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L'enfer

  • 1994
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42min
NOTE IMDb
7,0/10
6,9 k
MA NOTE
Emmanuelle Béart and François Cluzet in L'enfer (1994)
CrimeDramaThriller

Paul et Nelly ont tout pour être heureux : un mariage de rêve et un hôtel qui ne désemplit pas dans un décor somptueux. Jusqu'à ce que Paul se mette à douter de Nelly.Paul et Nelly ont tout pour être heureux : un mariage de rêve et un hôtel qui ne désemplit pas dans un décor somptueux. Jusqu'à ce que Paul se mette à douter de Nelly.Paul et Nelly ont tout pour être heureux : un mariage de rêve et un hôtel qui ne désemplit pas dans un décor somptueux. Jusqu'à ce que Paul se mette à douter de Nelly.

  • Réalisation
    • Claude Chabrol
  • Scénario
    • Claude Chabrol
    • Henri-Georges Clouzot
    • Jean Ferry
  • Casting principal
    • Emmanuelle Béart
    • François Cluzet
    • Nathalie Cardone
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,0/10
    6,9 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Claude Chabrol
    • Scénario
      • Claude Chabrol
      • Henri-Georges Clouzot
      • Jean Ferry
    • Casting principal
      • Emmanuelle Béart
      • François Cluzet
      • Nathalie Cardone
    • 39avis d'utilisateurs
    • 39avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Photos76

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    Rôles principaux27

    Modifier
    Emmanuelle Béart
    Emmanuelle Béart
    • Nelly
    François Cluzet
    François Cluzet
    • Paul Prieur
    Nathalie Cardone
    • Marylin
    André Wilms
    André Wilms
    • Doctor Arnoux
    Marc Lavoine
    Marc Lavoine
    • Martineau
    Christiane Minazzoli
    Christiane Minazzoli
    • Mme Vernon
    Dora Doll
    Dora Doll
    • Mme Chabert
    Mario David
    Mario David
    • Duhamel
    Jean-Pierre Cassel
    Jean-Pierre Cassel
    • M. Vernon
    Sophie Artur
    • Clotilde
    Thomas Chabrol
    Thomas Chabrol
    • Julien
    Noël Simsolo
    Noël Simsolo
    • M. Chabert
    Yves Verhoeven
    • Young Boy
    Amaya Antolin
    • Mariette
    Jean-Claude Barbier
    • M. Pinoiseau
    Claire De Beaumont
    • Mme Rudemont
    Pierre-François Dumeniaud
    Pierre-François Dumeniaud
    • M. Lenoir
    René Gouzenne
    • M. Ballandieu
    • Réalisation
      • Claude Chabrol
    • Scénario
      • Claude Chabrol
      • Henri-Georges Clouzot
      • Jean Ferry
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs39

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    8dbdumonteil

    Maleficent obsession.

    Among all the directors labelled "nouvelle vague",Claude Chabrol was arguably the one who had more affinities with the precedent generation so despised by a lot of his sixties colleagues.And the generation before Chabrol included the genius Henri-George Clouzot.So,to film "les diaboliques"'s director lost screenplay,Chabrol was ideal.Both he and Clouzot mix detective stories,social satire and psychological studies. "L'enfer" might be one of Chabrol's finest achievements.François Cluzet,in a lifetime performance,portrays a jealous man-recalling Bunuel's hero in "El'(1952)-,but his jealousy verges on madness.Little by little,with small touches,we see this maleficent obsession grow like a cancer,destroying everything,his wife's sincere love(well played by Emmanuelle Béart),his personality,his job.And see how Chabrol masters space.At the beginning,the action takes place in a wonderful lake setting.Then we do not get out of the hotel owned by Cluzet,with its dangerous corridors .And in the final sequences ,the director confines his two characters to a doctor office or their bedroom. Cluzet's madness and its inexorable progression are masterfully shown too.First,only some gestures,some voice inflexions.Then he begins to follow her everywhere .Then come the hallucinations:the amateur movie projected onto a small screen in the restaurant is the film's apex and should be part of a Chabrol anthology.Interior voices obsess the unfortunate hero,and every time he looks himself in a mirror,he sees an irrational world,this world he lives in,this world he believes in.No longer able to communicate with the normal one,he forces the other ones (his wife being first in line)to enter his.And we are not sure,at the end of the movie,that Béart is not on the other side of the mirror too.

