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Women's Business
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15218 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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8 / 1989 |
1,021 Words |
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David Howard David Howard writes on the arts and lives in Washington, D.C. |
It somehow seems bizarrely fitting in the year when the bicentennial of the French Revolution is being so enthusiastically celebrated that French film director Claude Chabrol has chosen to make a film about the last woman in France to be executed by that revolutionary instrument, the guillotine.
Une Affire de Femmes (Women's Business) is not a particularly easy or appealing work, given that the protagonist, played by Isabelle Huppert, was condemned as an abortionist during the dark days of Vichy France under the German occupation.
Presented at last year's Venice Film Festival, the subject matter of the film--still clearly a highly charged issue--provoked the explosion of a tear-gas bomb in a Paris movie theater, causing one man to die from a heart attack while trying to escape. It premiered this spring in the United States at New York's Museum of Modern Art in a series devoted to the film's producer, Marin Karmitz. Since then it has played only at Washington, D.C.'s, annual Filmfest.
Like many of Chabrol's films, Une Affaire de Femmes is provocative. The story is rich in moral ambiguities. Marie, the character portrayed by Huppert, is a working-class housewife who becomes an abortionist almost inadvertently, when a friend pregnant by a German soldier comes to her for help in desperation. Although Marie performs her first abortion acting out of a humane instinct, she is latter shown performing abortions for money, earning increasingly large fees for this illegal activity.
Recklessly, Marie rents out a room to a neighborhood prostitute and
... (1999 of 5982 Characters)
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