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Les Diaboliques (1955, Fr.)
(aka Diabolique, or The Devils)
In French director Henri-Georges Clouzot's intriguing,
noirish psychological horror-thriller - one of the earliest films
to feature a shocking plot twist in its conclusion; the Hitchcockian,
Psycho-like film (with another crucial
bathroom sequence) with a complex murder plot, and the overarching
themes of hate, double-cross, revenge and greed, was adapted for
the screen from Pierre Boileau's and Thomas Narceja's 1952 novel Celle
Qui N'était Plus (She Who Was No More); the film was remade
as the R-rated erotic thriller Diabolique (1996), starring
Sharon Stone, Isabelle Adjani and Chazz Palminteri:
- the film opened with the title screens symbolically
displayed above the algae-infested, fetid waters of an unkempt
swimming pool, and a quote from Barbey D'Aurevilly:
"A painting is always quite moral when it is tragic and it
presents the horror of the things it depicts"
- the film's setting
was the run-down, all-boys Institution Delassalle Boarding School
in metropolitan Paris (in the provincial town of St. Cloud), where
a love triangle involved the three main characters (all heinous,
evil, and greedy in their own right) in the curving plotline
- the headmaster of the Parisian school was 34 year-old
Michel Delassalle (Paul Meurisse) - a despicable, miserly, tyrannical
and abusive schoolmaster who was cruelly mistreating his students
and employees; he was also involved in a physically-abusive affair
with his lover/mistress - the brassy science schoolteacher,
an icy cool-tempered, cropped blonde-haired femme fatale Nicole
Horner (Simone Signoret) whom he often beat (in the opening scene,
she had a black eye that was hidden by her sunglasses)
Christina "CriCri" Delassalle (Véra
Clouzot)
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Nicole Horner (Simone Signoret)
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Michel Delassalle (Paul Meurisse)
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- the film's point-of-view or perspective was from
Michel's also mistreated, downtrodden, humiliated, tormented and
"delicate" wife/Headmistress-Principal Christina "CriCri" Delassalle
(Véra Clouzot, director Georges Clouzot's real-life wife),
a devout ex-Catholic nun originally from Caracas, Venezuela with a
heart condition; Michel called his frail wife of eight years "a
cute little ruin"; the dark-haired, pig-tailed infantilized Christina
was the wealthy owner of the school; Christina knew of her husband's
destructive affair with his lover Nicole, but tolerated it; one of
the other teachers astutely observed: "The legal wife consoling
the mistress"
- in an early scene in the school's dining room, the
mean-spirited Michel made Christina chew and swallow stinking, rotten
fish served for dinner (expired food prepared by the
school's staff) in front of everyone: "Everyone
is looking at you. Swallow!"; once the dining room was cleared,
Michel approached toward Christina (off-screen) and presumably forced
sex from her
- during the suspenseful thriller (with a convoluted
murder plot), Nicole was finally able to convince her co-battered
friend Christina to join together with her to commit the perfect
yet sinister murder of their equally-despised tormenter Michel; during
a 3-day school vacation break that they took together to Nicole's
country apartment (in the isolated village of Niort over 400 km from
Paris), Christina and Nicole shared the one bed (the film's mildly-implied
lesbian sub-text); they lured Michel there by phoning him and having
Christina announce her sudden divorce plans for a legal separation
- later that evening, after Michel arrived by train
in Niort, they discussed her unhappiness in the marriage, and he
slapped her in anger; he was tricked by Christina into drinking alcohol
spiked with a sleep sedative before the two drowned him in the bathtub;
Nicole held down Michel's drugged body as the horrified and more
sensitive Christina stood by, but then went to the bedroom with heart
pains [Note: This was Christina's fatal mistake - she did not definitively
verify that Michael was actually dead!]
