Demoniac (1957) Poster

(1957)

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8/10
Dance with she-wolves
dbdumonteil11 May 2008
Aside from Hitchcock's "Vertigo" and Clouzot's "Diaboliques" which are still unsurpassed,the best adaptation of a Boileau-Narcejac novel for the screen.Whereas the two masters completely rewrote the stories,the screenplay of " les Louves" was reworked by the novelists themselves .

This is an absorbing suspense from the railroad tracks at dawn where you've got to watch out for trains going nowhere to that house in the country where the hero feels that he is fading little by little .

Two prisoners of war escape from a camp.One of them has a soldier wartime woman pen friend he wants to marry ,a person he never met.But he dies and his pal takes his name (impostors have always played a prominent part in thrillers:to name but two ,both William Irish ("I married a dead man" ) and Patricia Highsmith( "The talented mister Ripley" )brilliantly succeeded ).When he arrives in the "Marraine de Guerre" 's home,the plot thickens.It seems that the woman's sister knows more than she should.And his own "sister" Julia is coming any day know.How will he be able to go on lying and pretending he is someone he is not? Luis Salvsky has a dream of a cast ,his four leads being part of the creme de la creme of French actors:François Perier as the unfortunate victim who will discover that there's much more worse than a prisoners camp;Micheline Presles as his pen friend,prepossessing,but isn't it strange that a woman takes a man she's never met before to be her husband?Jeanne Moreau as Presles's sister,a sensual woman,who enjoys séances in the dark where she reveals things better left unsaid;and to top it all,Madeleine Robinson ,as the dead soldier's sister ,who welcomes the impostor as "her dear little Bernard" .

This fabulous quartet takes the film out on a level of stratospheric intensity.Often filmed in close shots,their faces are like disturbing masks.Their eyes are always telling lies and the viewer,caught with them in a devilish trap,needs a breath of fresh air after the last sequence,to be avoided by people suffering from claustrophobia.

This is another fine French film noir of the fifties,when the genre was thriving before the new wavelet butchered it.
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6/10
True friendship and fake love
esman1214 February 2023
A forgotten French noirish crime movie. Wicked, delusive and hopeless are the adjective that depict « Les Louves » the best in my opinion. After the accidental death of his friend Bernard with whom he escaped jail, Gervais steals his identity and meets Hélène, a woman who corresponded with Bernard but who never got to meet him, as well as her sister Agnès. Manipulation and deaths will follow. The plot has a really good potential but it felt like the climax could have been more intense for this one. The voluntarily slow pace is not a problem since it directly contributes to its confined atmosphere, with the trap closing on the prey little by little... The great performances from Micheline Presle and François Périer should also be highlighted. I would describe this movie as a lesser-known cousin of "Les Diaboliques", which was actually written by the same duo : Pierre Boileau and Thomas Narcejac.
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10/10
"The fish are as wary as the people here."
morrison-dylan-fan17 September 2018
Warning: Spoilers
After a wonderful sighting of the British Film Noir Faces in the Dark (1960),fellow IMDber dbdumonteil told me about another Boileau-Narcejac adaptation. Aware of this film a few years ago, (but not of it being a Boileau-Narcejac movie) I had been unable to see it,due to there being no English Subtitles around. With a poll coming up on ICM for the best films of 1957,I decided that for the first time since seeing all of Isabelle Huppert's 1981 credits, I would watch every 1957 Jeanne Moreau title,which led to me discovering that Eng Subs had recently been made,that gave me the chance to finally see this Boileau-Narcejac tale.

View on the film:

Pouring blood on the tracks as Larauch and Pradal's friendship hits the rails, co-writer/ director Luis Saslavsky is joined by Night is Not For Sleep (1958) cinematographer Robert Juillard in making these two POW's escape to a Film Noir hell hole, where the sound of Occupying Nazi troops bellows down the streets as they kill those out during the curfew, and attempts later by Larauch to create a new image of himself are shattered by the cold glances from the locals in panning shots down the shop registers. Welcoming Larauch to the Vanaux household, Saslavsky unveils the family mansion with a rich Gothic Noir atmosphere, lit in tightening close-ups layered with deep shadows that gives the inhabitants a haunted death face appearance.

Giving this title a personal quality by adapting their own novel (with Saslavsky)Thomas Narcejac & Pierre Boileau highlight their distinctive characteristics in a gripping fashion, as the supernatural (but not horror) visions of Agnès keep Larauch haunted by the past, whilst struggling to forge a new mask. Keeping Larauch the lone male voice of the household, Boileau-Narcejac turn the " Woman's Picture" inside out via spectacular, subtle dialogue tugging at the Film Noir poison sisters Hélène and Agnès glaze themselves in, and ambiguity being strung by the arrival of Larauch's calculating "sister" Julia.

Calling Larauch back to his past like a siren,Jeanne Moreau gives an enchanting performance as Agnès, whose trance-like state is whipped up by Moreau to heighten Femme Fatale mistrust from all who catch her gaze. Visiting for a family reunion, Madeleine Robinson gives a magnetic performance as Julia, who enters with such a laid-back manner Larauch openly wonders how she has not called him out, until Robinson allows Julia's mask to slip. Fighting to change the track his life is on, François Périer is incredibly intense as Larauch, hit by the fear of Film Noir loneliness that he can never truly escape his dirt-poor past. Wrapping Larauch round her little finger, Micheline Presle unleashes Hélène as an icy Femme Fatale, which cracks the mild-manner, thin smile of her mask,to reveal the fangs of the she-wolves.
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