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    Movie Fail Last Login: 5/25/13

    http://www.rottentomatoes.com/member/moviefail
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    PROFILE STATS

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    2196
    Profile Views Last 7 Days:
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    ABOUT

    Member Since
    August 2010
    Current Location
    http://moviefail.wordpress.com
    Movie Character You Most Identify With
    Napoleon Dynamite, Withnail
    Favorite Line From A Movie
    "Are you the farmer?"- Withnail in Withnail & I
    Favorite Scene From A Movie
    The Matrix - "I Know Kung Fu" and Final Monologue, 300 - Leonidas's Rage, Withnail & I - Opening Credits, American History X - The Last Death, Shawshank Redemption - Final Scene, Matchstick Men - Roy's Intro, The Iron Giant - "Superman"
    Favorite Movie
    Withnail & I
    Favorite Actor
    Edward Norton & Joseph Gordon-Levitt
    Favorite Director
    Tomas Alfredson, Pete Docter, Michel Gondry, Milos Forman, Edward Zwick, Christopher Guest, Alfonso Cuarón, Darren Aronofsky, Banksy, Joss Whedon, Jamie Uys, David Fincher, Nick Park, Thomas McCarthy, Hayao Miyazaki, and Wes Anderson
    Celebrity Crush
    Mila Kunis
    Favorite Genre
    Comedies
    Favorite Critic
    Roger Ebert
    Best Movie Seat
    middle
    Favorite Movie Watching Snack
    Twizzlers
    Favorite Movie Watching Drink
    Coke
    When I'm not watching movies, I'm...
    Writing Reviews, Playing Table Tennis, Playing Music, Playing Video Games, Doing Biomedical Research, Surfing The Net
    Fresh or Rotten
    fresh

    REVIEWS SNAPSHOT

    Reviews Written:
    71
    • Highest Voted
    • Lowest Voted
     
     
     
     
    Votes
    +9 +12 / -3
    thumb up thumb down
     
     
    Inception (2010)
    80%

    I don't want to call Christopher Nolan a hack director, because by all rights, he isn't. But if he continues to receive these accolades so undeservedl... More

    23 Comments

     
     
    Votes
    +1 +6 / -5
    thumb up thumb down
     
     
    The Dark Knight (2008)
    70%

    I cannot tell you how sorrowfully my hopes were dashed when I first saw The Dark Knight in theaters. Unfortunately, The Dark Knight refuses to realize... More

    10 Comments

    REVIEWS

     
     
    Showing 1 - 1 of 1 Reviews for The Intouchables
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    +2 +2 / -0
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    The Intouchables (2012)
    Genre:
    Comedy
    80%

    Posted on 8/23/12 10:24 AM

    Olivier Nakache and Eric Toledano's latest film is a fascinating character study that approaches many of the themes handled in The Diving Bell and the Butterfly. And while it doesn't quite match the dramatic depth or raw honesty of that film, The Intouchables largely succeeds in its marriage of emotion and humor. As a sylistic, feel-good flick with strong individual elements, I can see why The Intouchables was an easy choice for last year's César Award ceremony.

    The film tells the story of Driss (Omary Sy), a young guy from the streets of Paris, who finds himself caring for a wealthy tetraplegic art connoisseur named Philippe (François Cluzet). As their relationship begins to unfold, they find that their mutual companionship is far more valuable than the physical services they can provide one another. The premise if heartwarming, even if it is a bit cliché.

    Still, Nakache and Toledano manage to coax out some incredible performances from Sy and Cluzet which keep the movie afloat. Driss in particular shines as the looser, more humorous of the two; his willingness to break the stifling conventions of "higher society" makes for some very funny crowd-pleasing gags. What is most compelling about these two characters, however, is how each of their drastically different stories about life in Paris weave together to comment on two very different aspects of the same world. And indeed, the story of the highfalutin Philippe does come to a moving ending that directly ties to his relationship with Driss. On the other hand, Driss' tale comes to a quiet, unremarkable, and unexplained ending which keeps his arc from having a real sense of purpose.

    And in the greater context of the film, it is unfortunate that Driss' story gets shortchanged. Looking back to Michael Haneke's 2005 film Caché, everything from French-Algerian relations to racial tension is explored. In one small scene in that film, a black biker nearly hits Daniel Auteuil's character. Their very brief but heated exchange says more about the underlying issues in France than all of The Intouchables, which is too bad considering the opportunity to take a risk and go for poignancy is certainly there.

    I think this speaks to the general failings of The Intouchables - the way it handles its potentially touchy subject matter is a microcosm of how Nakache and Toledano approached the film's structure. The film opens with a visually and aurally beautiful scene which eloquently introduces us to both Driss and Philippe; the way the imagery is presented and how perfectly the dialogue comes across feels like the beginnings of a truly avant garde film. But by the time the audience is called back to this gorgeous opening sequence, little stylistic or substantive precedence has been given for their debut scene together. This is because the audience is aware at the film's end that the plot has fallen into a by-wrote formula that so many other movies succumb to, and this stands in stark contrast to its intriguing introductory scene.

    As aforementioned, The Intouchables does eschew its potential for mediocrity through the strength of its lead actors, but that underlying feeling of "been there, done that" is nevertheless pervasive. Reservations aside, I would certainly recommend the film. It's funny and it's sweet, and its heart is in the right place - my disappointment comes simply at its unwillingness to go that extra mile.

    Verdict: Movie Win
    RT Score: 80%

    ~ Søren

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    Tyler M.

    Tyler M. on 8/27/12 at 12:55 PM

    Normally, I don't like to see foreign language films, but this one looks unbelievable.

    1 Replies | Report Abuse

    Movie Fail

    Movie Fail on 8/27/12 at 01:25 PM

    Interesting - well, I think it's well-worth your time, even if you don't normally go for foreign films.

    0 Replies | Report Abuse

    Showing 1 - 1 of 1 Reviews for The Intouchables
     
     
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