IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,8/10
2453
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuWhile waiting her husband return from a business trip, a young woman with a baby is getting close with a strange woman traveler.While waiting her husband return from a business trip, a young woman with a baby is getting close with a strange woman traveler.While waiting her husband return from a business trip, a young woman with a baby is getting close with a strange woman traveler.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 2 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt
Marina de Van
- Tatiana
- (as Marina De Van)
Nicolas Brevière
- Man in the woods
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
This is a good shocker, using something of a Wuthering Heights scenario in miniature. It would have made an excellent 30-35 minute short, but was unnecessarily extended for probably commercial reasons. If some scenes appear to add little to the story, try to think about the link between:
-What Tatiana says about the consequencies of women ripping during childbirth
-Tatiana's disturbed personality
-the toothbrush incident
-Tatiana's knowledge of the men in the forest, yet lack of interest in joining Sasha for oral sex there
-The closing scene
The director nicely sets up the atmosphere of foreboding, which after all, is what horror movies depend on. I though the rope on the victim was a clever and disturbing touch; it's something I've never seen before, although I admittedly haven't seen many horror flicks. While you can guess how it ends fairly early on, the twists and turns in getting there, and the denouement, are quite unexpected. Compared with Ozon's other shorts, this has some substance mixed in with his usual puerile, tedious obsession with the dark side of human sexuality.
I like films like this (e.g. 2001: A Space Odyssey)where you have to think afterwards about what you've seen, and maybe see it again, to make complete sense of it. Your mileage may vary.
-What Tatiana says about the consequencies of women ripping during childbirth
-Tatiana's disturbed personality
-the toothbrush incident
-Tatiana's knowledge of the men in the forest, yet lack of interest in joining Sasha for oral sex there
-The closing scene
The director nicely sets up the atmosphere of foreboding, which after all, is what horror movies depend on. I though the rope on the victim was a clever and disturbing touch; it's something I've never seen before, although I admittedly haven't seen many horror flicks. While you can guess how it ends fairly early on, the twists and turns in getting there, and the denouement, are quite unexpected. Compared with Ozon's other shorts, this has some substance mixed in with his usual puerile, tedious obsession with the dark side of human sexuality.
I like films like this (e.g. 2001: A Space Odyssey)where you have to think afterwards about what you've seen, and maybe see it again, to make complete sense of it. Your mileage may vary.
See The Sea is one of those films that's truly horrifying. This is one
of the few movies that gave me a true scare, not a cheap one. A mother
and her child live in a cottage that's located by the sea. Her husband
is always on a lengthy business trip, leaving the two alone for long
periods of time. One day, a female drifter comes into their lives. This
is when the fun begins. Mere words cannot describe what happens next.
But the end results are down right scary. If you want a nice scare or
if you enjoy a real good thriller every now and then, this one might be
your cup of tea.
Highly recommended.
A-
of the few movies that gave me a true scare, not a cheap one. A mother
and her child live in a cottage that's located by the sea. Her husband
is always on a lengthy business trip, leaving the two alone for long
periods of time. One day, a female drifter comes into their lives. This
is when the fun begins. Mere words cannot describe what happens next.
But the end results are down right scary. If you want a nice scare or
if you enjoy a real good thriller every now and then, this one might be
your cup of tea.
Highly recommended.
A-
The story begins with a crying baby and ends with a crying baby (but under very different circumstances) and in between we become involved in a intriguing and somewhat sinister drama about two very different women. The beauty of the beach location with its golden sand contrasts in an interesting way with the ugliness of the tragic events. Simmering not far below the surface is the sexual yearning of two women, each of them lonely in their own way.
Baby Chiffre is a great little actress - smiling, gurgling, crying and doing all the right things at the right time. The two women made a nice contrast in characters - Sasha Halls as the lonely elegant wife and Marina de Van as the intruding back-packer. The development of the plot as the cunning back-packer with her insensitive questioning manipulates the wife into accepting her presence inside her home is an exciting thought somewhat frightening aspect of the story.
There are a couple of details I would like to question: Firstly, would the obviously well-bred wife put the toilet roll at her feet on the bathroom floor? Secondly, whilst admitting she was very hungry, would the backpacker pick up her dinner plate and lick off the gravy with her big fat tongue? While the toothbrush scene might offend some people,I found it quite acceptable in the context of the desperate character.
