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Docteur Jekyll et les femmes

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Docteur Jekyll et les femmes
Directed byWalerian Borowczyk
Written byWalerian Borowczyk
Based onStrange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
by Robert Louis Stevenson
Produced by
StarringUdo Kier
Marina Pierro
Patrick Magee
Howard Vernon
Gérard Zalcberg
CinematographyNoël Véry
Edited byKadisha Bariha
Music byBernard Parmegiani
Production
companies
  • Whodunit Productions
  • Allegro Productions
  • Multimedia Gesellschaft für audiovisuelle Information mbH[1]
Release date
  • June 17, 1981 (1981-06-17) (France)
Running time
92 minutes
Countries
  • France
  • West Germany[1]

Docteur Jekyll et les femmes is a 1981 horror film directed by Walerian Borowczyk. The film is a variation on Robert Louis Stevenson's 1886 novella Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and stars Udo Kier, Marina Pierro, Patrick Magee, Howard Vernon, and Gérard Zalcberg.

The film, a co-production between France and West Germany, was released in France in 1981 and won an award for Best Feature Film Director at the 1981 Sitges Film Festival for Borowczyk.

Plot

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Fanny Osborne and her mother arrive at the home of Dr. Henry Jekyll to celebrate their engagement. The party is attended by numerous dignitaries, including General Carew and his daughter; Dr. Lanyon, a close friend and mentor to Henry who is nonetheless nonplused by Henry's endorsement of "transcendental science"; Enfield, Henry's attorney; and the Reverend. After dinner, the daughter of a guest is found raped and murdered in a bedroom. In the ensuing investigation, General Carew kills the Osbornes' coachman, thinking he is the culprit. Then someone finds a broken walking stick that used to belong to Henry; it has been used to beat to death a young girl.

Henry informs Enfield that he has named Edward Hyde as his sole heir should he die unexpectedly. When Enfield protests, Henry assures him that Hyde will take care of Fanny and their mothers. When Henry goes to see if he can revive the coachman, an unknown man appears in the Jekyll household and begins to attack the guests. He ties up General Carew and forces him to watch as he ravishes the general's willing daughter, then beheads another guest when he tries to intervene before trapping a young male guest in the attic and raping him.

Henry returns and professes embarrassment and horror that his guests have been assaulted and murdered. He barricades himself in his laboratory, unaware that Fanny has also hidden herself there. She watches as Henry plunges into a bath of unknown chemicals and transforms into his alter ego: Edward Hyde. Fanny follows Hyde through the house as he brutalizes the other guests, including forcing Mrs. Osborne to play the piano until her fingers are numb and killing the Carews with arrows. Seeing Fanny, Hyde tells her that he wants to watch her die, then wounds her with an arrow. But before he can kill her or Mrs. Osborne, Hyde is interrupted by the gun-wielding Lanyon. He takes Lanyard to Henry's laboratory where he plays him a recording in which Henry pleads with Lanyon to give Hyde a dose of a chemical. Lanyard complies and watches in horror as Hyde transforms into Henry. Lanyon dies of a heart attack.

Henry takes the injured Fanny to his laboratory. He explains that he is not a hypocrite: his Jekyll persona is completely sincere in his generosity and humanity, and Hyde is completely sincere in his hatred and refusal to conform to social expectations. Seemingly addicted to Hyde's freedom, Henry prepares another bath. But before he can enter, Fanny immerses herself. She emerges untransformed physically but possessed of the same contempt for morality. She then pushes Henry in, and he transforms into Hyde.

Together, they kill the rest of the guests and servants and destroy the house—including Henry's notes and books on transcendental science. They then escape in a carriage, having violent sex until they transform back into Fanny and Henry.

Cast

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Release

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Borowczyk wanted to call his film Le cas étrange de Dr.Jekyll et Miss Osbourne but his distributors UGC insisted it be released under the title Docteur Jekyll et les femmes.[2] The film was released in France on June 17, 1981.[1] Docteur Jekyll et les femmes never opened commercially in the United States, and in Britain, it played at one cinema for one week.[3]

The film was released theatrically in the UK under the title The Blood of Dr. Jekyll and then later on video as Bloodlust.[4] On the film's presentation at the Sitges Film Festival, it was shown under the title Docteur Jekyll et Miss Osborne.[5] Arrow Films released the film in both the U.S. and UK on April 21, 2015, on Blu-ray and DVD.[6] This was the film's first legitimate commercial release in any medium in the U.S. and the first in the UK since the VHS era. Arrow also restored Borowczyk's preferred title The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Miss Osbourne.[7]

Reception

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The film won Walerian Borowczyk the award for Best Feature Film Director at the 1981 Sitges Film Festival.[5]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d "Docteur Jekyll et les femmes". Filmportal.de. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
  2. ^ Atkinson, 2008. pg. 167
  3. ^ Contemporary Reviews (booklet). Arrow Films. 2015. p. 20. AV005.
  4. ^ Binion, Cavett. "Docteur Jekyll et les Femmes - Cast, Reviews, Summary, and Awards - AllRovi". Allmovie. Rovi Corporation. Retrieved December 11, 2013.
  5. ^ a b "Sitges Film Festival - Festival Internacional de Cinema Fantàstic de Catalunya » Archives › 1981". Sitges Film Festival. Archived from the original on October 10, 2020. Retrieved August 7, 2011.
  6. ^ Gingold, Michael. "More Arrow U.S. Blu-rays: Bava's "BLOOD," Borowczyk's "JEKYLL" art/details". Fangoria. Archived from the original on February 3, 2015. Retrieved December 11, 2013.
  7. ^ Arrow Blu-ray release of "The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Miss Osbourne", extras and booklet

References

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