L'Ange noir

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
L'ange noir
L'ange noir.jpg
Directed byJean-Claude Brisseau
Written byJean-Claude Brisseau
Produced byJean-Claude Brisseau
StarringSylvie Vartan
Michel Piccoli
Tchéky Karyo
CinematographyRomain Winding
Edited byMaría Luisa García
Music byJean Musy
Distributed byUGC
Release date
1994
Running time
95 min
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

L'ange Noir (English: The Black Angel) is a French drama film directed and written by Jean-Claude Brisseau.

Plot[]

Stephane is a woman married to a judge. She kills the legendary gangster Aslanian with the help of her maid. She was having an affair with Aslanian yet she pretends not to have known him and tells the police that she killed him because he raped her. The police arrest Stephane.

Her magistrate husband arranges for a top lawyer, Paul, to defend her. Paul starts looking into her past and discovers that Stephane had a criminal past and was once a prostitute who appeared in pornographic films with Aslanian. Paul falls in love with Stephane and continues to defend her even though he knows that her story of rape is a lie.

Stephane is being blackmailed by someone who threatens to reveal her past. Paul negotiates with the blackmailer's lawyer and arranges a meeting to pay the blackmailer's demands. There, Stephane finds her daughter Cécile, who is the blackmailer and had become Aslanian's lover.

Stephane is aquited and released. At the party celebrating her aquital Stephane walks out on her husband, her guests and her life, to a waiting taxi. Cécile follows her to the taxi and shoots her.

The voice over at the end of the film tells us that Paul has been disbarred, Stephane's maid has left, and Cécile was given a suspended sentence. Stephane's husband has retired and Cécile now manages their estate.

Cast[]

Production[]

The film was heavily influenced by other movies, including The Paradine Case (1948), Vertigo (1958) and The Letter (1940).[1]

Reception[]

The film was poorly received critically and commercially.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ a b "Anti-Social Realism: Jean-Claude Brisseau" By Frédéric Bonnaud, Film Comment accessed 19 December 2014

External links[]

Retrieved from ""