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World Famous Comics: The Butcher
The Butcher
Starring: Stéphane Audran, Jean Yanne, Antonio Passalia, Pascal Ferone, Mario Beccara
Directed By: Claude Chabrol
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars
Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: DVD
Format: Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, NTSC
Label: Pathfinder Home Ent.
Number of Items: 1
Region Code: 1
Release Date: May 20, 2003
Running Time: 87 minutes
Theatrical Release Date: December 19, 1971

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The Butcher
List Price: $19.98
Used Price: $8.89
3rd Party New: $10.90
Amazon's Price: $17.99

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Editorial Comments

Product Description:
Le Boucher (The Butcher) is possibly Claude Chabrol's best known and critically acclaimed film. At a friend's wedding Helen meets Popaul (Yanne) an ex-soldier with combat honors from Algeria and Indo-China who has returned to his hometown and the family trade of butchery. The two are attracted to each other but Helene is reluctant to get involved as a previous lover has hurt her. Shortly after Popaul's arrival in town the body of a murdered girl is found. When Helene discovers a second victim and a vital piece of evidence that seems to link Popaul to the murders she reluctantly suspects her new found friend. Consistently taut with engrossing twists Le Boucher (The Butcher) is an intense and enthralling thriller. System Requirements:Run Time: 93 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: FOREIGN/LATIN Rating: NR UPC: 825307906295 Manufacturer No: PH90629

Amazon.com:
This 1969 masterpiece by Claude Chabrol is a high point of the French New Wave director's mid-career, as well as that of actress Stephane Audran, Chabrol's then-wife. Audran plays a lonely schoolteacher who develops an inexplicable draw toward an ex-army butcher (Jean Yanne) who may or may not be a serial killer plaguing a small town. Drawing on Hitchcockian themes of exchanged guilt and shared secrets, Chabrol constructs an extraordinary relationship between the two characters that marries unspoken self-awareness with constant suspense over the unresolved nature of their bond. The film becomes so responsive to their tiny, meaningful gestures, their pregnant silences, and the comic-tragic synchronicity of their insulated world that the mere blinking of an elevator light speaks volumes about the hell of privileged knowledge. Le Boucher returned Chabrol to the backdrop of the French provinces, which he had visited before in his debut, Le Beau Serge, and later in La Ceremonie. --Tom Keogh


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:4.50 out of 5.00 stars

5 out of 5 starsONE OF THE BEST FRENCH MOVIES.
The performance of Jean Yanne is breast taking. His female partner Stephane Audran is elegant, sensible, graceful. The Director, Claude Chabrol, is at the peake of his carrier.



4 out of 5 starsSuspenseful
This is the second Claude Chabrol-directed movie that I have seen. I wrote somewhat critically of the first one I saw, "Le Ceremonie", because of the many suggestions that I read about Chabrol being the "French Hitchcock". I did not feel "Le Ceremonie" was a suspenseful movie. I DO think that "Le Boucher" is suspenseful and there is a point in the movie where it is truly suspenseful. I felt that I got my money's worth with "Le Boucher" but, oddly enough, I came to see this film as more an influence of John Ford than Alfred Hitchcock. The extensive wedding scene that the film opens with, the elaborate dancing scene, the journey, all made me think of the standard elements of of a John Ford movie. I found myself reflecting on that as I was watching "Le Boucher" while still looking for a Hitchcock connection. Whether it's Ford, Hitchcock or, more appropriately, Chabrol that you're looking for, "Le Boucher" is a quality movie. It's a good example of Chabrol's quality as a director. I've found, after seeing two of his movies, that his specialty seems to be relationships and this movie definitely examines a relationship that gets rather strange.



4 out of 5 starsOne of Chabrol's best - just don't expect a thriller
Le Boucher/The Butcher is one that falls into the love it or hate it camp. Certainly by modern standards, Claude Chabrol makes little of his premise - smalltown schoolteacher Stephane Audran falls for smalltown butcher and serial killer Jean Yanne - either as a suspense vehicle or moral drama. There are occasional hints of something deeper in the butcher's descriptions of the atrocities he saw in Algeria and IndoChina and which he has brought home with him to the outwardly idyllic backwater and scene of his unhappy childhood, but they're just left for the audience to make the connections. As usual, Chabrol is more interested in milieu than the crimes themselves, and his sense of place and community is impeccable without being forced, as his direction. Although the script is fairly thin, it perfectly captures the way comparative isolation and lack of diversion brings people into each other's spheres more than burning passion (in fact, Yanne reveals that its her ability to calm his passions that makes her so special to him). And it's telling that the two characters never have a romance: they don't even share a kiss. It's more akin to a drawn-out old-fashioned courtship - it's just that one of them happens to be a serial killer.

One thing that is particularly striking is that way he is able to use long, unshowy takes (some lasting several minutes) simply because his actors are up to the challenge, giving the film an unforced, natural flow. There's imagination and striking imagery when required - the film's most tense moment takes place during a fade to black, while a night time drive takes on a disembodied quality - but he's not out to batter his audience with technique. Quietly impressive, but you may need to have lived in a small town to get the most out of it.

The Pathfinder NTSC DVD offers an acceptable but far from outstanding standards conversion transfer. Arrow's UK PAL DVD does offer a better transfer in a slightly cropped widescreen ratio, but contains no extras.



3 out of 5 starsWhere's the suspense?
Right away you know the killer and the explanation for his crimes, so it is all very predictable.



4 out of 5 starsInevitably, Bad Things Happen
Helene Daville (Stephane Audran) is the school mistress in Tremolat, a quiet village in the Perigord region of France. She's a confident, attractive woman who had a love affair ten years ago and who now has no desire to become enmeshed again. Popaul Thomas (Jean Yanne) is the village butcher. He spent 15 years in the army serving in Indochina and Algeria. He's seen things he doesn't care to talk about. At a wedding they meet and become friends. He is strongly attracted to her, and brings her presents of choice cuts of meat. She likes him, even cares for him in a way, but resists anything more intimate. Then young women are found butchered in the region.

This really isn't a mystery movie and it isn't a tedious psychological drama. The way in which these two people are drawn to each other is at once curious and intriguing. Is Helene a woman who will put herself in danger because she is able to feel so few other things? Is Popaul simply a man who wants more than he has or is he a serial murderer? If he is a murderer, on what levels is he guilty? How deep are the feelings and complexities within Helene as, at one point, she keeps hidden a piece of evidence that could point to the murderer?

I found the movie consistently involving but not one that had me either guessing or emotionally engaged. Audran and Yanne both give outstanding performances. Audran's character seems cool and in control, but she unexpectedly shows deeper feelings, especially when she is dealing with the students in her charge. Yanne looks a little like 80 per cent Mel Gibson and 20 per cent Andy Kaufman. Popaul comes across as an entirely competent man, able to handle whatever might come his way. But at the same time there is a wounded vulnerability about him that can create uneasy feelings. And for old car fans, Helene Daville drives a Citroen 2CV, a model no longer made. It was the French equivalent of the old VW, cheap to buy, reliable, and easy to fix if anything went wrong. It's so ugly a car it has great style.

I thought the movie was involving and well worth watching. The DVD transfer, while not bad, could have used some work.


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