Diabolique (The Criterion Collection) | 
| Director: Henri-Georges Clouzot Actors: Simone Signoret, Vera Clouzot, Paul Meurisse, Charles Vanel Studio: Criterion Collection
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $21.93 as of 5/22/2012 02:34 MDT details You Save: $8.02 (27%)
New (39) Used (9) from $15.99
Format: Black & White, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC, Special Edition, Subtitled Languages: English (Subtitled), French (Original Language) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Discs: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Running Time: 116 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: IMEDCC2009D UPC: 715515070911 EAN: 0715515070911
Release Date: May 17, 2011 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Before Psycho, Peeping Tom, and Repulsion, there was Diabolique. This thriller from Henri‑Georges Clouzot (Le corbeau, The Wages of Fear), which shocked audiences in Europe and the U.S., is the story of two women—the fragile wife and the willful mistress of a sadistic school headmaster—who hatch a daring revenge plot. With its unprecedented narrative twists and unforgettably scary images, Diabolique is a heart-grabbing benchmark in horror filmmaking, featuring outstanding performances by Simone Signoret (Casque d’or, Army of Shadows), Vera Clouzot (The Wages of Fear), and Paul Meurisse (Le deuxième souffle, Army of Shadows).
Legend has it that Henri-Georges Clouzot beat out Alfred Hitchcock to secure the rights to this novel, which proved to be a veritable blueprint for an icy masterpiece of murder, mystery, and suspense. Véra Clouzot plays the sickly wife of a callous headmaster of a provincial boarding school going to seed, and the commanding Simone Signoret is the headmaster's mistreated mistress. Together they plot and carry out his murder, a brutal drowning that director Clouzot documents in chilly detail, but the corpse disappears, and a nosy detective starts sniffing around the grounds as threatening notes taunt the women. Clouzot's thriller is as precise and accomplished a work as anything in Hitchcock's canon, a film of grueling suspense and startling shocks in an overcast, gray world of decay, but his icy manipulations lack the human dimension and emotional resonance of the master of suspense. The film has been accused of being misanthropic by many critics, and Clouzot's attitude toward his characters is bitter at best, contemptuous at worst. The viewer is left on the outside looking in, but the razor precision and terrifying twists deliver a sleek, bleak spectacle worthy of attention. --Sean Axmaker
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