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Monsieur Verdoux - Der Frauenmörder von Paris

Originaltitel: Monsieur Verdoux
  • 1947
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 50 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,8/10
20.097
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Monsieur Verdoux - Der Frauenmörder von Paris (1947)
A suave but cynical man supports his family by marrying and murdering rich women for their money, but the job has some occupational hazards.
trailer wiedergeben1:40
1 Video
55 Fotos
Schwarze KomödieSerienmörderDramaKomödieKriminalität

Ein freundlicher aber zynischer Mann unterstützt seine Familie, indem er reiche Frauen heiratet und ermordet; der Job birgt jedoch einige Berufsrisiken.Ein freundlicher aber zynischer Mann unterstützt seine Familie, indem er reiche Frauen heiratet und ermordet; der Job birgt jedoch einige Berufsrisiken.Ein freundlicher aber zynischer Mann unterstützt seine Familie, indem er reiche Frauen heiratet und ermordet; der Job birgt jedoch einige Berufsrisiken.

  • Regie
    • Charles Chaplin
  • Drehbuch
    • Charles Chaplin
    • Orson Welles
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Charles Chaplin
    • Mady Correll
    • Allison Roddan
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,8/10
    20.097
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Charles Chaplin
    • Drehbuch
      • Charles Chaplin
      • Orson Welles
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Charles Chaplin
      • Mady Correll
      • Allison Roddan
    • 104Benutzerrezensionen
    • 85Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Oscar nominiert
      • 6 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:40
    Trailer

    Fotos55

    Poster ansehen
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    Poster ansehen
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    Topbesetzung99+

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    Charles Chaplin
    Charles Chaplin
    • Henri Verdoux - Alias Varnay - Alias Bonheur - Alias Floray
    Mady Correll
    Mady Correll
    • Mona Verdoux - His Wife
    Allison Roddan
    • Peter Verdoux - Their Son
    Robert Lewis
    Robert Lewis
    • Maurice Bottello - Verdoux's Friend
    Audrey Betz
    • Martha Bottello - His Wife
    Martha Raye
    Martha Raye
    • Annabella Bonheur
    Ada May
    Ada May
    • Annette - Her Maid
    • (as Ada-May)
    Isobel Elsom
    Isobel Elsom
    • Marie Grosnay
    Marjorie Bennett
    Marjorie Bennett
    • Her Maid
    Helene Heigh
    Helene Heigh
    • Yvonne - Marie's Friend
    Margaret Hoffman
    • Lydia Floray
    Marilyn Nash
    Marilyn Nash
    • The Girl
    Irving Bacon
    Irving Bacon
    • Pierre - Carlotta's Husband
    Edwin Mills
    • Jean Couvais
    Virginia Brissac
    Virginia Brissac
    • Carlotta
    Almira Sessions
    Almira Sessions
    • Lena Couvais
    Eula Morgan
    • Phoebe Couvais
    Bernard Nedell
    Bernard Nedell
    • Prefect of Police
    • (as Bernard J. Nedell)
    • Regie
      • Charles Chaplin
    • Drehbuch
      • Charles Chaplin
      • Orson Welles
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen104

    7,820K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    8movedout

    "Presents incongruities to an agreeable monster..."

    Considered in some circles as Chaplin's crowning performance. It's a clever and earnest study of a man, a survivalist in a world gone the way of a corporate jungle. It also becomes incredibly relevant now in its take on the ruthlessness of capitalism and harshness of being part of a civilised society. Take allegory on its face value, Chaplin's Henri Verdoux is a bluebeard, who marries middle-aged women for their money and disposes of them through incinerators or "liquidates them" as he prefers to call it. His actions are driven by a need to care for a young child and an invalid wife who look up to him, as he keeps from them his retrenchment from his post as a bank clerk. He sees no difference in murder as he does in business. There's an inconsolable sadness throughout the film. Despite the gags, and wit teeming within its situations and characters, all roads lead to despair. The cold reach of its cynicism is daunting as it is bleak.

    The film presents incongruities to the calculatingly agreeable monster by showing an aging man whose waning pride demands attention, and a hopeless romantic who surmises that he's a singular creature in a cold, inhuman world. The film then shows how arctic and precise he is when it comes to murder, how meticulous he is when he plans and how efficient he is when it comes to counting francs - cue the sight gag.

