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L'intouchable (2006) -- Open-ended Trailer from Strand Releasing

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Overview

User Rating:
5.3/10   150 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Down 7% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writer:
Benoît Jacquot (writer)
Contact:
View company contact information for The Untouchable on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
6 December 2006 (France) more
Genre:
Plot:
On the day she celebrates her birthday, Jeanne, a young actress, is told by her mother her father is... more | add synopsis
Awards:
1 win & 1 nomination more
User Comments:
punishes the senses deliberately: literally untouchable more (5 total)

Cast

  (Cast overview, first billed only)
Isild Le Besco ... Jeanne
Bérangère Bonvoisin ... La mère de Jeanne
Marc Barbé ... François, le metteur en scène du film
Manuel Munz ... Agent Jeanne
Louis-Do de Lencquesaing ... L'amant de Jeanne
Yaseen Khan ... Passager indien
Parikshit Luthra ... Mani
Pascal Bongard ... Français piscine 1
Pierre Chevalier ... Français piscine 2
Caroline Champetier ... Muriel, religieuse sous le nom de Soeur Thérèse de l'Enfant Jésus
Dablu Kumar ... Papu
Susheel Kumar Batra ... Le père de Mani
Rakesh Sharma ... Anpar, le père de Jeanne
George Babluani ... Homme Géorgien
Samuel Sogno ... Acteur théâtre
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
The Untouchable (International: English title)
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Runtime:
82 min
Country:
Language:
Colour:
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Filming Locations:
Company:

Fun Stuff

Quotes:
Jeanne: Isn't your bed too small when am in it?
L'amant de Jeanne: It is too small when you are NOT in it!
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Soundtrack:
Sunday more

FAQ

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6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful.
punishes the senses deliberately: literally untouchable, 9 March 2007
4/10
Author: mgduke from new york city

this film punishes the senses deliberately, subjecting its audience to a ripping gauntlet of painful visual and aural textures. our eyeballs are lacerated by the relentlessly jumpy hand-held camera, pans too swift to apprehend without nausea, and the barrage of disorientingly abrupt jump cuts. ears attacked by the harsh banausic soundtrack, pounded by soulless machinery, everything torturously intrusive and overloud, even tap water, where even sitar and tabla are twisted into instruments of pain.

jacquot's apparent rationale for this mortification of our senses is to replicate the pains of a journey of spiritual self-discovery, whose immemorial signposts feature suffering, danger, and abnegation. traditional pilgrims crippled themselves crawling to shrines on their knees. jacquot's pilgrim is a young woman, Jeanne, brought up by her single mother, never feeling at home in society or in her skin, who learns around her 18th birthday that she was conceived in Benares of an Indian father, and compulsively undertakes a voyage seeking him, her roots, herself, a voyage that she insists on financing by painful humiliation.

Isild le Besco, portraying Jeanne, provides a pitch-perfect, nail-on-chalkboard personification of the skin-shredding pilgrim. Using her acting skills and flesh mercilessly, le Besco forces us to internalize the gnawing estrangement, rage, and bafflement that eat at Jeanne like a cancer. The audience is never at ease looking at Jeanne, even when she is getting a massage. Her vulnerability is unendurable, verging always on the razor edge of victimization and violation. le Besco appears to have fattened up her body for this role, especially her hips, which works very well for it, bringing her character to the far edge of voluptuousness, on the point of losing it.

At a Lincoln Center Q&A, Jacquot emphasized repeatedly how crucial it is for a director not to be cognizant of what he is doing. For all his genuine charm, he seemed tormented by hyper-rationality, determined to rid himself of this daemon. The Untouchable, with all its scourging of the senses, seems like his desperate attempt to purge himself of it, like burning away the flesh of corpses in Benares. But doesn't that deliver the film as a triumph of just the kind of rationality that he made it to escape?

For me Jacquot's rip-tide--reason trying to trick away reason by mortifying the senses--made The Untouchable a film that i found almost too painful to watch. The theory was enjoyable to contemplate--as were moments of beauty and mystery--but his programmatic bloodying of my poor eyes and ears gave me a headache so bad that I had to fight to keep from vomiting. Nonetheless, I can't help admiring the good work, thoughtfulness, and courage (to create something so rebarbative) that went into it's creation. Would that Jacquot had trusted those moments of beauty and mystery, allowed them to take off free of the visual and aural punishment, lifted the veil of supplices.

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