Isabelle Huppert, Sandrine Bonnaire,
Jacqueline Bisset, Jean-Pierre Cassel, Virginie Ledoyen.
When Catherine Lelievre (Jacqueline Bisset) hires mousy and taciturn
Sophie (Sandrine Bonnaire) as a housemaid, she thinks that she found
a treasure. Mr. Lelievre (Jean-Pierre Cassel) seems to agree with
her, pointing out that the maid just has yet to learn how to serve
dinner correctly. Wealthy liberals, they treat her generously enough
and expect diligence and reliability in return. However, Sophie
didn't tell her new employers that she is dyslexic, and very soon
she has terrible troubles with even such supposedly ordinary things
as shopping lists. She befriends outspoken postal clerk Jeanne (Isabelle
Huppert), who occasionally helps her with the above-mentioned lists
and tells her all sorts of gossip about the Lelievre family. Mr.
Lelievre, who suspects that Jeanne opens their mail, tells Sophie
that Jeanne was charged with the murder of her four-year-old daughter
and though she was later acquitted, he can't believe in her innocence.
Thus he forbids Sophie to invite Jeanne to the Lelievre house, and
the tension between Sophie and her employers increases. What could
have been a thriller in the hands of a different director, in the
case of Claude Chabrol has become another witty and observant social
commentary about the eternal confrontation between the rich and
the poor. Ruth Rendell's novel A Judgement in Stone was previously
filmed in 1986 in Canada. |