    His articulation is almost borne out of being made to play different roles, the confidence he exudes to charm these women into marriage are just facets of Verdoux's intelligence. Above all, he assumes he knows how these women think and what they truly are. His misogynistic tendencies towards women who are self-sufficient is in clear contrast to his wife, who he adores and the ingénue in the street he picks up halfway through the film who restores his faith in humanity when she turns out to be an optimistic but kindred spirit.

    With the film's final minutes, Chaplin indicts big business within the film's context of being in the Great Depression. He uses this opportunity to verve into anti-war criticism, a keenly placed insight being released just a few years after the end of the second World War. Insisting he's nothing but an amateur compared to the murderers behind war and business machinations, he uses the furious revolutions of the wheels of a train to show like in like many of his silents, that he's nothing but a cog - always turning to the tune of the corporations.
    9AlsExGal

    Probably Chaplin's best sound film...

    ... not that he made that many of them.

    Chaplin plays Henri Verdoux, a man who goes about marrying and then killing upper middle class middle-aged women for their money and property. If he was known to be around at the time of their death, he disposes of their bodies in such a way that they will never be found. If he was not known to be around, then he doesn't bother to dispose of their bodies and just takes the cash he needs with him, leaving like he was never there.

    It's awhile before it is revealed that Verdoux was what we now call "laid off" from his job at a bank after 30 years during the Depression that gripped Europe after WWI and as a result of that he is on a tear, married to multiple soon to be murder victims at a time, in order to provide for his actual crippled wife and child and eventually retire from this sordid business.

    You never actually see Chaplin do any violence. That would just be too stunning of an image. So everything is insinuated, such as him disposing of the property of a recently deceased wife while the incinerator out back has been going full steam for three days. Martha Raye plays one of Verdoux's more annoying and lively wives, and if you think she is too good of a comedienne for Verdoux just to visit and abruptly kill her, you'd be right. His near attempts are hilariously disrupted, including one attempt that is stopped by a group of yodlers with binoculars. Will he eventually be successful? I'd say watch and find out.

    In the parts of the film where Chaplin combines action, slapstick, and dialogue, the production is outstanding. At the end where he relies more on dialogue alone, I wouldn't say it drags, but I would say it is a bit "off". I get that Chaplin is trying to compare the furor that is created over the murder of a dozen people by a serial killer to society's indifference over millions dying as a result of war or famine, but I think the rather sentimental one liners he throws out blunt and muddle his message considerably.
    7bkoganbing

    Far from the Little Tramp

    As Charlie Chaplin put it when the tramp finally talked in The Great Dictator the magic was gone. Chaplin felt he had to come up with another character in order to continue his career and he got away from the lovable Little Tramp as far as he could with Monsieur Verdoux.

    A whole lot of people were shocked when Monsieur Verdoux came out and instead of the Tramp we got a Bluebeard murderer. Black comedy was not a genre popular in the USA at that time and a lot of people hated this film. None more so than Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper who as a good conservative Republican cheered on the coming blacklist and beat the drums for Chaplin's deportation. No accident that Chaplin was hauled before the House Un-American Activities Committee at the time Monsieur Verdoux came out.

    Based on the famous French mass criminal Henry Desire Landru, Monsieur Verdoux tells the story of a bank clerk who lost his job and to support his family started marrying and murdering rich women. Verdoux keeps quite a schedule because he's marrying several of them at the same time. But always returns to wife Mady Correll and son Allison Roddan.

    Funniest marriage is to Martha Raye who not only is he unsuccessful in killing, she nearly does him in on a couple of occasions strictly by accident. That raucous laugh might elicit sympathy from a jury if anyone ever heard it and was condemned to live with it even part time.

    With the marriage to Raye comes the film's funniest sequence Chaplin trying to kill Raye when they were in a boat on a lake in Switzerland. It will not escape your attention that the sequence is borrowed from Theodore Dreiser's An American Tragedy which was already filmed in 1931 and would shortly be filmed again in 1951 as A Place In The Sun. Ironic indeed how the same plot gambits can be played for laughs or deadly serious.

    Second funniest is Raye showing up at Chaplin's wedding to Isobel Elsom whom he has targeted. It forces him to leave her at the altar not knowing at that time how lucky she was.

