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IMDbPro

You go to my head

Original title: You Go to My Head
  • 2017
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
3.5K
YOUR RATING
Svetozar Cvetkovic and Delfine Bafort in You go to my head (2017)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer2:35
11 Videos
75 Photos
DramaMysteryRomance

Following a mysterious car accident in the desert, Dafne suffers from post-traumatic amnesia. Jake, the first person she sees when she regains consciousness, tells her he's her husband.Following a mysterious car accident in the desert, Dafne suffers from post-traumatic amnesia. Jake, the first person she sees when she regains consciousness, tells her he's her husband.Following a mysterious car accident in the desert, Dafne suffers from post-traumatic amnesia. Jake, the first person she sees when she regains consciousness, tells her he's her husband.

  • Director
    • Dimitri de Clercq
  • Writers
    • Dimitri de Clercq
    • Pierre Bourdy
    • Rosemary Ricchio
  • Stars
    • Delfine Bafort
    • Svetozar Cvetkovic
    • Arend Pinoy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    3.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dimitri de Clercq
    • Writers
      • Dimitri de Clercq
      • Pierre Bourdy
      • Rosemary Ricchio
    • Stars
      • Delfine Bafort
      • Svetozar Cvetkovic
      • Arend Pinoy
    • 35User reviews
    • 118Critic reviews
    • 69Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 37 wins & 119 nominations total

    Videos11

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:35
    Trailer
    Official Teaser
    Trailer 1:19
    Official Teaser
    Official Teaser
    Trailer 1:19
    Official Teaser
    You Go To My Head: My Husband?
    Clip 1:32
    You Go To My Head: My Husband?
    You Go To My Head: Let Me Help You
    Clip 2:00
    You Go To My Head: Let Me Help You
    You Go To My Head: You Get To Be A Blank Slate
    Clip 2:03
    You Go To My Head: You Get To Be A Blank Slate
    Clip #4
    Clip 2:04
    Clip #4

    Photos75

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    + 71
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    Top cast8

    Edit
    Delfine Bafort
    • Dafne…
    Svetozar Cvetkovic
    Svetozar Cvetkovic
    • Jake
    Arend Pinoy
    Arend Pinoy
    • Ben
    Omar Sarnane
    • Caretaker
    Laurence Trémolet
    • Real Estate Agent
    Jmiaa El Hlali
    • Hotel Employee's Mother
    Hamza Sarnane
    • Hotel Employee
    Abdel Jalil Zerououl
    • Doctor
    • Director
      • Dimitri de Clercq
    • Writers
      • Dimitri de Clercq
      • Pierre Bourdy
      • Rosemary Ricchio
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    6.53.4K
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    Featured reviews

    10jordanlage

    You Go to My Head: This Heart of Mine Hasn't a Ghost of a Chance

    Dimitri de Clercq's story begins with an image and sequence that's a perfect thematic encapsulation of the film to follow. An SVU has crashed in a desert, its two occupants unmoving. The passenger, a young woman, stirs and finds that the driver hasn't survived what may have been an unfortunate accident, or something more nefarious, we don't yet fully know. As she struggles to get out of the car, she climbs sideways, according to our point of view, and we realize that to film the scene, the cinematographer has affixed the camera on an axis in the rear seat facing forward so that the viewer at first assumes the car is in its normal, all 4 wheels-on-the-ground position, when in fact it has rolled over and lay on its side - disorienting, initially, as the young woman makes her way up and out (again, sideways, from our Dutch angle perspective) of the car, then increasingly disquieting as she tries to get her bearings and seek help. We try to get our bearings, too, as we are put immediately into the shoes of our protagonist's plight, as she fruitlessly attempts to make her way through an unfamiliar landscape, Morocco as it turns out. The odds begin to dim that she - and in effect, we - will make it out of this nightmare alive. The plot kicks in when a man discovers our heroine (Delfine Bafort, who, in the course of the film, convincingly has to start from scratch and thus goes from cautious to trusting to assertive) in the nick of time, and brings her to a doctor, whereupon they determine that she has suffered near-total amnesia from the car crash.

    Beyond that, any more specifics are a guessing game. Characters' hands are not disclosed. Doubts enter in. Who wants exactly what from whom, are people are gaslighting one another, when will the other shoe drop, these are questions that start to slowly gnaw at what we think we are already sure of. In this respect, YOU GO TO MY HEAD sustains an art house neo-Hitchcockian aspect for the remainder of the film. While most of the movie unfolds under the relentless heat and bright whiteness of the Saharan sun, its noir elements are unmistakable.

    The best stories, in particular films, don't explain, they unfold, with minimal exposition The viewer here doesn't get ahead of de Clercq's and co-scriptor Pierre Bourdy's plot. Polanski's and scriptwriter Robert Towne's CHINATOWN is but one of the most well-known examples of this (advisedly) inviolate rule of storytelling. YOU GO TO MY HEAD unfolds in much the same way. We do not know (and it would rob our enjoyment anyway of) what will happen next. De Clercq continually upends expectations. When the young woman, Kitty, as she comes to be called by her saviour Jake (Svetozar Cvetkovic, in a carefully calibrated, admirably restrained performance), inadvertently discovers information that potentially gives up the ghost of what the writers have cooked up, we feel that same sickening sense of dread found at the end of CHINATOWN because we're now so fully invested in the outcome of their relationship. It's a very deft threading of a narrative needle de Clercq has accomplished, keeping the audience's sympathies intact for both lead characters despite the unease we feel about them. That uncomfortable ambiguity felt through the entirety of the film is the very same one experienced through another European master's films whose abstract sense of queasy atmosphere is his hallmark, Michelangelo Antonioni. THE PASSENGER and ZABRISKIE POINT come to mind of course, but its better-suited double-feature companion would be Antonioni's undisputed enigmatic classic, L'AVVENTURA.

