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The Woman Next Door

The Woman Next Door (1981)

1h 46m | PG-13

⭐ 7.1 / 10

Madame Jouve, the narrator, tells the tragedy of Bernard and Mathilde. Bernard was living happily with his wife Arlette and his son Thomas. One day, a couple, Philippe and Mathilde Bauchard, moves into the next house. This is the accidental reunion of Bernard and Mathilde, who had a passionate love affair years ago. The relationship revives... A somber study of human feelings.

Director: François Truffaut

Studio: Les Films du Carrosse

Genre: Drama, Romance

Video: 720p

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Cast

Gérard Depardieu

Gérard Depardieu

as Bernard Coudray

Fanny Ardant

Fanny Ardant

as Mathilde Bauchard

Henri Garcin

Henri Garcin

as Philippe Bauchard

Michèle Baumgartner

Michèle Baumgartner

as Arlette Coudray

Roger Van Hool

Roger Van Hool

as Roland Duguet

Véronique Silver

Véronique Silver

as Madame Odile Jouve

Reviews

By CinemaSerf

You can just imagine the scenario. "Bernard" (Gerard Depardieu) is living quite contentedly with his wife "Arlette" (Michèle Baumgartner) and their young son when they get new next-door neighbours. "Philippe" (Henri Garcin) and wife "Mathilde" (Fanny Ardant). Well ardent might have been a more appropriate spelling as it turns out that "Bernard" and "Mathilde" have a bit of history that time hasn't quite satiated. Ostensibly, they present a friendly front to their respective families and neighbours, but we soon appreciate the things are smouldering and that events eight years ago did not end well - for either of them. With their behaviour becoming more erratic and tensions mounting, well who knows what's going to happen next. This might be my favourite Depardieu performance as he really does thrown himself into the role body and soul, and with Ardant delivering an equally impassioned characterisation we are presented with a lively, tempestuous and at times quite visceral series of scenes as things spiral out of control. I'm not always a fan of narration but here, the sparing use of commentary from local tennis club boss "Madame Jouve" (Véronique Silver) helps fill in the gaps but also lets off some of the steam - physically and metaphorically, as the story becomes more involved. Talk about neighbours from hell...!