1943 | France | Fiction

Le Corbeau (The Raven)

  • French 91 mins
  • Director | Henri-Georges Clouzot
  • Writer | Louis Chavance
  • Producer | RenĂ© Montis, Raoul Ploquin

STATUS: Released

This film is currently not available.   

A mysterious writer of poison-pen letters, known only as Le Corbeau (the Raven), plagues a French provincial town, exposing the collective suspicion and rancor seething beneath the community’s calm surface. Made during the Nazi occupation of France, Henri-Georges Clouzot’s Le Corbeau was attacked by the right-wing Vichy regime, the left-wing Resistance press, and the Catholic Church, and was banned after the liberation. But some—including Jean Cocteau and Jean-Paul Sartre—recognized the powerful subtext of Clouzot’s anti-informant, anti-Gestapo fable, and worked to rehabilitate his directorial reputation after the war. Le Corbeau brilliantly captures the paranoid pettiness and self-loathing that turn an occupied French town into a twentieth-century Salem.

Paranoia Suspicion Intrigue Community Oppression
Film Organizations
The Criterion Collection
DISTRIBUTION