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Elles

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Elles

A journalist tries to balance the duties of marriage and motherhood while researching a piece on college women who work as prostitutes to pay their tuition.

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Release : 2012
Rating : 5.6
Studio : Canal+ Polska,  ZDF,  Slot Machine, 
Crew : Production Design,  Director of Photography, 
Cast : Juliette Binoche Anaïs Demoustier Joanna Kulig Louis-Do de Lencquesaing Krystyna Janda
Genre : Drama

Cast List

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Reviews

Kattiera Nana
2021/05/14

I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.

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TinsHeadline
2018/08/30

Touches You

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Catangro
2018/08/30

After playing with our expectations, this turns out to be a very different sort of film.

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Robert Joyner
2018/08/30

The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one

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Dries Vermeulen
2014/11/28

Though uneven, this is an interesting erotic drama in which Polish documentary filmmaker Malgorzata Szumowska (who would proceed with the scalding indictment of the Catholic Church's outdated views on homosexuality and the enforced celibacy among its clergy with 2013's IN THE NAME OF) honestly attempts to shed unsensational light on the phenomenon of female students paying their tuition moonlighting as prostitutes. The movie's greatest strength lies in its refreshingly matter of fact approach to potentially scabrous sexual situations which are presented in a fairly graphic yet never gratuitous fashion.Whenever the film focuses on the trials and tribulations of its young protagonists then, blue collar grant student Charlotte a/k/a "Lola" (the wonderfully expressive Anaïs Demoustier, currently wowing audiences worldwide in François Ozon's THE NEW GIRLFRIEND) and Polish exchange student Alicja (Joanna Kulig from Pawel Pawlikowski's THE WOMAN ON THE FIFTH), it's absolutely riveting with both actresses turning in fearless performances that go way beyond shedding their clothes. Where it goes off the rails however is in its long stretches devoted to upper middle class journalist Anne, played by the venerable Juliette Binoche, who's doing an in-depth piece for French women's magazine Elle (hence the title) on the very subject the film addresses, gaining growing awareness and self-knowledge in the process. Anne's not a terribly compelling character and that's hardly the fault of Binoche who delivers another perfectly professional performance to supplement her vast resumé. Presumably, Szumowska intended this ultimately rather dreary personage as something of an audience stand-in for her intended middle class demographic who can't possibly be so sheltered in this day and age as to know next to nothing about how the internet intervenes in people's personal (read : sexual) lives.So we get endless scenes of Anne's being confronted by the dreariness of her idle existence, stuck in a loveless marriage with kids careening out of control due to parental indifference. The director, who has already shown such confidence in handling the superior sub-plots involving the two "test cases", manages to hit all the wrong notes when it comes to the supposed "meat" of the movie, culminating in a pair of misguided set-pieces as Binoche desperately tries to reconnect with a sexuality long buried beneath the strenuous demands of work and social relations. First there's a sad bathroom floor masturbation bit, suggested rather than explicitly shown (but pretty disheartening none the same), followed by Anne's drunken advances on her estranged husband in the wake of a disastrous dinner party for the boss and his wife. An open ending shows the family at the breakfast table, sunlight streaming through the windows, talking to one another and passing the food around, somehow suggesting that everything will be alright from now on.The emptiness of such scenes is happily countered by the largely guilt-free sexual scenarios Charlotte and Alicja first shock and then tempt Anne with. Szumowska admirably attempts to sidestep clichés, extending to an understanding approach to their male participants, generally presented as decent human beings equally undeserving of stigmatization as the women who cater to their demands and occasionally experience pleasure in the process. A particularly clever touch is provided by Charlotte's passionate and mutually pleasurable lovemaking to a handsome young man whom we expect is her previously mentioned but as yet unseen boyfriend. When he rises from the bed to get dressed, he leaves a wad of bank notes by her pillow. When we are subsequently introduced to the "real" boyfriend with whom she's about to move in, their allegedly "superior" relationship already appears beyond repair.From the look and feel of the movie, you would never guess this was made by a Polish director as it has that super "soigné" and slightly precious sheen that characterizes about 90 per cent of present day French cinema, easy on the eyes but wholly unadventurous. Occasionally, this will create a jarring juxtaposition such as when Alicja receives an out of the blue golden shower in one of the movie's many immaculately styled apartment settings. The music, incorporating several popular classical selections (Beethoven's 7th...again !), likewise seems designed to lull comfortably off theater patrons into a soothing sense of "salon" social awareness by offering them a glimpse from a safe distance of how the other half lives.

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grantss
2014/04/05

The movie had potential, but ultimately wasted it. Potential was for an intriguing tale of voyeurism and vicarious living of an author's/researcher's life through the lives of the people she interviews for her work, and ultimately how this affects her.In reality, the movie goes down this path, but pulls its punches and goes nowhere. For all the nudity and sex, the movie isn't that gritty, ultimately. (The sex and nudity is a bit tame, anyway). I was expecting a profound ending, but was very disappointed. There is no life changing, just voyeurism. Solid performance by Juliette Binoche in the lead role. Good support from a cast of unknowns.

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Lucy Fear
2013/03/13

Juliette Binoche, a amazing actress, she can play and probably have played all kinds of roles, and makes this movie lift at least +2.French movies are always a pleasure to watch. The stories never sweet and Black and white (as in American movies) and leaves a lot to the viewer to interpret.The film highlights a more occurring phenomena in todays society where young "normal" women turns to prostitution to supports their life. The film takes a objective view although some of the writer's views shines through.Its is definitely a film I would recommend, if you are after more than dumb entertainment.

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flickernatic
2012/04/22

This film is embarrassing on two levels: first because it's story line is so weak, and second because it ends not with a bang but a whimper. Oh, and there is also the seemingly endless sequence of fleshy scenes that serve to glorify porn and prostitution at one and the same time (the scenes include a sickening rape carried out with a bottle).The narrative appears to run something like this - A wealthy, materialistic magazine writer, trapped in a dull haute bourgeois lifestyle, sets out to investigate student prostitution. She is soon seduced by the charms of the girls and concludes that 'all men are bastards', including her boring husband, who uses her as a perfect dinner hostess in order to suck up to his boss.In a climactic scene, she walks out of the dinner party, leaving her husband and her (vile) male guests high and dry. But lo! Does she go off to join the free and easy (and wealthy) student prostitutes in their care-free, hedonistic life? Er, no! In very short order she returns to the breakfast table to serve the orange juice and muesli to her still dull, bourgeois husband and kids. Fin! To add to the (dis)pleasure, there are a number of odd sequences which seem to have no connection to the already fragile narrative thread: the writer visits and old man in hospital (is it her father?) and gives him a foot massage; she attempts to use a lavatory but finds she 'cannot continue'; she repeatedly tries to close the door of the family refrigerator but it won't close because an item on one of the door shelves has become dislodged.This unenlightening and unpleasant movie is one to avoid, Ms. Binoche notwithstanding.(Viewed at The Cornerhouse, Manchester, UK, 21 April 2012)

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