    Two private jokes: In the first sequence,Béart puts her hair in braids,and she resembles Vera Clouzot in "les diaboliques".When the young couple comes back to the restaurant after the wedding,the little accordion tune "les couleurs du temps" that you hear was written by Guy Béart,Emmanuelle's father a long time ago.

    NB.Clouzot's version,which he began to film circa 1963,featured Romy Schneider and Serge Reggiani.(although the film was never completed,it has a page on IMDb)
    Doctor_Bombay

    A man's own personal hell….

    Reality, or fantasy is the immediate question posed in Claude Chabrol's L'Enfer. The man who carries the mantel the 'French Hitchcock' Chabrol delivers a taut, bare to the bones thriller.

    When husband Paul (Francois Cluzet) begins to believe his beautiful, flirtatious wife Nelly (Emmanuelle Beart) is fooling around, his psychological demise is quick, and intense.

    Chabrol brings us the story primarily from Paul's point of view, leaving many of the ambiguities, as well as the uncertainties of this tale to our own imagination.

    From a script of Henri-Georges Clouzot (Diabolique, Wages of Fear) written in 1964, Chabrol updates the original (Clouzot never finished his version due to failing health, he died in 1977) giving it the contemporary setting and dialogue, but maintaining a style of presentation consistent with the thrillers of that era.

    I love this early exchange: Nelly: "You're following me, Paul." Paul: "Why would I, is there any reason?" Nelly: "No, but if you keep it up, there will be."

    Emmanuelle Beart shows why she is one of the world's great stars. American audiences have yet to have the best of Beart, who's English speaking debut (Mission:Impossible) seemed uneven, almost clumsy. But here she delivers on all cylinders: a beautiful seductress. Calculating? Unfaithful? We'll see.

    Highly recommended.
    7gavin6942

    Interesting Case Study

    Paul, an irritable and stressed-out hotel manager, begins to gradually develop paranoid delusions about his wife's infidelity. As he succumbs to green-eyed jealousy, his life starts to crumble. Each step on his downward spiral to madness seems to accelerate, driving him further along the path to a personal heck.

    The story was adapted by Chabrol from the screenplay by Henri-Georges Clouzot for the unfinished film "L'Enfer", which Clouzot began shooting in 1964 but was unable to complete. One has to wonder how it would have been different in the 1960s, but other than the film quality, it would probably be very similar... the plot is timeless.

    Both leads do an excellent job of being desirable and obsessive, respectively. Certainly an interesting film, and even though the concept is simple, it comes across as very effective and may be Chabrol's finest work.
    7antcol8

    Grand Guinol of Love

    Chabrol will always be Chabrol - sometimes less, rarely if ever more (maybe in La Femme Infidele...). But he's Chabrol, God bless him: love, lakes, bourgeoisie, jealousy, sex, meals, bonhomie, kids who appear and disappear, murderous thoughts, weird surrealism right before the end. You can set your watch by him. Emmanuel Beart is unbelievably sexy. And the film is a perfect illustration of some (dimly understood by me) Lacanian theories: sexual intercourse's dream of fusion is impossible, for example. Having possessed the ideal object, Cluzet knows that, in fact, one possesses nothing. Everything that makes Beart alluring also makes her dangerous in that she freely chooses...whatever she freely chooses. Freely choosing fidelity means that any moment you can freely choose infidelity. So a guy just can't win. That's why DeCordova in Bunuel's El (adroitly cited by another one of the readers here) pulls out the needle and thread. This film has none of the humor and acuity of Bunuel's neglected masterpiece. But it's Chabrol, and he's doing his thing. That ain't nothing...As a study of a man's descent from jealousy into madness, however, the film is powerful and well made but not super subtle.
    7nin-chan

    Enigmatic...?

    If this film represents a faithful adherence to Clouzot's original script, one would have to say that the story may be regarded as the absolute apex/exemplar of Clouzot's understanding of psychology. At the same time, L'Enfer is absolutely a Claude Chabrol film, and the fact that it rests comfortably in either canon attests to the lasting parallels between the two masters.

