... aka: Malpertuis: The Legend of Doom House
... aka: Malpertuis: Histoire d'une maison maudite
Directed by:
Harry Kümel
After his ship docks for the night,
pretty boy sailor Jan (Mathieu
Carrière) hops off and
decides to go looking for his childhood home. He locates where it should
be, but it's now gone and so is his family. Getting a glimpse of a woman
off in the distance who looks like his sister, he follows her through the
streets and ends up in a rowdy pub / brothel. The girl he thought was his
sister is actually Bets (Sylvie Vartan), a sultry cabaret singer
and working girl. Two other men; Charles Dideloo (Michel
Bouquet) and Mathias
Crook (Daniel Pilon), have been trailing Jan ever since he left the
ship and make mention of him falling into their "trap."
Charles gets Sylvie's
boyfriend / pimp all riled up and a bar brawl ensues. Jan is struck over
the head and passes out. When he awakens, he's in a nautical-themed
bedroom... but he's finally found his long-lost sister Nancy (Susan
Hampshire), who's waiting by his bedside. Jan soon discovers he's
actually at his Uncle Quintin Cassavius' (Orson Welles) sprawling
mansion, which is called Malpertuis. Since he equates his uncle to the
Devil and the home to Hell, we know this isn't necessarily a good thing.
Cassavius is not a very nice man. He's cheap, rude, dirty, a huge glutton
(he eats an entire roasted pig in one sitting) and refers to the staff as
things like "miserable wretches" and "scavenging cows." He's also dying
and seems to spend most of his time lying in bed barking out orders. For
some reason, he's insistent on seeing his nephew Jan, who's not really
interested but finally caves when Charles, who turns out to be his uncle,
threatens to rape his virtuous sister! Cassavius tells Jan he wants him to
take his place and become "master of the world." Lots of other strange and
eccentric people occupy the home, including imbecilic, overly-sensitive
taxidermist Philaris (Charles Janssens) and the grubby Lampernist (Jean-Pierre
Cassel), who occupies a cell and is paranoid he won't have enough
light. Other than the above mentioned characters and the staff, Charles' wife Sylvia
(Dora van de Groen) and daughter Euryale (Hampshire again, in a red
wig), Nancy's lover Mathias and a trio of sisters; Eleonora (Jet
Naessens), Rosaria (Cara Van Wersch) and Alice (Hampshire
again, in a brown wig), all gather at the dying patriarch's bed to hear
his final wishes.
Cassavius splits the money evenly between everyone present, but there's
just one small catch. The money is to be distributed annually and, to
receive it, they must stay inside the Malpertuis grounds and never leave.
The last survivor will inherit the home and all that goes with it. If the
last two survivors are male and female, they must marry. Lawyer Eisengott
(Walter Rilla) is lurking around to ensure the heirs all play by
the rules. From that general set-up, this goes in all kinds of bizarre,
nonsensical directions. Jan falls in love with the ethereal beauty Euryale,
despite the fact she barely talks to him and refuses to ever look him in
the eyes. Nancy plans to flee the home with her lover but he's found dead
with a spike driven through his head. Alice, who is referred to as Alecto
by her cackling sisters, seduces both Charles and then Jan. When Cassavius'
tomb is opened, he's somehow turned into a stone statue. Distorted fetuses
are kept in jars, an eagle rips a guy apart, there's mention of Cassavius
wanting to create a "master race" of blonde haired, blue eyed people and
the greedy characters sit around counting their money and behaving like
mad men and women. The home itself is a strange place full of long
hallways, staircases leading up and down and tons of locked doors. Just
what's up with all the oddball characters? And what is the secret of the
home?
Malpertuis (first released in the U.S. as The Legend of Doom House)
was director
Kümell's follow-up to his acclaimed
arty-erotic lesbian vampire hit
Daughters of Darkness (released the same year). Despite being
well-produced and extremely nice from a visual standpoint, booking a showing at
Cannes in 1972 and having some internationally bankable name stars in he
cast, it was financially unsuccessful and didn't get near the attention
that Daughters did. After viewing it, it's easy to understand why. You ever get the impression
certain films are strange and random simply for the sake of being strange
and random? I couldn't tell you what point (if any) this was attempting to
make. It's even sandwiched with Alice in Wonderland references
(ending with a Lewis Carroll quote even) as if the whole point was to be
irreverent. Twists - one after another - are piled on during
the last 20 minutes; everything from elements of Greek mythology to the
standard "it was all just a dream" cop out, but after sitting through
nearly two hours of bizarre characters doing bizarre, nonsensical things I
found myself beat into such a state of complacency that I'd stopped caring.
This is a definitely a case where personal taste is going to dictate one's
enjoyment. Those who don't care a whole lot about a coherent narrative or
a stable grounding point will likely soak up what this has to offer.
Others are going to have a more difficult time with it.
I'm not sure how close this sticks to the
Jean Ray novel on which it is based, but if it's faithful I'd probably
have little interest in actually reading the book myself. On the plus
side, it looks great, the art direction and photography are both superb
and British actress Hampshire is extremely striking (enhanced by some
nicely subtle makeups) playing no less than five different roles.
Even though I was lukewarm on this one overall, I did love all the supplements on the Barrel Entertainment DVD. It
has interviews with the director (who also provides a commentary track),
Hampshire,
Carrière,
producer Pierre Levie and director of photography Gerry Fisher.
Kümel basically
says that Welles was a huge pain the ass to work with, was drunk the whole
shoot, had absolutely no respect for the other actors and gave the impression
he would leave the set at any moment if he didn't get his way; concluding
that the cast and crew actually celebrated once he finished his scenes and
left the set! Fisher adds that Welles told the director his main job was
to please him and he was a diva control freak who demanded things
be done on his way or else. Apparently, Welles insisted on doing his own
[they say terrible] makeup, demanded close-ups and stopped the shooting for extended lunch
breaks
whenever he felt like it, throwing them completely off schedule. The DVD also shows some behind-the-scenes footage from
the shoot which pretty much lend credence to these claims. The same
footage shows that the film was shot in English, though the version I
watched had been dubbed into French.
★★1/2
1 comment:
Welles could be a bombastic egoist when he wanted to be I guess! Some of his attitude may have been related to him making movies he really didn't want to. Anyway, I once almost saw Malpertuis in a theater years ago but it was in French with no sub-titles. Glad it's out on DVD.
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