The Breach (film)

The Breach (French: "La Rupture") is a 1970 film written and directed by Claude Chabrol, based on the novel The Balloon Man by Charlotte Armstrong. The film was also known as The Breakup at times in its release in the United States.[2] The film had a total of 927,678 admissions in France.[3]

The Breach
DVD cover
La Rupture
Directed byClaude Chabrol
Screenplay byClaude Chabrol
Based onThe Balloon Man
by Charlotte Armstrong
StarringStéphane Audran
Jean-Pierre Cassel
Michel Bouquet
Annie Cordy
Music byPierre Jansen
CinematographyJean Rabier
Edited byJacques Gaillard
Distributed byGaumont Film Company
New Line Cinema
Release date
  • 26 August 1970 (1970-08-26)
Running time
111 minutes
CountryFrance
Italy
Belgium
LanguageFrench
Box office$5,566,068[1]

Plot

Hélène Régnier's (Audran) mentally ill husband Charles (Drouot) injures their son, Michel, in a violent rage. Hélène beats Charles to the floor with a frying pan, flees and starts divorce proceedings. Charles moves back in with his wealthy and manipulative parents, who never approved of his marriage and are determined to secure custody of Michel. While the boy is recovering in a local hospital, Hélène moves to a boarding house nearby. The Régniers hire Paul Thomas (Cassel), an impoverished family acquaintance, to find damaging material on Hélène to help them secure custody. Paul moves into the boarding house and, with the help of his girlfriend Sonia (Rouvel), plots to ruin Hélène's reputation.

Principal cast

ActorRole
Stéphane AudranHélène Régnier
Jean-Pierre CasselPaul Thomas
Michel BouquetLudovic Régnier
Annie CordyMme. Pinelli
Jean-Claude DrouotCharles Régnier
Jean CarmetHenri Pinelli
Catherine RouvelSonia
Claude ChabrolUn passager dans le tramway

Critical reception

Vincent Canby of The New York Times:

La Rupture, with a screenplay adapted by Chabrol from a novel by Charlotte Armstrong, has so many beautiful things in it that I'm tempted to suspect some terrible weakness in myself, rather than the film, for the feeling of depressed impatience it left. Perhaps not... There is also another problem with the frame of the film: the disadvantages and indignities are piled so thickly on the poor heroine that one knows early that the film is obliged to offer her vindication. Otherwise it has no shape. That her vindication is achieved at a high price isn't surprising or touching enough to transform the melodrama of La Rupture into tragedy.[4]

Dave Kerr of The Chicago Reader:

One of the key films of the 70s, La Rupture is Claude Chabrol's most audacious experiment with narrative form — a modernist reworking of the melodrama (1970)... The “rupture” of the title belongs to the narrative, which begins with clear black/white, good/evil distinctions and then gradually self-destructs, breaking down into increasingly elliptical and imponderable fragments. Highly recommended.[5]

References

  1. "La Rupture (1970)- JPBox-Office". Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  2. "La Rupture (The Break Up) (The Breach) (Hallucination)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2011-08-23.
  3. JP (1970-08-13). "La Rupture (1970)". JPBox-Office. Retrieved 2011-09-03.
  4. Canby, Vincent (1973-10-05). "Movie Review - La Rupture". Movies.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2011-08-23.
  5. Kehr, Dave. "La rupture". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 2011-08-23.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.