Claude Chabrol | - L--enfer -1994-
★★★★½ (4.5/5) Where to watch: Currently available on Criterion Channel and select boutique Blu-ray releases.
Paul’s mind begins to poison itself. He starts tracking Nelly’s movements, timing her arrival and departure from the post office. He becomes convinced that she is having an affair. Despite a total lack of evidence, his suspicion hardens into certainty. Claude Chabrol - L--enfer -1994-
One of the most discussed aspects of L’Enfer is its refusal to conform to the “femmefatale” or “martyr” archetype. In many films about jealousy (from Othello to Possession ), the woman is either destroyed or revealed as a saint. Chabrol denies us that closure. Nelly is never proved innocent or guilty. The film suggests that fidelity is not an objective fact but a belief . Paul does not need evidence of adultery; he needs the possibility of it. That possibility is infinite and more destructive than any proof. ★★★★½ (4
The narrative quickly shifts as Paul’s success becomes the catalyst for his ruin. Key stages of his descent include: The Male Grasp in Claude Chabrol's “L'Enfer” | Medium He becomes convinced that she is having an affair
To understand L’Enfer , one must first acknowledge its ghost. In 1964, the legendary French director Henri-Georges Clouzot ( The Wages of Fear , Diabolique ) began shooting his own version of L’Enfer with Romy Schneider and Serge Reggiani. Clouzot’s film was to be a radical, psychedelic exploration of jealousy, using surreal colors, distorted lenses, and expressionist sets to visualize a husband’s paranoid delusions that his wife is unfaithful. After three weeks of shooting, Clouzot suffered a heart attack, and the film was abandoned. It became the holy grail of unfinished cinema, inspiring documentaries and film studies for decades.