The Bridesmaid | 
enlarge | Director: Claude Chabrol Actors: Benoit Magimel, Laura Smet, Aurore Clement, Bernard Le Coq Studio: First Run Features Category: DVD
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Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 33786
Format: Color, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Subtitled), French (Original Language) Rating: Unrated Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 110 Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: D912549D UPC: 720229912549 EAN: 0720229912549 ASIN: B000LPS4FC
Theatrical Release Date: 2004 Release Date: March 20, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW, Factory Sealed items direct from the Studios. 30 Day Satisfaction Guarantee. Quick International Airmail!
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Amazon.com A lean, elegant, and venomous thriller, The Bridesmaid is less concerned with sneaky plot twists than with slithering under your skin. A young man named Phillip (Benoit Magimel, The Piano Teacher), who's been pouring all his energy into his job, meets a lovely young woman named Senta (Laura Smet, Gille's Wife) at his sister's wedding. Lured in by Senta's beauty and obsessive passion, Phillip finds himself sinking into Senta's strangely out-of-synch world--and her unsettling demands. Director Claude Chabrol is justly famous for his sinuous thrillers (such as La Ceremonie and La Fleur du Mal) and often called the French Hitchcock, but Chabrol's suspense is very different from Hitchcock's. Chabrol unpeels the layers of Phillip's mind--for example, Chabrol spends as much time on the young man's relationship with his mother as on his affair with Senta, grounding the story firmly in Phillip's psyche. As a result, when Phillip struggles to hold onto Senta, the unstable emotions are as suspenseful as a ticking bomb. --Bret Fetzer
Description It's love at first sight when bridesmaid Senta falls into the life of a handsome young Phillipe at the wedding of his younger sister. As their passion for one another intensifies, Phillipe slowly discovers that Senta is shrouded in mystery.When one day she asks Phillipe to performa a terrible deed as proof of his love for her,Phillipe must come to terms with who his lover might really be.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
Possibly Chabrol's best film... March 25, 2008 ...full stop.
"La Ceremonie" was arguably too Nietzschean and morbid for its own sake. Its portrayal of class arguably too obvious and reductive.
In "The Bridesmaid," Chabrol delves into familiar French terrain -- the amour fou -- and genuinely gives it new life. The film is utterly masterful in its understated use of the medium, absolutely ingenious in the way it burrows into one's subconscious.
With the thematic use of the bust of Flora, the film tips its cap to Truffaut's "Jules and Jim," and in more ways than one. Henri-Pierre Roche penned his tale of romantic obsession in his seventies. Chabrol, now himself in his seventies, has given us his own febrile, darkly humorous story of love gone mad, with an Oedipal twist. In terms of mastery of style and sophistication of storytelling and content, I'd say that "Le Boucher" and "Les Bonnes Femmes" are the only legitimate competition in Chabrol's oeuvre.
Claude Chabrol Directs Ruth Rendell Thriller Again September 19, 2007 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
[The following review includes mild spoilers.]
French veteran director Claude Chabrol takes up again Ruth Rendell's thriller (after his terrific "Judgment of Stone" made in 1995). "The Bridesmaid" is equally atmospheric, but less unpredictable and intense than his previous Ruth Rendell adaptation.
The plot of "The Bridesmaid" revolves around young Philippe, honest and slightly timid man played by Benoit Magimel with his pitch-perfect acting. Phillip loves his mother and two sisters, is a hard-working person and trusted by his boss. He is an ordinary man quietly living in a rural city of France.
But everyone has an obsession of some sort and Phillip has one. He hides it from his family, but he secretly loves "Flora" - I won't tell what she is, though that's no secret from the beginning, implying the desire in the seemingly quiet character of Philippe.
But one day his obsession changes to something more dangerous when he encounters a girl named Senta (Laura Smet), one of the bridesmaids at his sister's wedding, and falls passionately in love with her. And Senta asks him to do four things for her to prove his love, which Philippe does not take seriously at first.
I won't reveal the content of her peculiar request here, but one famous Hitchcock thriller would come to your mind if you know the content of Laura's request. Anyway Chabrol cleverly inserts shots that suggest something weird and bizarre during the episodes that apparently describe the mundane daily life. Stories of Philip's mother and her new lover or his sister's marriage are introduced casually, but they all play significant roles later. The film's opening scenes about the news report of a missing girl and unconcerned attitudes of Philippe's sisters to the news are also a nice touch.
I know opinions divide here, but in spite of the deft camerawork and impressive acting, I couldn't find myself drawn into the world of the film. Maybe that's because Philippe's obsession with "Flora" didn't work in the script ("Flora" should look like Senta, but this fact is not stressed enough). Or maybe that's because the lack of mystery on the side of Senta, who is certainly enigmatic, but the truths about her character are too transparent.
I am not saying the film is a bad thriller. It is a solid thriller that wraps up neatly, but not with the nerve shattering climax of "Judgment of Stone" which I prefer to this one.
