Rotten Tomatoes
Cancel Movies Tv shows FanStore News Showtimes

Inspector Lavardin

Play trailer Poster for Inspector Lavardin Released Mar 12, 1986 1h 39m Mystery & Thriller Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist Tomatometer Popcornmeter
Tomatometer 4 Reviews 56% Popcornmeter 500+ Ratings
An unorthodox French detective (Jean Poiret) investigates the murder of an author.
Watch on Fandango at Home Buy Now

Where to Watch

Inspector Lavardin

Critics Reviews

View All (4) Critics Reviews
Budd Wilkins Slant Magazine Arrows Lies and Deceit box set offers five of Claude Chabrols finest efforts from the 1980s and 1990s in a handsome new package with hours of bonus materials. Mar 2, 2022 Full Review Imran Khan PopMatters It lacks the incisive comments made on class struggle in a more realized film like his breakthrough Le Boucher (1970), but still maintains a foothold in a genre that had begun to wane in the mid-’80s. May 31, 2022 Full Review Matt Brunson Film Frenzy Not as polished as its predecessor Cop Au Vin, it still counts as a reasonably good time. Rated: 2.5/4 Mar 5, 2022 Full Review Dennis Schwartz Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews A thoroughly enjoyable detective story directed by Claude Chabrol. Rated: B+ Apr 15, 2003 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (11) audience reviews
Simon T A worthy sequel to Chabrol's Cop Au Vin, showcasing Jean Poiret's amused and forensic detective. The setting could be the same as the previous outing - a large country house in Dinard where a wealthy businessman becomes a murder victim, his naked body discovered on a nearby jetty. The usual Chabrol themes - family secrets and lies - are enjoyably played out with a layering of comedy, only undermined by the sometimes tortuous plotting. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 11/12/24 Full Review Stephen C I love Chabrols puzzle box thrillers and this is one of his best. When an upright writer is found dead on a beach it's up to Inspector Lavardin to find the killer. But things aren't as cut and dried as they appear to be with all kinds of secrets coming out of the woodwork. Chabrol is a master of this genre and of all the French new wave directors he is my favourite and vastly underated Rated 5 out of 5 stars 08/21/23 Full Review CKB Chabrol brings back the 'vinegary' Inspector Lavardin from Cop au vin (aka Poulet au vinaigre) to put some more small town players through his particular style of acid bath, with plenty of wit and sparkle along the way. Everything's more personal this time around, for the widow of the murder victim he's investigating is an old flame who vanished from his life 20 yrs before (and who remains nicely mysterious to the very end). The theme here is professing morality vs doing what is truly right, so this time Lavardin refrains from his tough guy methods to get the truth, and employs some nice leverages to achieve his ends. Chabrol also invokes Sherlock Holmes, having Lavardin call his clueless policeman assistant 'Watson', making the widow appear to be Lavardin's version of Holmes' only love, Irene Adler, and requiring the inspector to make a Holmesian judgement call, putting the law's demands aside to protect the innocent. The camerawork is subtly exceptional, and Chabrol's son Matthieu provides a Les Six-style score that suits his father's work nicely. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 11/02/22 Full Review Audience Member The sequel to the 1984 film Cop au Vin, Inspecteur Lavardin finds the detective (Jean Poiret) demoted to investigations in a small coastal town due to his investigation techniques involving dunking suspect's heads under water. This brings him into the case of a murdered Catholic writer named Raoul Mons, who has been found dead on the beach with the word pig written all over his back. It turns out that Raoul wasn't just a drug dealer, blackmailer and rapist, but also was married to Helene, an old flame that that Lavardin hasn't seen for twenty years. Even stranger, her daughter is named Véronique, the same name he'd always wanted to give to a daughter. And when the truth comes out, will the Inspector stay with his new family or just go home alone with his breakfast obsessions and the photo of a murderess in his wallet? Two years later, Poiret would return to this role for four episodes of the TV series Les dossiers secrets de l'inspecteur Lavardin, which was written by Chabrol, had two episodes directed by him and also featured his son Thomas. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 02/06/23 Full Review paul d This is an engrossing police and family drama. At its core is a good mystery that a charismatic detective is trying to unravel, surrounded by a series of strange and interesting characters with various quirks and manners and some complex layers of inter-relationships. It all takes place in a seaside French city. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 03/31/23 Full Review Audience Member He's no Sherlock Holmes, or even Columbo.Also mystifying why critics think Chabrol is such a master. The shoddy production values, overacting, lack of realistic background sounds, make some scenes feel like a dress rehearsal. If made in America, this would be one of those ABC TV movies that were mainly seen as late night reruns. Rated 1.5 out of 5 stars 02/11/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Inspector Lavardin

My Rating

Read More Read Less POST RATING WRITE A REVIEW EDIT REVIEW

Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis An unorthodox French detective (Jean Poiret) investigates the murder of an author.
Director
Claude Chabrol
Producer
Marin Karmitz
Screenwriter
Claude Chabrol, Dominique Roulet
Distributor
MK2 Diffusion
Genre
Mystery & Thriller
Original Language
Canadian French
Release Date (Theaters)
Mar 12, 1986, Original
Release Date (Streaming)
Apr 22, 2014
Runtime
1h 39m
Most Popular at Home Now