No wonder many of Chabrol’s best films are clearly a part of, even as they take liberties with, the domestic-suspense genre. Les biches (1968) is a gender-flipped version of Patricia Highsmith’s The Talented Mr. Ripley, exploring female power and seduction. La rupture (1970), adapted from Charlotte Armstrong’s The Balloon Man, artfully examines a woman’s desperate bid to keep custody of her son away from her terrorizing in-laws, even as the pacing stops and starts in ways that throw off the traditional suspense trajectory.
To watch a Chabrol film is to feel your mind bend slowly, slowly, then all at once. Nowhere is this quality more apparent than in La cérémonie. Consider the opening scene, in which Sophie, the seemingly mousy maid, meets her prospective employer, Catherine Lelièvre (Jacqueline Bisset, ravishing as ever, her French melodious) at a diner. They discuss terms. Catherine seems to hold the upper hand. And then, flatly, Sophie says she earned a certain salary at her last job, can it be exceeded? And with that question, the power balance shifts. Sophie is somehow in control, even as she will wrestle with it over the course of the film, and lose it entirely.
Chabrol joked that La cérémonie was “the last Marxist film,” and its examination of class is first-rate. The Lelièvres—comprising Catherine; her husband, Georges (Jean-Pierre Cassel); his daughter, Melinda (Virginie Ledoyen); and her son, Gilles (Valentin Merlet)—live in sumptuous isolation, artlessly happy with one another and surrounded by high culture. Catherine owns an art gallery. The family spend their evenings watching opera broadcasts (though at one point they’re seen watching a clip from another Chabrol film, concurrently self-referential and ominous). Their collective crime is less about overt cruelty to the working class and much more about casual indifference, rendered visible as soon as Sophie walks in the door.
She cooks and cleans, and refuses to use the dishwasher. She hides at night, rapt in front of the television. And then Sophie is asked to perform a task that will require her to read. Her edifice cracks, her rage mounts, as she is unable to connect sounds and letters, and it becomes obvious to the audience that Sophie is illiterate. The scene jolts as much because of Bonnaire’s naked performance as its placement in the film: far too early to be a big reveal, but a pivotal revelation nonetheless.
Here is the first consonant moment. The vowel arrives when Sophie goes into the village on her day off and meets Jeanne for the first time. Jeanne, as Huppert plays her, is a whirling dervish, jettisoning norms that don’t apply to her, ruthlessly opening people’s mail (leading to a blowout argument with Georges, mutual hatred fully on display), a joy to behold precisely because she provokes extreme discomfort.
Jeanne’s palpable rage when Melinda discovers her in her broken-down car, effortlessly fixes it, asks for a tissue to wipe off the dirt, and then thoughtlessly throws it back in the car, narrowly missing Jeanne’s face—here is the unbridgeable difference between privilege and poverty, beauty and plainness, a sense of entitlement masked by generosity. Jeanne’s fury becomes ours as well, and it will unite in unholy matrimony with Sophie’s—exacerbated by her own tense interactions with Melinda, leading her to blackmail the girl over a secret pregnancy.