Monsieur Verdoux

Charlie Chaplin


Charlie Chaplin's
Monsieur Verdoux

Film maudit turned cult classic, Charlie Chaplin’s Monsieur Verdoux (1947) is now widely considered one of his best works, and his most political. Chaplin immodestly proclaimed it “the cleverest, most brilliant film of my career.” Nominated for the 1948 Academy Award® for Best Screenplay, and originating from a true story, this self-described “comedy of murders” was based on an idea by Orson Welles, which Chaplin reportedly bought for five thousand dollars in a refusal to be directed by anyone but himself. Verdoux stars Chaplin as the moustachioed bluebeard in beret and cravat whose charming manners and good looks cloak a deep-seated, murderous hatred, festering since the loss of his longstanding job as a bank clerk. The film includes such unforgettable moments as Verdoux snipping roses in his garden while an incinerator rages behind him, and his infamous pre-guillotine salvo, an indictment of humanity’s cyclical follies. Plagued with censorship problems early on, and temporarily pulled from distribution in the US at the height of the Cold War Hollywood witch-hunts, Verdoux was initially vilified for its risqué societal critique. “Now it shapes up as Chaplin’s most startling, most invigorating movie; its icy temperature is positively bracing after the hot syrup of his earlier work.” (Time Out).

New poster designed by Robin Hendrickson
All Photos © Roy Export Company Establishment

A mordant satire that exemplifies the fine line between comedy and tragedy, Verdouxtranscends the borders of genre, and deserves to be seen multiple times, especially in this new 35mm print. It “has a Brechtian toughness and wit, but the style is soft, seductive, elegiac.
— Dave Kehr
One of the most challenging movies ever made in Hollywood.
— David Denby, The New Yorker
There are few comedies as resoundingly defiant.
Monsieur Verdoux is the spirit of modernity taken to its darkest extreme. It may be immortal. (5 stars)
— Joshua Rothkopf, Time Out New York
A pioneering black comedy... A turning point for Chaplin as an artist. If you haven’t seen Monsieur Verdoux yet, it’s about time.
— Stephen Witty, The Star Ledger
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One of the great films... remains a masterpiece,
unlike anything before or since.
— Richard Roud
One of the cinema’s immortal masterworks.
— Richard Brody, The New Yorker
It is a masterpiece. See it.
— Andrew Sarris, New York Observer
Among the great works of this century...
— James Agee