- the females concealed
Michel's bloated body in a large wicker trunk to drive it
back to the school the next day, but were nearly discovered when
a piece of string snapped on the wicker trunk as it was being dragged
with help from Nicole's upstairs neighbor M. Herboux (Noël Roquevert) to
their vehicle, and the corpse was almost detected
- as the two drove back, Christina worried: "We are
monsters. I don't like monsters," while Nicole replied: "If it's only
him, I feel better. I'll save the grain of sand falling from the
hands of providence for my morality lessons"; a hitch-hiking
drunken soldier (Jean Lefebvre) also made Christina anxious
when he kept insisting on getting into the back of their vehicle
- later that night as the two were dumping the weighted
body into the school's murky, scummy, neglected and unused swimming
pool, again they were almost discovered when a young boarding school
student named Pascual (Jean-Pierre Bonnefous) turned on an upstairs
bathroom light that illuminated the pool area
- the two females thought that the death would easily
be ruled a suspected drowning once the body surfaced, but Michel's
corpse didn't appear as expected; speculation was running rampant
about the missing Michel's unforeseen absence; to force the draining
of the pool, Nicole claimed she had accidentally dropped her keys
into the water; as the pool was being emptied by the school's groundskeeper-concierge
Plantiveau (Jean Brochard), the distracted and anxious Christina
was nervously teaching her math class nearby;
when Michel's body was not found, Christina fainted
in shock by the side of the pool
- the two uncertain and nervous co-conspirators began
to distrust each other, assign blame and make recriminating statements,
while they became guilt-ridden, fearful, and worried about the
possibility of being blackmailed by someone who had discovered their
secret; Christina blamed Nicole for promoting the murder: "I
was insane to listen to you"
- other tense, semi-supernatural and unusual situations
began to occur, suggesting that something had gone terribly awry
with the murder; Michel's gray, Prince of Wales
suit that he was wearing when he was drowned was mysteriously delivered
from the dry cleaners. A key found in the suit was identified as the
door key to Room # 9 in a nearby, rarely-used, fancy Eden Hotel residential
room. It had "no belongings, no bags"
and no one seemed to have ever seen Michel there; Christina also
found that charges for an unpaid bill two years earlier (shower repair
for 80,000 francs) had recently been paid from Michel's account
- once the remains of a naked
body were discovered off the school grounds in the Seine River, Christina
went to the morgue to verify its identity, but the body was not Michel's;
nosy, retired police commissioner and elderly, bumbling private detective
Alfred Fichet (Charles Vanel) became involved in the case when
he insisted that he could help Christina and locate her missing husband:
("If you'd like, we are both going to find your husband...don't
worry, I'll find him")
Private Detective Alfred Fichet (Charles Vanel)
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Detective Fichet With the Two Female Suspects
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- Christina and Nicole listened
as a student named Moinet (Yves-Marie Maurin) claimed to have
been recently reprimanded and punished by an 'unseen' Michel (and
ordered to rake dead leaves) for shattering a window with his slingshot
(that was promptly confiscated); teachers were known to often accuse
the fanciful-minded boy of lying and being a "mythomaniac":
(Nicole:
"You forget that this kid is a pathological liar"), and
now they doubted his account of the presence of the supposedly-dead
Michel; as he walked away, however, the boy affirmed his sighting: "I
saw him. I know I saw him"
- oddly though, a photograph
taken at the school seemed to show that the spectral figure of Michel
was standing in the window behind the students - was Michel still
alive?
- the fearful, unstable, paranoid and ailing Christina
was suffering from nightmares; in her bedroom, she confessed everything
to private detective Fichet and told him why Michel wasn't coming
back: ("You know he can't come back...because I killed him...five
days ago in Niort"); he was doubtful of her story due to help
she received from Michel's mistress Nicole; Christina was surprised
that Fichet didn't charge her with a crime, and told her to take
a strong sedative
- later that night, in the film's
plot-twisting conclusion, after wandering around the school building
and her apartment and getting spooked by strange noises and shadows,
the trembling Christina heard the sounds of a typewriter's keys;
down a long hallway and into Michel's office, she found a piece of
paper in the typewriter with multiple "Michel Delassalle"'s
typed on the page, with Michel's gloves nearby. [Note: A similar
scene was in The Shining (1980).]
