Home     |     Cart     |     My Account     |     My Wish List     |     Help    
 

  Search
 
  Genres:
Action Independent
Animation Music
Classic Romance
Comedy Sci-Fi
Cult Sports
Documentary Suspense
Drama Special Int
Erotica Television
Family Thriller
Foreign War
Horror Western
 
  1001 Movies You Must
   See Before You Die
  Most Requested
  Directors
  Recent Releases
  Recently Added DVDs
  Upcoming Titles
  Popular Independent
  Criterion Collection
  All Time Favorites
  AFI 100
  Staff Recommended A-M
  Staff Recommended N-Z
  Best of Contemporary
   Foreign Films
  Best of British Film
  Best of Documentary
   Films
  Rental of the Day
  Roger Ebert's
   Overlooked Film Festival
  Top Shakespeare
   Adaptations
  Best of Avant Garde
  Best of Romance
  Select Sentimental
  Cream of Comedy
  Best Recent American
   Features
  Movies by 40
   Directors to watch
  Best Cinematography
  Masters of Montage
  Hollywood
   Contemporary Classic
  Cannes Winners
  Vatican Picks
  Best American
   Independent
  Best of
   Science-Fiction
  Tying the Knot
  Top Film Noir
  Best Foreign Classics
  Best of Cult Films
  Fathers and Sons
  Meryl Streep Musts
  Christmas
  Flicks D'Amore
  Easter
 .


Photo Coming Soon
Merci Pour Le Chocolat (2000)
Rating:
Starring: Jacques Dutronc, Isabelle Huppert
Director: Claude Chabrol
Category: Music, , Foreign
Studio: First Run Features
Subtitles:
English
Length:
99 mins
Want to buy?
 
   

 

 

 

"An elegant study in perversity." -Edward Guthman, SF Chronicle

Merci Pour Le Chocolat, his 48th feature film, is vintage Chabrol: intricate plots wend their way through the elegant homes of several well-heeled French-Swiss, in the environs of Lausanne, Switzerland. Isabelle Huppert stars as Mika, the couture-attired, oh-so-perfect head of a company that manufactures Swiss chocolate; Jacques Dutronc is Andre, her suave, concert pianist husband whose first wife died years ago in a mysterious car accident.

When a beautiful young woman unexpectedly enters Mika and Ander's life, long-held secrets are revealed and facades fall away. Chabrol, the most Hitchcockian of the New Wave directors, has fashioned a delectable psychological thriller, dipped in darkest Swiss chocolate.

 
 
   
   

 
Critic's Reviews
Lou Lumenick New York Post Read Review
Roger Ebert Chicago Sun-Times Read Review
Jeanne Aufmuth Palo Alto Online Read Review

 

Contact Us   |   About Us   |   Press Room   |   Investor Relations   |   Affiliate Program  

© 1999-2008 cafedvd.com All rights reserved.             Wednesday, December 03, 2008 15:17