Nice Dress September 5, 2007 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Claude Chabrol does not need to be compared to Alfred Hitchcock. His cinematic view of family obligation, obsession in everyday life, and cliche rituals (such as weddings) stands on its own. Right before it totally creeps you out. The story of the good son, the good brother, the good guy who becomes an accomplice in the dark deeds of a bridesmaid who resembles Flora, Botticelli's goddess of Spring, begs the question: Which came first, his obsession or the object of his obsession? Chabrol's commentary is a must see, and an added bonus to the film.
Chabrol's Newest Intrigue Puzzle, but One with Missing Pieces July 8, 2007 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
The films of French Cinema master Claude Chabrol have been some of the quirkier, intelligent, strange, and creative works to come out of France (La Fleur du mal, Merci pour le chocolat, Au coeur du mensonge, Rien ne va plus, La Ceremonie, L'Enfer, Madame Bovary, Dr. M, etc). His works are marked with sinister underpinnings and his technique has been to place his characters in situations that challenge them to behaviors they consider bizarre until they understand the core of their somewhat deranged personalities. LA DEMOISELLE D'HONNEUR (THE BRIDESMAID) succeeds as a art work on so many levels that the viewer is inclined to forgive some of the dangling missing pieces in character and plot development that prevent this film from being Chabrol's finest. The setting, pacing, cast and concept are intriguingly seductive: that is enough to make the film work well.
The Tardieu family is in the midst of preparing for the wedding of one daughter Sophie (Solene Bouton), learning to accept the new love affair of the mother Christine (Aurore Clement) to a wealthy newly divorced man Gerard (Bernard Le Coq), becoming used to the edgy antisocial behavior of daughter Patricia (Anna Mihalcea), and all the while being cared for by the successful contractor son Philippe (Benoit Magimel). On the television is the report of a murdered young woman and the disruption of a television show frustrates the obsessive Philippe in his work to keep the family focused. We jump to Sophie's wedding to nerdy Jacky (Eric Seigne) whose cousin Stephanie "Senta" Bellange (Laura Smet) is the bridesmaid of the title. The strange but sensuous Senta captures Philippe's eye and a rather torrid love affair begins. Senta is passionate and makes Philippe agree to four demands to prove he loves her: the last two (killing someone/anyone) and having sex with a same sex partner) jolt Philippe but he throws his usual caution to the wind and proceeds with the pairing. A homeless man who lives at Senta's grimy cellar lodging door repulses her, and when a police report that the man has been found dead, Philippe falsely 'confides' to Senta that he is responsible. Senta then promises to kill Gerard as her half of the bargain: Gerard has avoided Philippe's mother and Philippe feels animosity toward anyone who would disturb his beloved mother. The plot thickens, then boils: the 'murders' change from reality to mistaken identity to heinous ends. Philippe has become immersed in Senta's madness, leaving an ending that remains 'in media res'.
Chabrol leaves strange clues scattered about for the astute eye to discover, at times in retrospect, and it is this trait that makes the story so fascinating. The cast is superb, with Benoit Magimel proving that his success in 'The Pianist' was not a fluke. He is a gifted actor and maintains an electrifying screen presence. This may not be Chabrol's best film, but it is twisted enough to keep the viewer tensely focused on the very strange story and on the complexly interesting set of characters in this very French film noir! Grady Harp, July 07
Best Chabrol film in 9 years June 1, 2007 19 out of 20 found this review helpful
Chabrol here tackles obsession, and does it masterfully. This is really the story of two obsessed people, not one. One's a man and one's a woman, and each somehow instantly recognizes in the other, upon first meeting, that they are kindred spirits.
It's easy to see this recognition and also easy to see the obsessiveness in each. Senta--incredibly sensual--is, one realizes fairly quickly, a storyteller, a pathological liar. Philippe is obsessed with his mother and with the stone bust of what appears to be a Roman goddess. If the viewer looks closely--VERY closely--it's not hard to see that the faces of the goddess, Senta, and Philippe's mother are all very similar. At one point in the film, he kisses the stone bust on the lips. Is this normal? I think not. In fact, near the beginning of the film, we are amazed to find that the somewhat older woman whom Philippe obviously appears attracted to and whom he physically relates to, in the outside world, as one would a lover, is in fact his mother. This is definitely not normal behavior.
The pacing here is flawless. Chabrol is, one could say, the undisputed master at probing relentless behavior founded on obsession, and here he is really in his element, as he was in his last truly great film, La Ceremonie. While The Bridesmaid still does not have the astonishing intensity and depth of the 1995 film, it is nevertheless a terrific piece of work that never takes a false step.
The DVD is graced with a nice (text) interview with Chabrol, as well as with a short but telling on-the-set featurette. In the interview, Chabrol notes that one of the key elements of any good thriller is a corpse. This does turn up in The Bridesmaid, but in a startling--even shocking--way, as the viewer will see.
Very highly recommended and a welcome return to the pleasures of Chabrol the master of psychological obsession and its dire consequences.
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