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J'ai perdu mon corps

  • 2019
  • Tous publics avec avertissement
  • 1h 21m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
38K
YOUR RATING
Patrick d'Assumçao, Victoire Du Bois, and Hakim Faris in J'ai perdu mon corps (2019)
Watch Bande-annonce [OV]
Play trailer1:46
5 Videos
47 Photos
Adult AnimationHand-Drawn AnimationAnimationDramaFantasyRomance

A story of Naoufel, a young man who is in love with Gabrielle. In another part of town, a severed hand escapes from a dissection lab, determined to find its body again.A story of Naoufel, a young man who is in love with Gabrielle. In another part of town, a severed hand escapes from a dissection lab, determined to find its body again.A story of Naoufel, a young man who is in love with Gabrielle. In another part of town, a severed hand escapes from a dissection lab, determined to find its body again.

  • Director
    • Jérémy Clapin
  • Writers
    • Jérémy Clapin
    • Guillaume Laurant
  • Stars
    • Hakim Faris
    • Victoire Du Bois
    • Patrick d'Assumçao
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    38K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jérémy Clapin
    • Writers
      • Jérémy Clapin
      • Guillaume Laurant
    • Stars
      • Hakim Faris
      • Victoire Du Bois
      • Patrick d'Assumçao
    • 158User reviews
    • 124Critic reviews
    • 81Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 31 wins & 56 nominations total

    Videos5

    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:46
    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Bande-annonce Teaser [OV]
    Trailer 1:01
    Bande-annonce Teaser [OV]
    Bande-annonce Teaser [OV]
    Trailer 1:01
    Bande-annonce Teaser [OV]
    I Lost My Body
    Trailer 1:47
    I Lost My Body
    I Lost My Body
    Trailer 1:01
    I Lost My Body
    I Lost My Body (Featurette)
    Featurette 2:27
    I Lost My Body (Featurette)

    Photos47

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    + 41
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    Top cast34

    Edit
    Hakim Faris
    • Naoufel
    • (voice)
    Victoire Du Bois
    Victoire Du Bois
    • Gabrielle
    • (voice)
    Patrick d'Assumçao
    Patrick d'Assumçao
    • Gigi
    • (voice)
    Alfonso Arfi
    • Naoufel enfant
    • (voice)
    Hichem Mesbah
    • Le père
    • (voice)
    Myriam Loucif
    • La mère
    • (voice)
    Bellamine Abdelmalek
    Bellamine Abdelmalek
    • Raouf
    • (voice)
    Maud Le Guenedal
    Maud Le Guenedal
    • La bibliothécaire
    • (French version)
    • (voice)
    • (as Maud Le Guénédal)
    Nicole Favart
    • Madame Lussac
    • (voice)
    Quentin Baillot
    • Le patron de la pizzeria
    • (voice)
    Céline Ronté
    • La mère du bébé
    • (voice)
    Deborah Grall
    Deborah Grall
    • La copine de Raouf
    • (French version)
    • (voice)
    • (as Déborah Grall)
    Pascal Rocher
    • Le pianiste aveugle
    • (voice)
    Bruno Hausler
    • L'automobiliste
    • (voice)
    • …
    Jocelyn Veluire
    • Le commentateur de foot et reportage
    • (voice)
    Raymond Hosni
    • Le professeur de faculté
    • (voice)
    Guillaume Desmarchellier
    • Voix d'ambiance
    • (voice)
    Brooke Burgstahler
    Brooke Burgstahler
    • Sandra
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    • Director
      • Jérémy Clapin
    • Writers
      • Jérémy Clapin
      • Guillaume Laurant
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews158

    7.538K
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    Featured reviews

    10ryanfordogs

    WTF??!!

    A masterpiece out of left field. Rich, layered, lean...devastating
    8darren-153-890810

    An absolute delight

    Saw this at LFF with absolutely no idea what to expect. I was completely blown away by how beautiful, heart felt and emotional it was.

    If any film can make you hold back the tears in my eyes is a winner. Let alone an animated one.

    Beautiful. Hope this gets a cinematic release
    9Cineanalyst

    Un-Hand-Drawn Animation

    Arty French animation "I Lost My Body" contains some lovely imagery, and others have applauded it for its poetic dramatization, but I want to focus on its clever self-reflexive construction. The story involves a character whose hand is severed, whereupon the plot mostly assumes a dual focus of that character with his remaining body and of that of his disembodied limb, the latter of which assumes an independent agency and movement. There's also a girl, who plays an important role in one respect, but the hero's journey is predominantly concerned with the boy and the hand. The foundational obstacle for both the boy and hand is to overcome a past tragedy of separation: the death of the boy's parents and, in the other case, the loss of the hand's body. All of which is congruent with the picture's self-referential pulse of the disconnection of modern animated movies, such as this one, from traditional hand-drawn animated cinema.

