Friday, October 17
The
Tenant
dir. Roman Polanski, France/USA 1976
After the triumph of Chinatown, Roman Polanski's The Tenant
marked an unsettling return to the horrifying psychodrama of Repulsion
and Rosemary's Baby. As in those previous films, Polanski explores
a descent into madness with subtle, deliberate pacing and keen attention
to accumulating details. Cannily casting himself in the title role,
Polanski plays the mild-mannered occupant of a Parisian flat previously
rented by a woman who committed suicide by leaping from her upper-floor
balcony. The woman's leftover belongings and the harsh attitudes of
disapproving neighbors (including Melvin Douglas and Shelley Winters)
begin to grate on the new tenant's psyche; his paranoia shifts from
simmering anxiety to full-blown psychosis, until fate itself seems
to run in a complete, tragically tormenting circle. Polanski masters
the material as only he could, and despite some critical drubbing
at the time of its release, The Tenant has earned a place among
Polanski's finest films. - Jeff
Shannon