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Under the Sand (2001)
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Reviews Counted:69
Fresh:65
Rotten:4
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: Rampling carries the film with her finely nuanced performance of a woman coping with her husband's death.
Theatrical Release:May 4, 2001 Limited
Synopsis: Francois Ozon's haunting UNDER THE SAND stars the remarkable British actress Charlotte Rampling, who plays Marie Drillon: a strong, attractive, professional, independent middle-aged woman trying to... Francois Ozon's haunting UNDER THE SAND stars the remarkable British actress Charlotte Rampling, who plays Marie Drillon: a strong, attractive, professional, independent middle-aged woman trying to get her life back on track after the sudden disappearance of her husband. Even for a superwoman like Marie, the shock of the tragedy is psychologically traumatizing. Marie isn't sure what happened to her husband (Is he dead? Did he run off with someone else?) and she's in denial about him being gone. At Parisian dinner parties with her supportive, careful friends, Marie still talks about her husband in the present tense. At home, she still imagines that he is with her; she pours two cups of tea in the morning and she reminds him to set the alarm clock before going to sleep at night. At the university where she teaches English, she reads to her students from the melancholy book THE WAVES by Virginia Woolf. Through all of this, Ozon's camera caresses Marie and encourages her, always casting her in cold, confident light. Using film language such as the repeated double reflection of Marie's face in the mirror, audiences come to understand Marie's innermost thoughts and feelings. She is a woman confronting herself (her identity, her age, her body, her sexuality, her emotions, her intellect) with brutal honesty. UNDER THE SAND is beautiful, sad, languorous film that includes some unforgettable images of the rolling ocean waves near Marie's beach house in Landes, France. [More]
Starring: Charlotte Rampling, Bruno Cremer, Jacques Nolot, Alexandra Stewart
Starring: Charlotte Rampling, Bruno Cremer, Jacques Nolot, Alexandra Stewart, Pierre Vernier, Andree Tainsey
Director: Francois Ozon
Director: Francois Ozon
Screenwriter: Marina De Van, Marcia Romano, Emmanuelle Bernheim, Francois Ozon
Composer: Philippe Rombi
Studio: Winstar
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Reviews for Under the Sand
Under The Sand lifts the phantom-spouse syndrome to the level of art, yet another dimension for this popular form.
Under The Sand is vaguely disturbing, in an emotional sense, at all times.
"Under the Sand" is best seen as a showcase for a fine actress at the height of her capabilities.
Though flawed, this is a mature discussion of loss, denial and sanity that engages both the audience’s heart and its head.
Characters will do or say something that seems inexplicable until Ozon provides a context, and suddenly it all makes sense.
Where Rampling really bares herself is in the emotional revelations and rawness she delivers in just about every screen.
It crawls under the skin by placing you firmly in the shoes of the mourner.
Ozon ... displays a rare talent for being able to reveal life's interiority in unusually palpable terms.
It's hard even to describe the movie without making it sound trite. Rather, by showing behavior, the film gets at the emotional truth that underlies it.
Both of these Ozon films can do what few directors have mastered. They can make us feel exactly what the director intends, without overt or obvious cues.
Ozon shoots it all with such haunting economy and breathless intimacy, and Rampling acts it with such candor and recklessness, that the film keeps lingering in your mind after you see it.
An absorbing, visually poetic portrait of one woman's subconscious refusal to come to grips with loss and grief.
This beguiling film ... is blessed with a wonderfully complex performance by Charlotte Rampling.
Charlotte Rampling’s performance, alone, is worth the price of admission...
As the film exposes the haunted frailty beneath bourgeois exteriors, Under the Sand marks the advance of Ozon from promising auteur to artful interpreter of the human condition.
A stark and surreal, non-literal and non-linear journey through the sand dunes of loss and denial.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 36% 36% | Angels & Demons |
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 83% 83% | Harry Potter and the H… |
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