Color, 1973, 92 mins. 34 secs.
Directed by Alain Jessua
Starring Alain Delon, Annie Girardot, Robert Hirsch, Michel Duchaussoy
Severin Films (Blu-ray & DVD) (US RA/R1 HD/NTSC), Kadokawa (Blu-ray & DVD) (Japan RA/R1 HD/NTSC), Studio Canal (DVD) (France R2 PAL), Optimum (DVD) (UK R2 PAL) / WS (1.66:1) (16:9)
the height of his stardom as one of
France's most popular leading men, Alain Delon took a very unexpected detour from his usual dramas and crime films by starring in this peculiar mixture of thriller, borderline horror film, and social commentary satire from director Alain Jessua, a neglected and not particularly prolific filmmaker who had hadn't taken the reins since 1967's interesting Jeu de massacre with Jean-Pierre Cassel. Here with Traitement de choc (or Shock Treatment) he had his most high-voltage cast by far, pairing up Delon with the winning Annie Girardot, who had appeared with Delon in Rocco and His Brothers and starred in multiple films for Philippe De Broca, Claude Lelouch, and Marco Ferreri, among others. The fact that both stars took part in the film's infamous, unabashed skinnydipping in the ocean scene became a big promotional gimmick for the film (with the U.K. going further by calling it Doctor in the Nude), but the film itself isn't a comedy or sexploitation by any means. Spooky and deliberately paced, it's a covert entry in the line of oddball medical chillers that would become more common later in the following decade ranging from Thirst to Night of the Hunted. It's also perhaps more timely now than ever before, dealing with issues of entitlement, greed, and the exploitation of immigrants in such a lacerating way you could easily remake it now without changing much at all.
Devilers (Delon). There she mingles with members of the upper class who partake in experimental injections and other treatments involving saunas
and seaweed, all seemingly carefree and above board. She soon becomes sexually entangled with the doctor despite her suspicions that something's afoot with the Portuguese staff, who don't seem to be particularly well and might have something to do with the doctor's serum. When Jérôme abridges his earlier recommendation with a dire warning about the institute, she soon finds herself in an insidious plot that leads to homicide and a cynically ironic ending.
throughout. The original French track is included in DTS-HD MA 2.0 mono (with English subtitles) along with the rare English dub, which is interesting to compare at least once.
"Alain Jessua – The Lone Deranger" (20m13s) features Bernard Payen, curator at The Cinémathèque Française, providing context for the director's career as a contemporary of the major French New Wave filmmakers despite not really being a part of it, his luck in getting major actors to headline his films, and the presence of regulars like Duchaussoy who fit into his skewed look at reality (or lack thereof). In "Koering’s Scoring" (23m43s), Koering chats about his entry into music (without wanted to become a musician) after started off as a painter, his admiration of Bernard Herrmann, and his first connection with Jessua that led to a trip to Brazil to bring the score to life. "Director’s Disorder"
(9m51s) is a new edit of a 2011 interview with Jessua about therapeutic trends at the time, the significance of doing his own music, the inspiration behind other films like the disturbing Les chiens, the "touch of fantasy" he employed without doing any outright horror, and his overall views on genre and social commentary. Finally, "Drumrunning" (8m19s) features Koering commenting on the main titles, the beach scene, and an outdoor chase while discussing his approach to the film including the instrumentation (such as the use of a Senegalese harp and African drums) and the thematic undercurrents he wanted to emphasize involving the Portuguese characters. The French trailer is also included (anamorphic this time), and the first pressing also comes with a CD soundtrack.