Woman in Chains

Woman in Chains

1968106 min
6.9/10
DramaRomanceThriller

Plot Summary

Gallery director Stanislas bolsters the development of modern art with his collection of surprising works. His newest acquisition is a sculpture by Gilbert, whose wife Josée is captivated by Stanislas. But unbeknownst to her, Stanislas is amassing photographs of a very perverse, disturbed nature.

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🎬 Demo Trailer

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👥Cast (28)

Laurent Terzieff

Laurent Terzieff

Stanislas Hassler

Bernard Fresson

Bernard Fresson

Gilbert Moreau

Elisabeth Wiener

Elisabeth Wiener

Josée

Dany Carrel

Dany Carrel

Maguy

Claude Piéplu

Claude Piéplu

Le père de Josée

Noëlle Adam

Noëlle Adam

La mère de Josée

Germaine Delbat

Germaine Delbat

La gérante

Michel Etcheverry

Michel Etcheverry

Surgeon

No Image

Annie Fargue

Character

Daniel Rivière

Daniel Rivière

Maurice

Gilberte Géniat

Gilberte Géniat

La patronne de l'auberge

Darío Moreno

Darío Moreno

Sala

🎬Crew

Director

Henri-Georges Clouzot

Writers

Marcel Moussy, Henri-Georges Clouzot, Monique Lange

Producers

Robert Dorfmann

🖼️Gallery (5 images)

Woman in Chains backdrop 1
Woman in Chains backdrop 2
Woman in Chains backdrop 3
Woman in Chains backdrop 4
Woman in Chains backdrop 5

💬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

6/3/2023

This has quite a complex plot from which we start even before Henri-Georges Clouzot stars messing with our heads... Laurent Terzieff ("Stan") is a wealthy, somewhat voyeuristic gallery owner/photographer who has oddly passionate - yet physically sterile relationships with women. Elisabeth Weiner (Josée) is a woman, married to an unfaithful artist, who becomes enthralled by Terzieff and is soon completely under his control as she tries to construct a television documentary about him and his art. There is a languor to the delivery of this story; but that lends to the wonderfully potent sense of sexual frustration; ambiguity and uncertainty. The characters are pretty unpleasant, it has to be said - especially the rather venal, ambitious husband "Gilbert" (Bernard Fresson) but that only contributes more to the essentially disturbing nature of this drama. Though clear at the start, by the rather confused (and weak, I found) conclusion we are really not too sure who is controlling whom, and why and it does rather surrender to the more basic emotions that now rob it of the intellectual "terror" it worked so hard, and cleverly, to establish. I ought to add, too, that some of the artwork featured is truly spacial, colourful and adds significantly to the mood of this work.

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