"La Rupture" ,
(it's based on a novel by Charlotte Armstrong), and Stephane Audran as
the wife and Jean-Pierre Cassel as the investigator are both terrific.
Of course, you may think Chabrol's decision to treat such a serious
subject as domestic violence purely as a thriller a little tasteless but
fundamentally this isn't really a film about domestic violence at all
but an almost Dickensian study of evil; the bourgeoisie parents are
distinctly rotten, the investigator even more so. If the film were more
'realistic' it might be unbearable; there's a scene of potential child
sex abuse, and the child is mentally handicapped, that is almost too
bizarre to be really disturbing and the film gets very bizarre towards
the end. However, even with its convoluted plot it works superbly both
as an outright thriller and as a scathing indictment of a highly amoral
society.
is one of Claude Chabrol's most devastating critiques of the
bourgeoisie and it's one of his finest films. It's about a working wife
and mother fighting for custody of her small son after the boy's
drug-addicted father has attacked them, only to find her husband's rich
parents have hired a sleazy, corrupt investigator to destroy her
reputation. The film isn't flawless; there are too many extraneous and
eccentric characters but the main plot is beautifully handled
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