The story never delves deep enough into the characters to really say anything significant.
5X2 (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:67
Fresh:43
Rotten:24
Average Rating:6.1/10
Consensus: Five scenes from a marriage, deftly and poignantly presented.
Theatrical Release:Jun 10, 2005 Limited
Box Office: $15,667
Synopsis: Focusing on the failed relationship of a thirtysomething couple, French director Francois Ozon (SWIMMING POOL, UNDER THE SAND) organizes this film into five chapters they shared together. In... Focusing on the failed relationship of a thirtysomething couple, French director Francois Ozon (SWIMMING POOL, UNDER THE SAND) organizes this film into five chapters they shared together. In backwards chronology, the first chapter of Marion (Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi) and Gilles's (Stephane Freiss) story has them signing divorce papers, and the last chapter shows the first sparks of romance between them years earlier. A master of controlling his audience's emotions, Ozon elicits vast sympathies for each character, making their relationship--and especially, the problems they cannot live with--more painful with each new detail revealed about Marion and Gilles. We see them alone in their darkest moments as they sit staring into space, smouldering with bitter helplessness at how the relationship is irreversibly wrong. And we see them love, and spar, and hurt each other in ways that seem unimaginable until the full picture is painted. It is this hurt that makes Marion, with her big, defeated, glassy blue eyes, unable to look at Gilles as they review the terms of their divorce. And it is this same hurt that culminates in Gilles raping Marion in a hotel room, brokenhearted and enraged at losing her love. How did this twosome wind up in such a miserable state? The remaining chapters--which pull viewers backwards by their heartstrings--reveal many secrets about this truly sad story. Lacking any tension-breakers, like the line dance in Ozon's WATER DROPS ON BURNING ROCKS, 5 X 2 is sober and disconcertingly intimate. Honest to the point of emotional torture, yet compassionate toward his characters, Ozon has constructed another beautifully moving film. The soundtrack by Philippe Rombi, which features poignant contemporary tunes, plays a part too, in that the characters interact with it, and it becomes their anthem. [More]
Starring: Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi, Stephane Freiss, Francoise Fabian, Michael Lonsdale
Starring: Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi, Stephane Freiss, Francoise Fabian, Michael Lonsdale, Antoine Chappey, Geraldine Pailhas, Jason Tavassoli, Jean-Pol Brissart, Marc Ruchmann
Director: Francois Ozon
Director: Francois Ozon
Screenwriter: Emmanuelle Bernheim, Francois Ozon
Producer: Olivier Delbosc, Marc Missonnier
Composer: Philippe Rombi
Studio: ThinkFilm
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Reviews for 5X2
Like reading a book from which most of the connective chapters have been removed, backwards.
Gilles and Marion may be more than the sum of their regrets, but because their creator hasn't done the math, they remain touching stick figures.
Stripping away the extraneous details that etch great screen characters in our minds forever, Mr. Ozon pinpoints key moments in the life of a pair of married Parisians that leave the viewer paralyzed with boredom and confusion.
Ozon, as he's shown in his many recent films (particularly Under the Sand), knows a thing or two about love and loss; 5x2 achingly demonstrates both.
These aren't puzzle pieces that fit snuggly together but fragments of character in revealing moments when weakness or pettiness overcome calm and affection.
Unwinds with absolute clarity and sure style, and Freiss and Bruni-Tedeschi make an interesting couple, if not a truly memorable one.
Neither Marion, with her melancholy stares, nor Gilles, with his detachment and his cigarettes, appears more than a character sketch.
It's fascinating, like watching the collapse of a building in reverse.
The film is Bergman's Scenes From a Marriage without the boring parts -- wait, I'm not supposed to say that.
The inevitability of the conceit could wear on us, were it not for the lived-in performances of the cast, most important Bruni-Tedeschi and Freiss.
You can get an idea of the two seemingly contradictory truths about this movie: It's not much fun, and it's impossible to stop watching.
We never get to know the twosome, and the intense curiosity generated by the opening scene starts to wane severely.
Sympathies sway back-and-forth between the wife and the husband, but never within the same episode, making Ozon just another god from the machine
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 66% 66% | Public Enemies |
| 83% 83% | Harry Potter and the H… |
| 44% 44% | Night at the Museum: B… |
| 75% 75% | Julie & Julia |
| 32% 32% | Terminator Salvation |
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 90% 90% | District 9 |
| 86% 86% | 500 Days of Summer |
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| 06% 06% | All About Steve |
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