7/10
Futuristic shock treatment is tame today
12 September 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Alvin Toffler's "Future Shock" was required reading on college campuses across America back in 1972 and the alarmist book, "about the future and the shock that its arrival brings" was only a forerunner of the fears the 1970s grappled with. Many movies at the time jumped on the bandwagon with cautionary tales and one of the better ones was Alain Jessua's TRAITMENT DE CHOC (1973) which tells the story of Helene (Annie Girardot), a wealthy French fashion designer who has a mid-life crisis when her boyfriend leaves her for a younger woman. On the advice of a friend (Robert Hirsch), she checks into a revolutionary rejuvenation clinic run by the charismatic Dr. Devilers (Alain Delon) where the clientèle, "a microcosm of society" consisting of judges, politicians, bankers, and wealthy heirs, form a sort of secret sect. Helene feels great after the first injection but when her friend can no longer pay, he becomes a pariah in the tight-knit community and he tries to warn her away. The next day he commits suicide and Helene is determined to leave the spa against the doctor's advice until she's approached by two undocumented Portugese male help who separately plead with her to help them escape just before they disappear. Helene becomes intent on discovering the suddenly sinister clinic's mysterious secrets and doesn't hesitate to sleep with the doctor to find out...

The primitive "tribal" soundtrack reflects the film's premise that for all of man's technological advancements, the law of the jungle still holds with the strong preying on the weak (or, in this case, the rich feeding off the poor) in a society with more than its share of "disposables". The suspense builds slowly and the climax, although it's lost some impact after decades of similar denouements, is a shocker -but what's really scary is how little the rest of the world cares about the dreadful things Helene discovers. The similarly-themed SOYLENT GREEN was made the same year which shows that these "Me Decade" fears taken to the extreme were universal and continued to be reflected on the screen in such sci-fi films as WESTWORLD (1973), THE STEPFORD WIVES (1975), and DEATH RACE 2000 (1975). There's also a bit of "free love" commentary as the aptly named Dr. Devilers (get it?) casually sleeps with all his female patients and, compared to Hollywood films at the time, both the sympathetic treatment of a gay man (Hirsch) and the full-frontal nudity of Delon & Co. come as a bit of a shock even though both were "natural" and in context. Recommended.
13 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed