Kino Lorber resurrects Diabolically Yours, the final film from French auteur Julien Duvivier, arguably the most neglected member of the “Big Five” of classic French cinema (the others being Rene Clair, Marcel Carne, Jean Renoir and Jacques Feyder—although over the past several years, Duvivier’s titles have received a greater recuperation stateside, especially compared to Feyder). However, Duvivier, who died in a tragic car accident several months before the premiere of his final feature, was in his seventies by this time, and his last film plays like a gender reversal of Clouzet’s classic 1955 title Diabolique.
Diabolically Yours was only Duvivier’s second film in color, which is gorgeously photographed by DP Henri Decae (who would lens the classic Melville title Le Samourai, which starred Deloin in one of his most iconic roles), particularly the loving close-ups of Deloin and the beautiful Senta Berger.
A far cry from Duvivier’s heyday, which includes the classic (and recently restored) Panique (review) and Pepe Le Moko, both films later remade (as Monsieur Hire and Algiers, respectively), Diabolically Yours is still pulpy entertainment and significant for fans of either of its lead actors.
Film Rating: ★★★/☆☆☆☆☆
Disc Rating: ★★★/☆☆☆☆☆