out to everyone's satisfaction, and besides (almost as an afterthought) she reveals that her husband was not the father, that instead she was inseminated by an unknown donor. This silliness could easily be resolved by DNA testing since the movie, which was released in 2000, is set in contemporary France. Chabrol uses a lab to establish what drug Mika is putting in the
chocolate
. Why not use a lab to establish paternity? Part of the reason may simply be that the novel upon which the movie is based "The Chocolate Cobweb" was written by the American mystery writer Charlotte Armstrong in the 1950's, before the age of DNA testing.
The real answer however is that Chabrol didn't bother, just as he didn't bother cleaning up some other ambiguities, like why the son does not confront Mika after he is told by Jeanne that Mika is drugging him. Or why Mika deliberately spills the drugged chocolate intended for Guillaume onto the floor, allowing her to be surreptitiously observed by Jeanne through a reflection in the glass of one of the photos. The spilling seems purely a plot device to allow Jeanne a reason to get the chocolat analyzed. Furthermore, we presume that Mika, who is very rich, remarries André because she loves him or admires him or wants to be with him. And it can be seen that he would want to remarry her because of her wealth, her beauty, her elegance, etc. However, it is revealed near the end of the film that he had all along suspected her of causing Lisbeth's death since he says something like "You also washed the glasses the night Lisbeth died." He knew.
One can even go to the extent of analyzing this by saying that Mika is the black widow and André finds her irresistible. Note the scene in which he suggests they make love to have a daughter and she puts him off by saying that he would be ineffective since he has already taken his Rohypnol. She says, next time before he takes his sleep potion they will do it. Furthermore notice that EVERY night he falls into a drugged sleep since he is addicted to Rohypnol. Perhaps this nightly occurrence is pleasant to Mika, in a sense an acting out of the black widow's mating ritual again and again.
Nonetheless, this idea of a woman helpless against her own nature seems a bit unsatisfying. We want something more. And what she does to satisfy her urges leaves us a bit mystified. It seems hardly enough. She drugs the chocolate that she lovingly makes for Guillaume and Jeanne. Why only this? Why this at all? The logic is that she needs to excrete her poison, like a spider. The very act of doing it is what satisfies her need. The fact that somebody could take the drug and then fall asleep at the wheel of a car really is beside the point.
This tale of the dark psychology within the human soul is the sort of thing that attracts Isabelle Huppert as an actress. She has played in her distinguished career a number of roles that require evil in the human soul. This is one of the more
sub
tle ones. For one of the more striking, see her in The Piano Teacher (2001).
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Spilled chocolat
Simply put, a cold case is an old case where evidence and suspicions have dried up, and is virtually impossible to solve unless there are new developments.
And a clever cold case lies at the heart of Claude Chabrol's "
Merci
Pour
Le Chocolat," a quietly intense little movie that allows nothing but the actors to carry the plot forward, and maintain suspense. No overwrought soundtracks or theatrics here -- it's a very slow,
sub
tle build of tension and suspicion, with the brilliant Huppert gracefully carrying it along.
As the film opens, legendary pianist André Polonski (Jacques Dutronc) is remarrying his first wife, Marie-Claire "Mika" Muller (Isabelle Huppert), a
chocolate
magnate.
Elsewhere, a budding pianist named Jeanne (Anna Mouglalis) is a wee bit thrilled to find that she may have been switched at birth with Polonski's son. She goes to see him, and is warmly welcomed -- but her suspicions are oddly stoked a she sees Mika deliberately spilling the hot chocolate. Tests reveal that (drumroll please) there was a sleeping drug in it. So why's Mika doing this?
As Jeanne is taught by Andre at his home, Mika continues to hang around acting weird. The young woman becomes more and more suspicious of Mika's past behavior, especially when Andre's son Guillaume (Rodolphe Pauly) tells her how his mother died. But Jeanne's suspicions may be putting herself -- and others -- in danger...
Often suspense movies are turned into thrillers, and the bad guy always acts sinister and practically has "Evil" stamped over his face. Fortunately Chabrol doesn't resort to cliches or shortcuts -- there's not a single dramatic crescendo, crazy camera angle or brandished knife in the entire movie. The characters don't even raise their voices.
Instead, Chabrol films the entire movie in a very understated way -- it's almost like watching a long home video. Lots of quiet, realistic scenes of understated conversation and unembellished camerawork, and rarely even a soundtrack except for the exquisitely-played "Funérailles." Even the setting -- amongst the refined moneyed in a large country house -- is kept unembellished. It feels like looking into another person's life.
But he's still able to build quiet, subtle tension that shows in a hundred tiny ways, and the inevitable climax -- while wonderfully suspenseful -- is no less quiet. And Chabrol also drops plenty of little unanswered mysteries along the way -- such as Jeanne's parentage, Mika's motives, and so on. Those with short attention spans will be quickly bored, but it's fascinating to see how realistic he made this.
Isabelle Huppert is undeniably the queen of this movie -- she's quiet, friendly and inscrutable, with a faint undercurrent of jealousy whenever Jeanne is around. Dutronc is almost as good as the friendly, world-famous pianiste who starts seeing cracks in his seemingly perfect life, while Pauly and Mouglalis both do solid jobs as the dissatisfied son and the bright young musician.
"Merci Pour Le Chocolat" is a refined, old-fashioned suspense movie that relies on the actors rather than Hollywoodized gimmicks. A small treasure, though not for those who need thrills and spills.
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A Fine psych thriller!
This film is a fine cup of dark
chocolate
, rich of suspense and bitter with calculation. The umpredictable turns of this plot and its cast had me writing down this movie on my wish list.
Optimal!
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