Sœurs de sang backdrop
Sœurs de sang poster

SŒURS DE SANG

Sisters

1973 US HMDB
mars 26, 1973

Un soir, Danielle Breton ramène un homme chez elle. Celui-ci est alors poignardé tandis qu'une journaliste assiste au meurtre de sa fenêtre. Elle prévient la police mais aucun cadavre n'est découvert. La journaliste, convaincu de ce qu'elle a vu décide de mener l'enquête en ignorant que Danielle Breton a en réalité une sœur jumelle, Dominique.

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Equipe

Production: Edward R. Pressman (Producer)
Scenario: Brian De Palma (Screenplay)Louisa Rose (Screenplay)
Musique: Bernard Herrmann (Original Music Composer)
Photographie: Gregory Sandor (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Marco Castellini
Deux sœurs siamoises, Danielle et Dominique, furent séparées chirurgicalement par une difficile opération, qui ne vit survivre que la première, tandis que l'autre mourut pendant l'opération. Danielle, qui travaille maintenant comme mannequin, se traîne une sorte de dédoublement de personnalité, qui lui fait croire, à certains moments, qu'elle est Dominique. Sous cette "peau", elle se transforme en une meurtrière sadique. Une écrivaine, qui a vu Danielle massacrer un homme à coups de couteau, remonte à la vérité tortueuse en risquant à son tour d'être tuée. De Palma démontre déjà dans ce premier thriller toute la passion et le respect qu'il voue au cinéma du maître Hitchcock, ne lésinant pas sur les citations et les références narratives (surtout de "Psycho") au cinéma du "maître du frisson". Le scénario est un peu chaotique, mais le film offre plusieurs moments de suspense très denses et bien articulés, aux cadences obsessionnelles. Ce n'est pas l'un des meilleurs films de la production de De Palma, mais il reste néanmoins nettement au-dessus des standards moyens du genre.
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John Chard

John Chard

8 /10

Sisters are doing it for themselves…

Sisters is directed by Brain De Palma who also co-writes the screenplay with Louisa Rose. It stars Margot Kidder, Jennifer Salt, Charles Durning, Lisle Wilson and William Finley. Music is by Bernard Herrmann and cinematography by Gregory Sandor.

When newspaper reporter Grace Collier (Salt) observes what she perceives to be a murder in the apartment across the street from her own, it proves to be the catalyst for a trip down a dark psychologically damaged street.

To be honest here, the continuous complaints about De Palma being a Hitchcock clone got boring around about the mid eighties. As Hitch is my personal favourite director it has never bothered me one bit that he homaged and borrowed from the great man's cannon, in fact I have always found that when on form it was great to have someone like De Palma to keep the suspense thriller genre going. It's not as if he's the only one who owes his career to director's from the past really is it?

Sisters is a wonderfully trippy suspenser, where De Palma lifts from some great Hitchcock motifs to portray a clinically edgy story based around an article he read about Siamese twins Masha and Dasha Krivoshlyapova. Infused with technical flourishes such as split screens, POV filming and close quarter framing, the director is donating his own blood for the veins of the piece. Suspense is rarely far away, be it characters in some sort of danger, or the possible discovery of a body, there is no pause for pointless filler fodder. While twists and revelations engage the brain instead of insulting it, something many of today's horror/thriller directors could learn to "homage" from actually, and a nightmare section of film literally unfurled out of the minds eye is top draw.

Herrmann was enticed out of near retirement to score the music, the genre and themes at work in the story ready made for his skilled compositions. The score in all essence is lifted from his own major works for Hitchcock, with added sections taken from Jason and the Argonauts and Mysterious Island, but reworked in such away it drifts a perfectly off-kilter vibe across production. Kidder and Salt do great work in tricky roles, and Finley is suitably edgy. Durning is a little wasted, though, but it's a small complaint in the acting area. There's a couple of plot holes and one turn of events that just doesn't make sense, but this is a prime De Palma thriller and a good starting point for anyone interested in his work. And yes! For anyone who really isn't bothered about someone homaging a past master. 8/10

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