M. le maudit (TV Short 1982) Poster

(1982 TV Short)

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6/10
M. LE MAUDIT (Claude Chabrol, 1982; TV) **1/2
Bunuel197620 May 2010
Though he is known as "the French Hitchcock", Chabrol has admitted to bearing an equal affinity with the work of another master – Fritz Lang. In fact, there were two explicit cases within his filmography to prove this point: the short subject under review – which is a condensation of Lang's sociological masterpiece M (1931) – and DR. M (1990), inspired by the "Dr. Mabuse" series of crime thrillers begun by the famously monocled Austrian auteur and continued by other hands. For the record, I purposely watched the latter a day prior to this one (see my review elsewhere).

To get back to M. LE MAUDIT, the film was included among the bountiful extras on Criterion 2-Disc Set of the Lang original (which Joseph Losey had already remade in Hollywood in 1951) – but, being overly familiar with it (it is in my all-time Top 10, after all!), I did not feel the urge to go through the entire package at this stage. By the way, the Chabrol effort was part of a series on French TV in which famous directors remade their favorite movies as a short; it would be interesting to know who else was involved and which titles they selected…

As for M. LE MAUDIT, I would say that someone familiar with Lang's film is liable to derive the utmost pleasure from it – not only to understand the plot fully (even if this has obviously been greatly streamlined) but to also identify the outright hommages. As such, it makes for a nice enough companion piece – the mere fact that it contrives to bring out the essence of a nearly two-hour movie in 10 minutes flat requires a certain skill of its own – but, of course, one could not sensibly compare it to either the 1931 or 1951 versions (nor, for that matter, with Chabrol's methodical approach to film-making amply exhibited in his features).

Incidentally, on the disc there is an accompanying interview to the short in which Chabrol amplifies upon Lang's unique qualities (his exacting pictorial style above all) and seems to be especially proud of having conceived a typically Langian shot for it which was actually not in the original!
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6/10
The most interesting aspect of this short . . .
oscaralbert9 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
. . . is the seven-minute directorial interview about it shot around 30 years later by the Criterion people for their two-disc set featuring Fritz Lang's 1931 feature film on Disc One and Claude Chabrol's 1982 French TV spoof of M and subsequent retrospective analysis on Disc Two (along with a lot of other, better done and more relevant stuff). Mr. Chabrol meticulously spells out the difficulties of replicating Mr. Lang's film-making geometry as he made his eleven-minute M spoof. Mr. Chabrol discovered that Mr. Lang had a sixth sense for timing, angles, and camera placement, which are almost beyond the ability of a less adept film director such as himself to duplicate. Many math teachers have estimated that the majority of this generation's math whizzes will never be "discovered," now that computers and graphing calculators have replaced pencil, paper, and creativity in math. (This is why a few lame-brains can "invent" scams such as bad mortgage derivatives or Bitcoin block-chains and bring the world to its knees: in the land of the gadget-blind, the one-pencil scammer is king!) Born film-making naturals such as Fritz Lang, Orson Welles, and Alfred Hitchcock are at least 90% less likely to emerge nowadays compared to the first half of the 20th Century, now that CGI and Green Screen short cuts have put unimaginative machines in charge of our entertainment (just as the machines have seized control of our math and money).
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An interesting experiment...
planktonrules31 October 2011
This is a very unusual film. It seems that back in the early 1980s, there was a French show in which various directors paid homage to great films by great directors by recreating shortened versions of the films. It's sort of like a 'Reader's Digest' condensation of a movie.

In this first film in the series, the famous French director of suspense films, Claude Chabrol, pays homage to Fritz Lang's "M". Using modern actors but black & white film and appropriate sets, Chabrol created this mini version that seems very much in keeping with the spirit of the original. It's not something that would appeal to most folks, but those who are familiar with "M" and love it, then this is an intriguing sort of film. Oddly, the final scene of Chabrol's homage shows the actual clip of the jury during the final climactic scene from "M". Overall, an interesting experiment.
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