Le Boucher (1970)

Le Boucher (1970)

Le Boucher movie storyline. In the village of Tremolat, Périgord, the lonely headmistress Helene befriends the local butcher Popaul at the wedding party of her colleague, Leon Hamel. In spite of their friendship, they do not become lovers as Helene is still recovering from the disillusionment of her last relationship.

On Popaul’s birthday, Helene gives him a lighter as a gift. During the excursion with her class to a cave in the woods, Helene finds the latest victim of a serial killer that is stabbing young women in the area. She realizes that the woman is Leon’s wife and she finds Popaul’s lighter at the crime scene but she hides the evidence from the police. When Popaul visits her, she discovers that he still has the lighter and she feels relieved. However, when Popaul paints the ceiling of her house, she makes a discovery that affects her sense of security.

Le Boucher (English: The Butcher) is a 1970 French psychological thriller film written and directed by Claude Chabrol. Set in the village of Trémolat on the river Dordogne, it tells the story of a deeply troubled butcher (Jean Yanne) who falls in love with the head teacher of the school (Stéphane Audran) but she, though happy to be a close friend, refuses a physical relationship. The film had a total of 1,148,554 admissions in France.

Le Boucher (1970) - Stéphane Audran
Le Boucher (1970) – Stéphane Audran

About the Story

At the wedding of the assistant teacher of the village school, the head teacher is placed next to the butcher. She is Hélène, close to age 30 and single, who gets happily tipsy. He is Popaul who, after 15 years in the army, has just come home to take over the family shop and falls instantly for his attractive neighbour. Over the next few weeks they see more of each other, sharing meals, going to the cinema, and exchanging little presents. She says she is no prude, but after an unhappy affair does not want him to touch her. He says he joined the army to get away from a hateful father and repeatedly dwells on awful things he saw in Indochina and Algeria.

The peace of the friendly little village is however shattered when a young woman’s body is found, killed by a knife, and the police cannot come up with a suspect. When Hélène takes the school for a picnic on a hillside, blood from a second freshly-killed corpse drips onto the children. It is the bride of the assistant teacher, and at the site Hélène finds an unusual cigarette lighter she gave to Popaul. Keeping quiet about it to the police, she hides it in a drawer at home. Next time Popaul calls to see her, she asks him to light her cigarette and he does it with an identical lighter. She relaxes, confident that the lighter beside the murdered woman was not his.

He offers to paint her ceiling, coming round to do it one evening when she has to go into town. Looking for a cloth to clean up with, he finds the lighter she had hidden and pockets it. When she gets home and finds the lighter gone, she realises that he knows she can identify him as the murderer. She starts locking all her doors and windows, but he is already in the house and, cornering her at knife point, starts trying to explain what drives him to do these things. When she breaks into tears over his suffering, he thrusts the knife into his abdomen.

She drags him into her car and rushes off to hospital. During the drive, he confesses more of the huge psychic burden he has laboured under: “I have a lot of blood – my blood doesn’t stop flowing. I know about blood. I’ve seen so much blood, blood flowing. … Once, when I was little, I fainted when I saw blood. I noticed the smell of blood – their blood all smells the same, that of animals and that of humans. Some is more red than others, but all have exactly the same smell.”

Le Boucher Movie Poster (1970)

Le Boucher (1970)

Directed by: Claude Chabrol
Starring: Stéphane Audran, Jean Yanne, Antonio Passalia, Pascal Ferone, Mario Beccara, William Guérault, Roger Rudel
Screenplay by: Claude Chabrol
Production Design by: Guy Littaye
Cinematography by: Jean Rabier
Film Editing by: Jacques Gaillard
Makeup Department: Louis Bonnemaison, Renée Guidet
Music by: Pierre Jansen
MPAA Rating: None.
Distributed by: Cinerama Releasing Corporation (U.S.)
Release Date: February 27, 1970

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