Story of Women
Story of Women
| 13 October 1989 (USA)
Story of Women Trailers

France, World War II. In order to somehow make ends meet, the mother of two children, Marie Latour, does underground abortions and rents a room to a familiar prostitute. She doesn't pay any attention to her husband, who returned from the war because of his injury and lives her own life. Abortions gradually begin to bring a good income, and boredom can be easily dispelled by starting a young lover.

Reviews
gavin6942

Marie Latour, a woman of limited schooling, raises two children in a ratty flat during World War II in occupied France. In 1941, her husband Paul returns from German captivity, too weak to hold a job. Marie discovers she can make money performing abortions, using a soapy water douche. Many of her clients are knocked up by occupying Germans.The film is based on the true story of Marie-Louise Giraud, guillotined on July 30, 1943, for having performed 27 abortions in the Cherbourg area, and oddly enough has been embraced by John Waters. Waters is typically known more for endorsing "Christmas Evil" than French cinema, but this just goes to show how diverse his love is.I find it quite interesting that the French women are getting pregnant by German soldiers. While this is a frequent consequence of war (though hopefully diminishing), and virtually created modern Sicily, it is a rare thing to see it show up in a film. For that, I applaud them.

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Jackson Booth-Millard

From director Claude Chabrol (Le Boucher), from the title it was no obvious what the story or plot of this French film would involve, but I was introduced to it because of the book 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die, and if it featured in it that was good enough reason for me it a chance. Basically set in World War II, France is occupied by the Nazis, Marie Latour (Isabelle Huppert) is a mother with two children she raises in a decayed flat, she has limited education from her schooling, and her husband Paul (François Cluzet) who was on the front has returned home. Paul's weakness is causing him problems holding a job, so it is up to Marie to make money somehow to support the family, and she discovers a way to use soapy water douche as a way to abort unwanted babies of women, and she charges them for this service. Many of the women she performs abortions for have been impregnated by Germans occupying the country, and with the money she makes she can afford a new flat with more bedrooms, she also rents the bedrooms to prostitutes to take their clients during the day, and she can buy better food and new clothes. Eventually this good fortune turns sour when Paul becomes dismissive towards Marie because he knows what she has been doing for prostitutes and pregnant women, but she is keen to find another career in singing, but of course the authorities catch onto what she is up to, so she is arrested, and becomes one of the last women in France to be guillotined. Also starring Marie Trintignant as Lulu / Lucie and Nils Tavernier as Lucien. I did not realise it was based on a true story, but it makes sense when I think about it, because the harshness of the plot is realistic, and the way that it is played out is well done, the performance of Huppert is suitable for the character as well, it can be uncomfortable in moments, but it is an intriguing Second World War drama. It was nominated the Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film. Worth watching!

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allisonalmodovar

(The spoilers are noted each time before they are revealed.) I once watched a special on Claude Chabrol's career. It said that his constant theme is people falling into crime so slow, so gradually, they wonder how they got there. It dawned on me that this fit most of his films. However, that description fits this movie most of all.I think this was my second Chabrol film, so I didn't know what to expect at all. I don't even think I read the back cover. Isabelle Huppert plays a woman who begins to see Nazi forces at work right before WWII.(Spoilers: First her Jewish friend is taken away. When money runs low, she beings performing abortions and renting out her home to prostitutes so she can have luxuries for her children during WWII. She has an affair and her husband turns her in out of jealousy. From being a normal mother, suddenly she finds herself on death row for committing several abortions on prostitutes. You almost feel sorry for her, until she remains unrepentant to the end.) Such an incredible performance, even though Isabelle Huppert's character is thoroughly unlikable. It is actually a true story, based on Marie La Tour (Spoiler: the last woman to receive the death penalty in France).

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pegd-1

With cool detachment and a subtle touch of horror, Claude Chabrol dissects the story of a woman who was guillotined during the Nazi occupation of France. One of his strengths as a director is that he allows the movie goer to form his/her own thoughts and opinions about the issues at hand. He is not a proselytizer. The film covers a lot of ground: illegal abortion, collaborating with the enemy, parenting, marital communication, greed and a slew of other human weaknesses. All of this against the backdrop of an occupied France, a country who witnessed the horrors of WWI and never fully recovered, and whose WWII soul (what is left of it) has been torn apart.Isabelle Huppert does a fine job interpreting Marie LaTour, the woman in question. Marie is not the most sympathetic of characters. In fact, most of the major characters are not "sympathique".(My favorite character is the prostitute Lulu, acted by Marie Trintignant.)All in all a well directed, well structured film about a tragic period in the lives of the French people. But you be the judge.Trivia: "Vera Drake" and "L'Affaire de Femmes" both begin in apartments which have the the same god awful green walls.

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