    As long as we're comparing and contrasting, YOU GO TO MY HEAD can be said to comfortably take its place beside other memorable desert-set post-studio era motion pictures. I suppose the instinct to lump it with the most obvious example, Lean's LAWRENCE OF ARABIA, is inevitable, but the English director's romanticized vision of Colonel Lawrence's Arabian peninsula doesn't quite do the lethal dangers of such an unforgiving landscape justice - the vistas and sequences are far more beautifully composed in Freddie Young's breathtaking 70mm cinematography. But it's a far different type of film. Lean's images were meant to leave his audiences awestruck. Not so de Clercq's. It's abstract in the way a Hockney painting is abstract. With Hockney, you know the painting conveys a vague southern California milieu. With de Clercq's film, there's a sense of discomfiting menace and passive hostility, as if the Moroccan desert is patiently waiting for the right time to strike, and then when it does, it will come as a slow psychological uncoiling, not the adrenaline-inducing dramatics of being engulfed by quicksand in the midst of a ferocious sandstorm. In that vein, de Clercq's film is cousin to Claire Denis's BEAU TRAVAIL, in which a regiment of Legionnaires is garrisoned on the edge of a moonscape in the Horn of Africa, The remoteness and proximity of the topography is so a constant reminder of how literally close they are to mortality that it eventually warps their psyches. Kitty and Jake's isolation on the edge of the desert may bring them closer together, but it gets under our skin, unnervingly so. Major kudos are due to Stijn Grupping's cinematography. And all due respect to Vittorio Storaro, there's no need to delve into any comparisons with Bertolucci's THE SHELTERING SKY.

    Symbolism abounds in YOU GO TO MY HEAD. The atonal score alludes to the distress Kitty is undergoing as she has doubts about exactly what has befallen her. Jake's modernist edge-of-the-desert home is as austere and alluring as moonlit dunes, a Corbusian wet dream. It and the outdoor pool serve as a literal oasis for Kitty as she rebounds from the crash. But the pool has cracks in the basin, is in need of repairs. Slowly the water drains away around the time that a dismaying truth is inexorably revealed. For that matter, the inquietude is not consigned to the film's final quarter hour. An unsettling sense of dread permeates the film's entirety, reaching a point of despair as it does towards the end, resulting in a most unexpected dénouement. What it finally has to say about human motivation and the lengths to which one will go to satisfy one's desires may be the film's most disturbing takeaway.
    8jakethesandbag

    Gorgeous, emotional mind trip

    To begin, I don't know where you can find this film as of right now. I have been assisting with a Film Festival's selection process, and this absolutely stunning film came up. It might be a bold declaration, but some of the visuals in this truly unusual thriller are comparable to "Lawrence of Arabia," with how it captures vistas, minimalism, and just showcasing the story. Keep it on your radar, and for sure add it to your watchlist for something to keep your eyes open for, because this is one of the most beautiful films I have seen in recent memory.
    10cwertheimer-39231

    A fascinating exploration of identity

    I found this film utterly absorbing from the first frame. I was mesmerized by the wonderful cinematography which perfectly captured the stark desert landscapes. The film was further enhanced by its austere score. The images and sounds complimented the account of the main character, a woman, who has lost her memory as a result of a concussion. She is discovered unconscious in the desert by an older man who identifies himself as an architect. What unfolds is a complex questioning of what constitutes identity. As the story unfolds through the eyes of the amnesia victim, the viewer becomes drawn into her psyche and puzzles over what is real and what is fantasy. Although I found this a bit unsettling, it added the right amount of mystery making the movie extremely absorbing. The narrative, acting, and dialogue were all excellent. The design of the architect's home was starkly beautiful and fascinating. I highly recommend this movie.
    9Craig_Derek_Jones

    A Rare Cinematic Experience

    We screened this remarkable film at the Capital City Film Festival this year and we were all impressed by it's lush beauty. The film plays like a lucent dream with inspired use of color, composition, and location. It's refreshing to see such a beautifully made film that doesn't pander to it's audience. The narrative material is both challenging and accessible at the same time with stellar performances by the two leads. YOU GO TO MY HEAD is a rare cinematic experience that's filmed in a classic Art House style while still embracing modern storytelling techniques and technology. It's unique and unforgettable.
    10jbmariner

    An Amazing Film

    If you love to watch filmmaking at its best, You Go To My Head should be tops on your list. I thoroughly enjoyed every moment watching this film unfold. Each frame was carefully crafted into beautiful art. The story was told with subtle and unexpected twists and executed with a keen eye for masterful cinematography. The acting, editing and directing were superb. This is one film that is so finely and intelligently made that I would absolutely recommend it to film lovers everywhere.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Filmed in Morocco at Fobe House, which is owned by producer/director Dimitri de Clercq.

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 13, 2018 (Serbia)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Germany
      • Belgium
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Flemish
      • Berber languages
    • Also known as
      • You Go to My Head
    • Filming locations
      • Fobe House, Tassoultant, Marrakech, Morocco(main location)
    • Production companies
      • CRM-114
      • The Terminal
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $10,682
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,864
      • Feb 17, 2020
    • Gross worldwide
      • $10,682
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 56 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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