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The Flower of Evil (La Fleur du Mal) (2003)
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As the main titles run, director Claude Chabrol
delivers a long tracking shot, his camera arriving at a Bordeaux mansion, glancing first
at a maid setting the dinner table, then climbing the stairs and peering into the second
floor bedrooms. In one, a woman sits on the floor, her head cast down. In another lies a
bloody corpse.
The opening sets a mood of mystery that is thoroughly absent from
the rest of this, Chabrol's 50th film. While the prelude was set a generation ago, it's
events are disclosed rather matter-of-factly in the course of the film, the balance of
which takes place in the present. The house belongs to Aunt Line (Suzanne Flon), who,
years ago, was acquitted of the murder of her father (the main title scene), a Nazi
sympathizer who was involved in deporting Jews to the camps and worked against the French
resistance. Line also held her father responsible for the death of her beloved brother, a
member of the resistance.
In addition to Aunt Line, the present day household consists of her
niece, Anne (Nathalie Baye), a charming politician running for mayor of the town; her
second husband, Gerard (Bernard Lecoq), a womanizer and an entrepreneur with a pharmacy
and a (perhaps shady) medical lab; and Anne's daughter by a previous marriage, Michele
(Melanie Doutey), a college student.