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Heading South (2006)
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Reviews Counted:81
Fresh:56
Rotten:25
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: As touching as it is disturbing, Heading South is an unconventional exploration of desire and longing, with superb performances and direction.
Theatrical Release:Jul 7, 2006 Limited
Box Office: $472,683
Synopsis: Laurent Cantet's feature film stars Charlotte Rampling and is set in 1970s Haiti. The film examines a time and place in which wealthy women from the east headed to the country in search of sexual... Laurent Cantet's feature film stars Charlotte Rampling and is set in 1970s Haiti. The film examines a time and place in which wealthy women from the east headed to the country in search of sexual fulfillment among its young male population. [More]
Starring: Charlotte Rampling, Karen Young, Louise Portal
Starring: Charlotte Rampling, Karen Young, Louise Portal
Director: Laurent Cantet
Director: Laurent Cantet
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Reviews for Heading South
Provocative subject matter and a rather magnificent performance by Charlotte Rampling aside, the occasional flickering hint of deeper meaning isn't enough to sustain interest.
A movie about middle-aged women frolicking with smooth-skinned Haitian locals on the beach can be either erotic and sensual, or exploitive and pointless.
As a glimpse into a curious subculture this provokes interest, but in dramatic and political terms it’s a missed opportunity.
Laurent Cantet directs his adaptation of Dany Laferreiere's La Chair du Maitre as if it were a Danielle Steele novel.
The women are meant to level the emotional playing field and add depth to what is, at heart, a story about the exploitation of poor nations by rich and powerful ones. But they wind up being too bitter and unstable to elicit much sympathy.
Okay, we'll admit that the ideal of being fawned over and adored by half-dressed men has some appeal, but this movie doesn't... sex in paradise shouldn't be this uninteresting.
While an important message is at the movie's core, Cantet just can't find a way to make us care.
... a shot of reality disguised as an umbrella drink, and is as uncomfortable an experience as having sand stuck in your swimming suit.
It's nice that they're finally adapting Harlequin romance novels into movies.
Laurent Cantet is less successfu ... with his obvious intention to use the women as a metaphor for the colonial meddling of the West in Third World nations, where exploitation is a rule of thumb.
A well-acted but misguided tale of displaced sexual longing on the beaches of Baby Doc Duvalier's 1970s Haiti.
Albert's bitterness deserved further development, but the real puzzle is why Cantet doesn't let Legba have a say.
It misses by a mile the quality that characterizes Cantet's other films.
In the end, the pretense of romance is what you walk away with. It might have made a memorable study of dark needs if it didn't wear down its vitality with so much dispiriting weakness.
Spinster women are not a very effective symbol of racism and colonialism in Haiti, are they? A better film would have targeted the U.S. Marines.
Latest News for Heading South
July 06, 2006:
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