    Truth be told some of Chaplin's left wing political views are grafted into the film somewhat forcibly. It's what got Hedda Hopper's undergarments in such a twist. Still this an amusing film and not fairly judged by a lot of people at the time it came out.
    9blanche-2

    Brilliant black comedy with a very serious message

    Charlie Chaplin is "Monsieur Verdoux" in this 1947 film based on the real-life serial killer Henri Landru. Verdoux is a bank clerk who is laid off late in life and turns to marrying and killing women for their money in order to support his invalid wife and child. Sounds brutal, and when you think about it, it really is, but Chaplin as usual manages to couch his message in comedy. While we see that he is successful in knocking off a couple of women and getting their money (though we never actually see a murder), Verdoux has a couple of failures as well, and there the fun begins. One of his women, Annabella Bonheur, is played hysterically by Martha Raye as a vulgar loudmouth eternally suspicious of Verdoux, who is posing as a boat captain. He tries some different ways of killing her, but no matter what he does, nothing works. He then turns his attention to another woman he's been chasing for some time, Marie Grosnay (Isobel Elsom). He's about to walk down the aisle when who does he see as a guest at the wedding - Annabelle. His attempts to get out of the house are priceless.

    Despite some genuinely comical scenes, the speech that Verdoux makes gives its deeper message - Verdoux was in it for the money. To him, the women were business propositions to be exploited. His point is that what he has done on a smaller scale is being done by dictators worldwide; people are not treated as human beings but merely for economic gain, for power and for exploitation. Though Verdoux's argument doesn't absolve him of responsibility or justify his actions, the warning is a good one - people need to care more about each other and about what's going on in their world, and put their attention on really important matters like suppression of the masses. Why, he asks, are the headlines full of Verdoux and not of what is going on around the world? (The film's ending takes place in 1937.) It's interesting to consider what would have happened to this story in the hands of Orson Welles, whose idea it was originally. He wouldn't have made it a comedy. It would have been a drama or a detective story. Only Chaplin would think of making the story of a serial killer into a comedy of sorts. Certainly 1967's "No Way to Treat a Lady" takes a page or so from this script.

    "Monsieur Verdoux" wasn't well received by the public - at all - and by 1947, people were questioning Chaplin's politics instead of reveling in his genius. It possibly was ahead of its time; it certainly wasn't appreciated as it is today. The movie is not without some problems, the biggest one being, what the heck happened to Verdoux's wife and child? It is never explained.

    "Wars, conflicts - it's all business. One murder makes a villain; millions a hero. Numbers sanctify." Charlie Chaplin as Verdoux said that 61 years ago.
    8gavin6942

    Chaplin's Finest Sound Film?

    A suave but cynical man (Charles Chaplin) supports his family by marrying and murdering rich women for their money, but the job has some occupational hazards.

    This film is brilliant, because it is not just entertaining, but also has a strong message. On the surface, it is a man who marries women and kills them in order to get their money. This in itself makes for a good film (and is somewhat risqué for the 1940s). But then, it is also a metaphor for society -- capitalism, imperialism, war... Chaplin takes on the Great Depression and the war industry.

    Most people know Chaplin for his silent films and tramp character, but he really became a strong filmmaker in his later years. This film, along with "Great Dictator" and "King in New York" are among his best works. It is a shame that for whatever reason he is not remembered for the second half of his career.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Verdoux's quote "One murder makes a villain; millions a hero" is taken from the abolitionist Bishop Beilby Porteus (1731-1808).
    • Patzer
      When Monsieur Verdoux states the area of the house being sold he mentions the lengths in feet. As the film is set in France, he should have used meters.
    • Zitate

      Henri Verdoux: Wars, conflict - it's all business. One murder makes a villain; millions, a hero. Numbers sanctify, my good fellow!

    • Alternative Versionen
      The West German theatrical version was cut by approximately 15 minutes.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Schwer verliebt (2001)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 6. Juni 1952 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Instagram
      • Official Site
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Französisch
      • Latein
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Monsieur Verdoux
    • Drehorte
      • Lake Arrowhead, San Bernardino National Forest, Kalifornien, USA
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Charles Chaplin Productions
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 2.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 64.636 $
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 65.718 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 50 Min.(110 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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