Product Details
Comedy of Power

Comedy of Power
Directed by Claude Chabrol

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Product Description

The latest thriller from French New Wave veteran Claude Chabrol opens with a tongue-in-cheek claim that it does not depict real events, even though it’s timely and provocative account of corporate and political corruption was inspired by a real-life scandal involving a French oil giant and several top-level politicians. The stunning and accomplished Isabelle Huppert (I Heart Huckabees) stars as Jeanne, a tenacious magistrate known as "the piranha" of the judiciary system, who puts her personal life on the back burner to pursue white-collar criminals with their private hands in public pockets. After gaining fame for locking up an embezzling CEO, Jeanne pushes the limits of her intoxicating power further than ever and winds up isolated in a dangerous game of threats and intimidation.

"The strongest film in years from this great French director [Chabrol]… features a sensational performance by Isabelle Huppert" – Stephen Holden, The New York Times


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #73339 in DVD
  • Brand: KOCH ENT.
  • Released on: 2007-05-08
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: French
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
  • Running time: 110 minutes

Features

  • Inspired by the "Elf Affair," an Enron-like scandal in France.Jeanne, a tenacious magistrate known as "the piranha," pursues corrupt white collar criminals. After locking up an embezzling CEO, she pushes the limits of her power even further and winds up in a dangerous game of threats and intimidation. DVD Extras: Theatrical Trailer Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: FOREIGN R

Customer Reviews

flawed but worthwhile 3
***1/2

In November 2003, after a sensational trial that rocked the Republic of France for four scandal-soaked months, three key executives of that country's ELF oil company were found guilty of massive corporate malfeasance on a scale not seen in Europe since the turbulent days of World War II. The graft, money laundering, and granting of political favors for which these men were convicted extended into the upper reaches of the government as well, so the scandal served a concomitant salutary purpose of finally laying bare that nation's long-established practice of state-sponsored corruption.

"Comedy of Power" is famed director Claude Chabrol's very fictionalized take on the ELF scandal. Yet, while most of the names and many of the details have been changed or even fabricated for the movie, the themes and concerns are obviously very much in keeping with the spirit of the actual event. The always mesmerizing Isabelle Huppert plays a no-nonsense judge who is unrelenting in her pursuit of corporate corruption, obsessed with bringing the culprits - no matter their position or standing in the community - to justice. Refusing to buckle under to pressure from (equally corrupt) higher-ups who believe she is going too far in her investigations, Judge Jeanne Charmant-Killman zeroes in on her "victims," refusing to let go until she gets what she wants. Chabrol and Huppert together create a woman of conviction and strength who, nevertheless, knows her limitations and can even acknowledge what a strain her single-minded determination is placing on her personal life and marriage (whether or not she chooses to do anything about it is another matter).

It`s true that "Comedy of Power" feels a little underdeveloped at times, and the somewhat inconclusive and lackadaisical ending may well leave some in the audience feeling dissatisfied and cheated. For while there is a certain bravery in not succumbing to the need for a pat resolution, the movie leaves us wanting to know more about how everything turns out in the end. Yet, despite this drawback, this is an interesting, and, at times, even gripping little drama that gives us a chance to watch a beautiful, dynamic actress in action. It is Huppert's multi-layered portrayal of a moral crusader who is also very much a flawed and vulnerable human being that rivets our attention and helps us wade through all the arcane trivia of the corporate-world plotting. Chabrol keeps the film moving at an expeditious pace, with a tasty mixture of both humor and suspense thrown in for good measure. But it is in the confrontation scenes between Huppert and her various high profile targets that the film truly engages our attention.

In addition to Huppert, Chabrol has elicited uniformly sharp performances from Francois Berleand, Patrick Bruel, Marilyne Canto, Robin Renucci and Thomas Chabrol (the son of Chabrol and the great actress Stephane Audran). As an ensemble, these gifted performers bring the larger issues into focus while keeping us thoroughly engrossed and entertained at the same time.

Chabrol's best since La Ceremonie.5
Claude Chabrol has never been one of my favorite "New Wave" directors. His dissections of bourgeois hypocrisy can be a little dry. But he does have the tendency of pulling a magic rabbit out of his hat just when you least expect it, and The Comedy of Power is one such rabbit, a film that seems to be part of an unofficial trilogy including Scorsese's The Departed and Eric Rohmer's Triple Agent. What connects all these films is a profound sense of the smoke and mirrors of modern existence, behind which lies a deeply repressed but no less tangible Catholicism. Call it "The Quiet Apocalypse of the Old Masters."

Isabelle Huppert, probably the best actress to ever appear in films, scores yet again as fraud investigator ( "magistrate" ) Jeanne Charmant-Killman, though she might as well have left out the "Charmant" as she goes about her business with the icy sadism of a Robespierre with breasts. The first shot of her says it all -- sticking her tongue all the way out of her mouth to eat some sushi, like some kind of freckly redheaded iguana. Huppert also modulates her voice to sound froggier and throatier than usual, a way for her to cut out any inflections that her prey might mistake for sympathy. Let's just say Huppert has no equal when it comes to portraying amphibians and lizards.

