The Champagne Murders
The Champagne Murders is a 1967 French crime thriller film based on a story William Benjamin, directed by Claude Chabrol and starring Anthony Perkins. It was the first of two films that Chabrol made with Perkins.
For his role in the film, Maurice Ronet won the Best Actor award at the San Sebastián International Film Festival.
Plot
Taking a prostitute to a park after drinking, Paul Wagner is attacked by unknown assailants, who leave him with a serious head injury and strangle her. Unable to manage the family champagne business, it is run for him by Christine Belling and her assistant Jacqueline. Christine tries to take advantage of Paul by selling the company, but he refuses to sign. On a business trip to Hamburg with Christine's husband Christopher, he gets drunk and goes to a park with a prostitute, who is found strangled in the morning. Going with Christopher to the party of a promiscuous artist, Paul again gets drunk and she is found strangled in the morning.Terrified that he may be murdering young women after drinking, Paul seeks the help of Christine while Christopher is away. She takes advantage of Paul by getting him to sign away his rights in the company. He goes home despondent and in the morning Christine is found strangled. Christopher, who now owns the business, turns up with a striking blonde, whom Paul remembers seeing in Hamburg and at the artist's party. It is Jacqueline, without the dark wig and pale make-up she wore to work, who is Christopher's mistress and has done the last three stranglings. A gun is pulled out and the movie camera recedes as the three fight over the gun.
Cast
- Anthony Perkins as Christopher
- Maurice Ronet as Paul
- Yvonne Furneaux as Christine
- Stéphane Audran as Jacqueline
- Annie Vidal as Blonde
- Henry Jones as Mr. Clarke
- Catherine Sola as Denise
- George Skaff as Mr. Pfeiffer
- Christa Lang as Paula
- Marie-Ange Aniès as Michele
- Suzanne Lloyd as Evelyn
Production
The Champagne Murders was Chabrol's first film with English-speaking actors. He filmed each scene in both English and French; much of the English dialogue was mouthed phonetically by the French actors and later dubbed in English.The film was shot in Techniscope format.