    As with all of Chabrol's foremost creations, this is incisive social commentary masquerading under the banal tag of "psychological thriller". Though the film can be enjoyed without any deeper engagement with or meditation on its themes of Othello-esquire obsession/jealousy, I think some thought will reveal it to be a far more rewarding film than a superficial viewing might suggest.

    Situating/contextualizing the film in Chabrol's vast corpus of work, one finds in "L'Enfer" another nightmarish journey into the hazards of bourgeois sterility. Though one might say that the work is naturalistic in some respects (the intense violence that simmers beneath the genteel exterior is revealed in his disdainful disparagement of the neighboring competition), that the overreaching, emotionally volatile and profoundly sensitive husband is particularly prone to this type of neurosis, the telling proclamation of "sans fin" that closes the film suggests that the narrative is not one of isolated particulars, but a general affliction, a self-perpetuating tragedy engendered by flawed social mechanisms.

    Throughout his career, Chabrol has been especially critical of the life-denying entropy and suffocating claustrophobia of bourgeois marriage, a plight where the insatiably voracious woman feels her haplessness and subordination most acutely. This, in some respects, might be his finest evaluation of marriage and erotic love in general. The tensions explored throughout the film are far from novel, again we bear witness to the irresolvable Romantic preoccupation, the desire to possess and identify with a subjective other. Again, as with "Les Bonnes Femmes", we see the carnivorous, destructive male principle, eager to subdue, asphyxiate, smother and ultimately devour irrepressible femininity.

    Yet lest we distance ourselves from Paul's evident psychosis, Chabrol implicates marriage as an institution endorsed by society at large. Note Paul's perverse, masochistic pleasure in fabricating these outlandish fantasies, particularly the wild reverie of Emanuelle Beart entertaining the entire hotel in the attic. Is this the only way to preserve erotic love in the nauseating ennui of marriage, to continually reinvent the Other and, through wild imaginings, make him/her a stranger so as to escape the concreteness of conjugal reality? On another level, the film might be read as an Adlerian representation of modern neurosis, of a nervous man who is inadequately equipped for the rigours of social expectation, whose overreaching demand for absolute order and unity invariably drive him to dementia and a flight from reality. Chimeras of success and masculine authority elude him, undermined by personal insecurities and a willful, independent wife. How then, does he compensate for his lack of control? Refuge in the sadistic alternate reality that he manufactures throughout the movie.

    Technically, this movie is almost immaculate, featuring outstanding performances (Emmanuelle Beart is a force of nature) and repeated viewings affirm that it is a movie of great understanding. I'm not sure if this review made any sort of sense at all, but at the end of the day all I can do is urge you to immerse yourself in "L'Enfer".

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Originally, the film was written by Henri-Georges Clouzot. He began filming in 1964, with Romy Schneider and Serge Reggiani in the main roles. Due to the health problems of Reggiani and Clouzot himself, he was never able to finish L'enfer (1964). Claude Chabrol acquired Clouzot's screenplay and adapted it, updating it for the 90s, for his version.
    • Citations

      [last lines]

      Paul Prieur: What's happening to me? What have I done? Let's see... we're about to go to the clinic... in Clermont. Both of us... but we're still here... just as before. "Just as before" what? I don't know anymore. I'm losing it. I just hope she don't pretend... I need to put my head in order. I need to be careful. I can't... I musn't... never again... No... Let's see...

    • Crédits fous
      The movie closes with a title that reads "No end".
    • Connexions
      References Revenge (1990)
    • Bandes originales
      Les Couleurs du Temps
      Music by Guy Béart

      Lyrics by Guy Béart

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Hell?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 16 février 1994 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
    • Site officiel
      • MK2 Productions (France)
    • Langue
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Hell
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Castelnaudary, Aude, France(street scenes: Paul follows Nelly)
    • Sociétés de production
      • MK2 Productions
      • CED Productions
      • France 3 Cinéma
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 39 003 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 9 736 $US
      • 23 oct. 1994
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 39 003 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 42 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby SR
      • Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.66 : 1

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