Because Jeanne leaves no doubt that she enjoys ruining lives, especially when those lives seem fuller and richer than her own. The first of her victims, who we see taken down in a marvellous tracking shot, is Mr. Humeau, who has been misappropriating funds, buying clothes for his mistress, etc. It's never quite clear what it is that these businessmen are up to, their world seems to be that of a pyramid structure with no one at the top, where each and every one of them can be eliminated in an instant. One minute they're in a hotel lobby sipping on the best champagne, discussing a colleague's downfall, and the next they've landed in Jeanne's jaws as well.

Jeanne, however, is by no means as smart or as powerful as she thinks. It is strongly suggested that her natural female vanity is being used to manipulate her. While she convinces herself that she is out to reform France of scandal -- "I don't care about the image of justice, just justice!" she trumpets self-righteously -- she takes orders from some invisible authority just like everyone else. She destroys only who the powers-that-be decide they want destroyed. Therefore, one guy gets pinched for oversplurging on caviar, while another openly boasts about handing out $800,000 in payola and gets off scot-free ( "Peanuts," he says. ) This last and seemingly invincible bigwig, by the way, explains himself by saying "Secret defense" -- the translator renders it stupidly "For your protection" or something like that -- referring to the title of Jacques Rivette's magisterial 1997 film, probably the first to deal with the Christian metaphysics of overarching corporate evil and the upcoming megadeath.

Jeanne, who seems like the central character, quietly becomes just another cog in a world of cogs, as the script becomes more and more spectral. She is given a new office in an effort to mellow her overzealous researches, and gets herself an expensive haircut. When she still pushes too hard and refuses to stay within her appointed role, she just gets fired, and that's that. Chabrol, with the aid of a script that masterfully evokes late Henry James, perfectly captures a modern world where just having the right address book makes the man, and where everyone only has as much information as they need to hang themselves... Power is everywhere, but the center of power is nowhere.

At the end, Jeanne stumbles dazedly out of a hospital muttering cryptically, "There's more dirt on the left and the right than you think." Pay particular attention to the final line of dialogue, which lifts the movie out of the minutely realistic and into the Last Judgment, as Chabrol pans to a landscape of frostbitten trees indicative of the billions now trapped in the pyramid of power, tricked into selling their immortal souls for a nonexistent future.

Chabrol meets Prime Suspect4
As a fan of Claude Chabrol's darker psychological masterpieces like Les Bonnes Femmes, Les Biches, La Femme Infidele, Le Boucher, La Rupture, Wedding in Blood, Innocents with Dirty Hands, Masques, Cry of the Owl, La Cermonie and Flowers of Evil I have to say that I found Comedy of Power to be insightful as an examination of "power" and the various forms it takes but ultimately lacking some of the punch of Chabrol's darker signature works.

In fact I found Comedy of Power to resemble the much-heralded British mystery series Prime Suspect (which stars Helen Mirren) more than I found it to resemble Chabrol's other works. Like the British series, Comedy of Power focuses not so much on specific crimes but on the masculinist culture of both corporate and police work. In Prime Suspect Helen Mirren must not only battle the lawbreakers but also the lawmakers who are not always interested in accomodating female intrusions into what they see as a traditionally male practice. Similarly, Isabelle Huppert as Jeanne Charmant-Killman battles not just corporate greed in Comedy of Power but male resentment of her success on both the personal and professional fronts. Chabrol is interested in looking at the way power changes people, how it affects their self-image, their perception of reality, their values, and the way they treat others. At first we think that the focus will be on the offenders but soon we realize that the focus is on Jeanne Charmant-Killman herself. In the course of the film Huppert prosecutes several greedy corporate embezzlers and with each success she gains even more public notoriety. But as her notoriety increases her focus narrows and she begins prioritizing her life according to her need for more and more of that professional success. As a result her personal life suffers. So, like many of Chabrol's other films this too is a tale of marital betrayal but here the betrayal is not sexual but an addiction to "power" and a very specific kind of power, the kind that allows her to feel empowered by disempowering men.

Huppert is certainly fascinating to watch as she evolves into a creature that rejects the company of any man that is not subordinate to her. Therefore her favorite male companion is her bright but ambitionless nephew "Felix" (played by Claude Charbrol's son, Thomas). Felix in many ways is like Jeanne in so far as he looks upon the world dispassionately. Jeanne and Felix are reminiscent of many other characters in Chabrol's films who seem not to have any or desire any emotional involvement with anyone. Therefore it makes perfect sense that Chabrol should be interested in the way that this psychopathology plays out in the professional world.

Fascinating film. I prefer Chabrol's films that deal with the dark nature of desire but this one is defintely a valuable addition to Chabrol's already impressive catalog (he's made about 70 films).