Husband Paul appears late in the film as a businessman returning from Paris. The shocking scene which he discovers on arriving home stuns him into absolute silence, hand over mouth to stifle his cry. I think a cry of terror, panic, disbelief - call it what you will, would have added more dramatic impact.
Summing up: top quality film, interesting, exciting and disturbing. I am still trying to understand the significance of the title.
Baby Chiffre is a great little actress - smiling, gurgling, crying and doing all the right things at the right time. The two women made a nice contrast in characters - Sasha Halls as the lonely elegant wife and Marina de Van as the intruding back-packer. The development of the plot as the cunning back-packer with her insensitive questioning manipulates the wife into accepting her presence inside her home is an exciting thought somewhat frightening aspect of the story.
There are a couple of details I would like to question: Firstly, would the obviously well-bred wife put the toilet roll at her feet on the bathroom floor? Secondly, whilst admitting she was very hungry, would the backpacker pick up her dinner plate and lick off the gravy with her big fat tongue? While the toothbrush scene might offend some people,I found it quite acceptable in the context of the desperate character.
Husband Paul appears late in the film as a businessman returning from Paris. The shocking scene which he discovers on arriving home stuns him into absolute silence, hand over mouth to stifle his cry. I think a cry of terror, panic, disbelief - call it what you will, would have added more dramatic impact.
Summing up: top quality film, interesting, exciting and disturbing. I am still trying to understand the significance of the title.
Ever since I've started writing comments on IMDb I've been writing about European movies more than about American, and I've suggested readers to watch most of them. I gave good marks to French movies, though many others (mostly American) movie-lovers found them pretentious, false artistic or boring. But now here's the movie that expresses everything bad people have ever thought about French movies. Too short for a serious standard movie, too long for its weak story. Too much nudity for prudes, too little to be a soft-porn. Too many unimportant scenes, too little developing of characters. If Americans often make cover versions of French movies, this one shamelessly steels from US movies and still succeeds to make it boring, because we can expect in advance every important event and the revealing of secrets doesn't surprise us very much. Finally, the "shocking" end of the movie is in fact the only logical one.
What's good in the movie? Photography maybe, but it is so common in French movies that it's not necessary to emphasize it (no better, no worse than average French photo). The acting is also far below French standards. Paul as character might have also been omitted from the movie, he might have been left just as a person somewhere far away: it would have been intriguing for us to think if he existed at all. But it would be too, too much for writers to understand that.
What's good in the movie? Photography maybe, but it is so common in French movies that it's not necessary to emphasize it (no better, no worse than average French photo). The acting is also far below French standards. Paul as character might have also been omitted from the movie, he might have been left just as a person somewhere far away: it would have been intriguing for us to think if he existed at all. But it would be too, too much for writers to understand that.
I taped this due to the recommend in the NYT television section and it was right. I kept getting apprehensive from the moment the backpacker turns up. The suspense of approaching terror reminded me of the growing sense of horror in Chabrol's Le Ceremonie.
Two quibbles: what mother would leave her baby in the bathtub for only a few seconds. And what mother would leave her baby alone on the beach? The mother obviously had a dark side to begin with; she was lonely (trying to reach her husband for several times without success) and was an easy prey to the backpacker. While the ending horrified me, it shouldn't have surprised me. What was great is the movie didn't drag on and was short.
Definitely worth watching and it left me shaken for a long time after-wards. Like Le Ceremonie, it will remain in my memory. Horror doesn't mean slash and gore.
Two quibbles: what mother would leave her baby in the bathtub for only a few seconds. And what mother would leave her baby alone on the beach? The mother obviously had a dark side to begin with; she was lonely (trying to reach her husband for several times without success) and was an easy prey to the backpacker. While the ending horrified me, it shouldn't have surprised me. What was great is the movie didn't drag on and was short.
Definitely worth watching and it left me shaken for a long time after-wards. Like Le Ceremonie, it will remain in my memory. Horror doesn't mean slash and gore.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe character Sasha was written specifically for Sasha Hails. Her character was given a young daughter so that Hails could work alongside her own infant daughter and not have to be separated from her while the film was being shot.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Ozon: Remastered & Uncut (2022)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Blicke aufs Meer
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirmen
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Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 49.476 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 10.268 $
- 30. Aug. 1998
- Laufzeit52 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.66 : 1
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Oberste Lücke
By what name was Besuch am Meer (1997) officially released in Canada in English?
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