Zombie-Like Michel Resurrected in the Bathtub -
and Removing His Fake Eye Lenses From His Eyes
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- as she screamed and raced away, she was lured into
her bathroom, and unexpectedly found Michel's corpse in the bathtub;
the sight caused her (and the audience) to have a fright-induced
heart attack, when Michel slowly rose zombie-like out of a bathtub,
fully clothed, with half-opened, glazed all-white eyes; Was it revenge
beyond the grave?, or a tremendous double-cross; she clutched
her chest in the vicinity of her heart, and her eyes rolled back
as she fell against the wall behind her; she slid to the floor where
she collapsed and slumped over dead
Christina's Fright-Induced Heart Attack
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[Note: The scary bathtub scene was imitated in The
Shining (1980), Fatal Attraction (1987), and What
Lies Beneath (2000).]
- the major twist was that Michel was never killed
by them - he had faked his own death - with collaborative help by
Nicole - so that Christina could be induced into having a fatal heart
attack
- afterwards, Michel popped the fake eye lenses from
his eyes, exited the tub, and perfunctorily checked Christina's
arm for a pulse; after unlocking the apartment door, Nicole rushed
into his arms for embraces and kisses; their plan had been to become
rich by selling the "fire-trap" school that he would inherit
from his deceased wife (Michel: "Wasn't it worth it? Now, we're
rich. Just by selling the school, we'll get a lot")
- the film's initial conclusion was that the pair of "Diaboliques"
weren't Christina and Nicole as previously assumed, but Nicole and
Michel; in the denouement, the two gloating co-conspirators
were immediately arrested by Fichet - who overheard them talking
about their plotting, and predicted their prison term ("between
15 and 20 years in jail")
- in the film's resolution the next
day as the school was closing due to the scandalous news, there was
another dizzying reversal regarding the fate of Christina. The confused,
truth-telling or lying (?) schoolboy Moinet, the same one who had
earlier broken a window, declared that Christina had just given him
back his confiscated slingshot which he had used to break a second
window that morning ("She's not dead. She came back")
- the film's last line as he walked away to again stand in a
corner for punishment for lying was: "I saw her. I know I saw
her." (translated)
- the film viewer was left pondering this additional
integral question: Had the retired detective Fichet and Christina
devised their own scheme (off-screen) to fool both Nicole and Michel?;
it was highly likely that the school-boy - who hadn't really lied
the first time about Michel's continued presence - also wasn't lying
this second instance when he declared that Christina was still alive
- the film's unique, one of the first of its kind, end-credits 'anti-spoilers'
director's statement advised viewers to keep the film's ending a secret (two translations):
- "Don't be devils. Don't ruin the
interest your friends could take in this film. Don't tell them what
you saw. Thank you for them."
- "Don't be diabolical yourself. Don't spoil the
ending for your friends by telling them what you have just seen.
On their behalf - Thank you!"
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Institution Delassalle (Boarding School)
The Two Plotting Females - (With a Lesbian Sub-text)
Christina Ordered by Michel to Swallow Rotten Fish Served for Dinner
at the School
A Spiked Drink Offered by Christina to Michel
Michel's Forced 'Murder' (by Drowning) in Bathtub
Dumping the Body Into the School's Swimming Pool
The Pool Was Drained - But No Body Was Found
The Discovery of a Body in the Seine River - Not Michel's!
Schoolboy Moinet (Yves-Marie Maurin) Claiming He Was Punished by the
Principal For Breaking a Window With His Now-Confiscated Slingshot
"I Saw Him, I Know I Saw Him"
The Principal Seen in the Background of a School Class Portrait
Nicole and Christina Worried About All the Strange Happenings
Christina's Fear of Sounds and Shadows in the School Building
The Typed Page with Multiple "Michel Delassalle"'s
in Michel's Office
Michel Briefly Checking Christina's Pulse for Heartbeat
The Two Scheming Lovers After Christina's 'Death'
Nicole and Michel Arrested by Fichet
Schoolboy Moinet Claiming to Have Seen Christina After
Her Supposed Death ("I saw her. I know I saw her")
Director's Anti-Spoiler Statement
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