Chaplin Collection 2 :Monsieur Verdoux
Image (1947)
Comedy
In Collection
#1652
0*
Seen ItNo
085393765224
IMDB   7.9
119 mins USA/English
DVD  Region 1   NR (Not Rated)
Marjorie Bennett Marie's Maid
Charles Chaplin Henri Verdoux
Isobel Elsom Marie Grosnay
Martha Raye Annabella Bonheur
Mady Correll Mona Verdoux, His Wife
Allison Roddan Peter Verdoux
Robert Lewis Maurice Bottello
Audrey Betz Mme. Bottelto
Ada May Annette
Helene Heigh Yvonne La Salle
Irving Bacon
Virginia Brissac
Claude Chabrol Himself
Hanns Eisler Himself
Norman Lloyd Himself
Director Charles Chaplin
Bernard Eisenschitz
Charlie Chaplin
Producer Marie-Laure Lesage
Martine Saada
Charles Chaplin
Writer Orson Welles
Charles Chaplin
Cinematography Roland Totheroh
Curt Courant
Musician Charles Chaplin

"The most extraordinary of all Chaplin's films." - Bosley Crowther, The Great Films: Fifty Golden Yeras of Motion Pictures

Henri Verdoux's business requires a lot of travel. His business involves wooing wealth spinsters, winning their confidence and bank accounts, then killing the hapless biddies before moving on to his next conquest.

Charles Chaplin turns his traditionally sunny sensibilities inside out with this sublime black comedy about a family man who secretly uses murder to support his beloved invalid wife and child. There's little of the immortal Tramp in Verdoux, yet the fastidious dandy is not lacking in comic graces. Most hilarious of all are the always-foiled attempts to dispatch the raucous Annabella (Martha Raye). When this most atypical Chaplin film opened, the world was not ready to look death in the face and walk away smiling. Today, Monsieur Verdoux ranks among Chaplin's best works. It is a killer comedy.
Edition Details
Distributor Warner Home Video
Release Date 3/2/2004
Packaging Keep Case
Screen Ratio Fullscreen (4:3)
Subtitles Chinese; English; French; Korean; Portuguese; Spanish; Thai
Audio Tracks SIL [English]
Layers Single Side, Single Layer
No. of Disks/Tapes 2

Features
Disc 01 Interactive Menus
Scene Access
Introduction by David Robinson - Chaplin's Biographer Discusses the Theatrical and Cinematic Context of the Film