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Deep Water

1981 [FRENCH]

Crime / Drama

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Isabelle Huppert Photo
Isabelle Huppert as Melanie
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
868.29 MB
1280*766
French 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 34 min
P/S 2 / 5
1.57 GB
1792*1072
French 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 34 min
P/S 1 / 7

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by user-142-6326256 / 10

Eaux Profondus - brief

Classic French art-house mystery thriller for the wine n cheese crowd. Young trophy bride (Huppert) flirts and attracts numerous young swains. Husband warns each of possible consequences. Those who heed, flee. Those who abide, however ... Challenging in that the viewer never knows the relationship between husband and wife, or how much friends and neighbors (island of Jersey) turn a blind eye to Measured pace (for modern viewers, read slow) that delivers unexpected jolts. Warning, there is violence in this film, and it bursts seemingly out of nowhere. Jean-Louis Trintignant unforgettable as the multi-layered husband. Based on Patricia Highsmith (Ripley stories) novel.

Reviewed by morrison-dylan-fan10 / 10

"Spirit on the water, Darkness on the face of the deep."

After the earthy Neo-Noir Coup de torchon (also reviewed) exceeded all my expectations,I decided to see if lead actress Isabelle Huppert made any other titles in 1981. Always looking out for Patricia Highsmith adaptation since seeing The Talented Mr. Ripley in the early 2000's,I was thrilled to stumble on an adaptation with Huppert,which led to me dipping into the pool.

View on the film:

Drawing every guy with her gaze, Isabelle Huppert gives an entrancing performance as Melanie,whose flirting Huppert gives a relaxed nature to,which Huppert sharply balances by giving Melanie icy, Femme Fatale nails that scratch at Vic's attempt to stop Melanie getting her "toy."

Watching his wife make out, Jean-Louis Trintignant gives a wonderful performance as Vic,who initially acts just a bit too friendly towards everyone. Keeping the anxiety in the marriage simmering away, Trintignant shatters Vic's calm with a calculating Noir loner manner that uncoils as Vic gets Melanie's lovers in his grasp.

Backed by a deliciously brash Jazz score,co-writer/(with Florence Delay and Christopher Frank) director Michel Deville & cinematographer Claude Lecomte whirl Film Noir chic with the dazzling style of the Giallo. While Vic and Melanie hit a dark stage in their marriage, Deville lashes the screen in vibrant reds and Giallo yellow that give the title a sweet pulp atmosphere.

Cracking the relaxed shell of Vic, Deville hits the screen with ultra- stylised,scatter-shot whip-pans and razor sharp editing stabbing the murderous calculations Vic has made.

Swimming in Patricia Highsmith's novel,the screenplay by Delay/ Frank/Deville cleverly give the couple a "free love" appearance for the opening,which subtly pulls the viewers guard down. Slicing into the Noir decay of the marriage,the writers brilliantly burn layer by layer the facade Vic has made Melanie believe,as Vic sets his sights on the designated victim.

Reviewed by brogmiller7 / 10

Men about the house!

I think one can say without fear of contradiction that Patricia Highsmith was a deeply complex individual with more than her fair share of demons. Her spectacles were never rose-coloured and her gripping tales featuring deeply flawed, morally vacuous, sociopathic characters have proved to be manna from heaven for film directors notably Hitchcock, Clement and Chabrol.

This adaptation of her fifth novel 'Deep Water' is directed by Michel Deville.

This film slowly drew me in and held my attention although M. Deville's rather tasteful and measured directorial style would seem to lack the 'edge' required for this sort of material. Where it does have the advantage is in the casting of Jean-Louis Trintignant and Isabelle Huppert as Vic and Melanie. He is the outwardly complaisant husband and she is the notoriously flirtatious wife who rubs his nose in it. He resolves to kill one of her paramours but of course one murder is never enough.........

Trintignant, with his unruffled exterior concealing the turmoil within and Huppert with her combination of vulnerability and almost cruel impassivity, are tremendous and their dynamic is mesmerising. The supporting players alas are not up to much but mention must be made of splendid Sandrine Kljajic as their young daughter whose childlike innocence gives the film a balance. The relationship between father and daughter is beautifully drawn. In one scene his bedtime story is that of Samson and Delilah!

Deville utilises his favoured editor Raymonde Guyot and Manuel de Falla's Concerto pour Clavicin is cleverly employed.

The subtle ending with its family reconciliation is filmically effective but the author's original ending would have packed a far greater punch.

Deville must have felt deflated by the films failure to make an impact but he hit the bullseye four years later with his critically and commercially successful 'Péril en la Demeure'. Still tasteful but this time with an edge!

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