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Irreversible
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Directed by Gaspar Noé
Gaspar Noé's Irreversible utilizes the same storytelling technique used by Christopher Nolan in Memento and Harold Pinter in Betrayal. Consisting of about a dozen scenes, all shot in single takes, Irreversible charts a disturbing night in the life of Marcus (Vincent Cassel), but presents the events in reverse chronological order. The audience eventually learns how the beautiful Alex (Cassel's real-life partner Monica Bellucci) is involved. The film opens with a violent altercation at a gay sex club and works backward to explain how and why the violence occurred. The actors improvised the vast majority of the dialogue starting from a four-page story outline. Irreversible was screened in competition at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
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mnoomnoo Back to the start
by mnoo in mnoo Blog
liked it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"This was certainly a difficult film to watch and to digest. The whole film is played backwards, starting from the most ugliest and uncomfortable scenes I've ever seen and slowly returning to the start where everything was still ok. Even though it was a hard film to watch (and definitely not the best choice for a Saturday evening chilling with friends... :|) I did find it intriguing. It illustrated with terrifying clarity how fragile life is and how every small decision can affect the w " [More]
animerionanimerion A Difficult Watch
by animerion in Movie Musings
liked it.
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"It has been a while since I have affected by a film to the degree that Irreversable has affected me. It hasn’t given me nightmares, but there are instances where this film plays out like one. While there is little French cinema that I have enjoyed, this is actually one of the few that I could sit all the way through. And honestly, I can’t say I even enjoyed this movie because the experience itself was emotionally taxing, I don’t think I can ever watch this fil " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re:Which of these film movments ...
by Risselada in Movie Polls
"[quote user="pippin06"] This is out of my league too. I consider myself an average to above average filmgoer/viewer but am not sure if I've seen anything in any category (maybe I have and I didn't know it...but maybe not). Like I said, I saw a lot of French films in college, but who knows if they fall under New Wave or something like that... ...but maybe we could somehow start a discussion somewhere where people schooled in these film schools could make recomm " [More]
mercurialmercurial Re:Weekly Theme for November 17 ...
by mercurial in Weekly Theme
"So many to list . . . so how about I go with the most shocking (to me). Julianne Moore / Heather Graham / Mark Wahlberg in Boogie Nights Kevin Bacon in Wild Things Never have I wanted to rip out my eyes s " [More]
Macabre_FilmNutMacabre_FilmNut New wave french horror??
by Macabre_FilmNut in HORROR MOVIES 101
"I remember that opening scene in the vehicle and the killer is proceeding to do something with a skull. Now for alll you that have seen Haute Tension, you know what I am talking about? From that point on after he is done and discards the head out the window, the movie proceeds to get better with plot and gore! After seeing that and not being disapointed. I have proceeded to watch most films from France. Since [More]
tinokievtinokiev Definitions of Art. Unclassific ...
by tinokiev in Asian Art Cinema
"Personally I often find myself trying to classify or rate a film, specially asian ones and not finding a term or a category to put it on. It is like " a wong kar wai" film. Wong Kar Wai himself is a category of his own approach to aesthetics's, or you could said a "takashi mike" film and you know you are going to expect lots " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Telling A Story Backwards
by Risselada in PulpFiction1975
"The most extreme example of non-linear structure I've seen is probably 21 Grams. I consideration of how cut up and rearranged the timeline is, it's pretty amazing how well it flows and reveals different parts of the timeline in the most effective way. Another recent film that I have heard uses the non-linear story telling technique quite well is Irreversible.& " [More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Formally audacious, stylistically sound, and stomach-sickeningly grisly, Gaspar Noé's stateside breakthrough is unarguably the work of a filmmaker with technique to spare. Whether or not this year's Gallic enfant terrible has anything to contribute to cinema other than skillful button-pushing, however, remains to be seen. Irreversible's facile tale of a once-idyllic couple caught in a torpor of rape, drugs, and retribution is loaded with easy ironies and horror-flick set pieces. Noé's technical gymnastics keep it undeniably compelling: Shot in fluid, color-saturated, whirling-dervish long takes, edited in reverse, and given a throbbing, hypnotic sound design from Daft Punk's Thomas Bangalter, Irreversible's deft moves don't allow the viewer a second to ponder some of the script's more implausible, trumped-up conceits. An early-film cab-ride in which our anti-heroes assault a foreigner, for instance, serves as little more than an intentionally disorienting emotional red herring. Likewise, copious screen time is allotted to setting up the three lead characters' dynamic, which is of little use to Noé other than to upset audience expectations. And it's more than a little disingenuous that Monica Bellucci's much-discussed rape scene happens to be the only sequence shot with a steady camera. Noé purportedly relished the severe reactions provoked by screenings of Irreversible -- walk-outs, cat calls, and the like -- which would only make sense for a person whose ultimate goal is to create the cinematic equivalent of car-wreck gawking. ~ Michael Hastings, All Movie Guide
 

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