    This is more than a handy pun. Most of the primary elements of creating animation are included in the narrative. It has music--the boy's mother played the cello, and he and a blind man play the piano. The boy also collected audio on a cassette recorder (a device which also serves a critical function in the overcoming of the heroes' obstacles). Also notice the focus in the story on disembodied dialogue (e.g. the pizza delivery scene), which is what voice acting consists of, and on sound effects (e.g. the sound of wind from pressing one's hand to their ear). Besides the promise of a generic romantic coupling, the girl's role here also is in the writing department. She's a librarian and recommends to him a novel, "The World According to Garp," which itself is a piece of multi-layered, self-referential fiction about a writer and writing. Additionally, the boy borrows books about igloos from the library, which provides him with inspiration for his architectural designs. Thus, we have design (architectural and written), a soundtrack and a score. All that's left is to build the visuals of the animation. For that, he becomes a carpenter's apprentice--using, as his employer gives a helping hand, tools, accessories and instruments to transform the material, wood, which comes from the same stuff the paper animators used to draw films on did.

    Note that only then does the hand's separate story begin, from an "accident" of carpentry. Film is a process of reanimation; in live action especially, but also, through inspiration or as reference, in animation as well, film captures something alive--something animated--then kills and makes it inanimate as still images before, finally, reanimating what was once captured as the projected (or Netflix streamed, as the case may be) motion picture that the spectator views. Likewise, the hand's individual adventure begins when he is captured by the electric saw; next, the hand lies dead before becoming reanimated as something entirely different from what it once was. In other words, the disembodied hand here is a metaphor for film and, specifically, animated film. It's the film-within-the-film, the hand's journey nested between the outer story of the boy's making of that story, along with the girl as being something of our on-screen surrogate spectator.

    Unlike in live action, these drawn compositions don't necessitate a physical camera. This provides a free hand to the perspective of the picture, the theoretical camera's eye, which in turn becomes the spectator's shared vantage point, to be limited only by the filmmakers' imagination. The handling of that camera here is where "I Lost My Body" most excels visually in my estimation. In addition to alternating between color and black-and-white palettes and 2D and 3D computer animation, there's some shifting in perspectives. We and the camera are sometimes like a fly--oblivious, perhaps, to the characters when we're at a distance on a wall, but a nuisance when we swoop in or rest too close upon them. Other times, we share the point of view of this or that character--both what they see in the outside world and, through memories and fantasies, what they imagine with their mind's eye. At one point, we're just a disembodied eyeball resting on a floor. We may even be a reflection in a subway mirror as we witness a hand hiding under a ravioli can scurrying by. (By the way, does anyone else sense a dig at Pixar--specifically "Ratatouille" (2007) with this sequence involving rats, but with other scenes, too, such as floating through the wind (albeit it with an umbrella instead of balloons) between cars, and I can't think of any better reason for the astronaut business here. It would be fitting since, after all, Pixar largely killed traditional animation.)

    Even better here is the attempt, which seems specifically more suited to animation because of how it's made, to expand the sensory stimuli by adding texture and a motif of the hand feeling the physical world around it. We experience movies, to paraphrase Charlie Chaplin, as movement, two planes and a suggestion of depth; it's something we've always seen and, later, also heard. Of course, we also feel emotionally and physically in response to the audio-visual experience. Thus, sure, "I Lost My Body" is touching, but, moreover, its tactile focus, hand-in-hand with its self-reflexive framework, almost gives the impression that it's a movie we can feel, to reach out and touch back.
    8ameyvitian7

    Hauntingly mesmerizing and dreamy yet nightmarish!

    Though, there are too many interpretations to this one - What it forced me to believe and somewhere poked a thought in me was - "What you seek is seeking you" - Somewhere, it's about a dream - A dream that's seeking you - While you're sitting back, afraid of taking that leap into the unknown - A leap of faith, a jump that's completely unpredictable and irrational - But sometimes, you take that leap and therefore you reach an unknown place with unknown challenges which bring unknown rewards to you - Just run into it blindly and keep your fingers crossed.
    10the_danny

    "I lost my body" is all about losses in life that many of us go through, and hope

    A simple animation and yet so poetic and melancholic. It's slow and cozy to watch, it unexpectedly got my feelings carried away through the story of this young boy finding his reasons to continue living. "I lost my body" is all about losses in life that many of us go through, and the uniquevocual reason we continue to live is hope to find that part of us that's missing, such as love. A very few movies out there have the capacity to touch hearts these days, this is one of them.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Marks the first time a feature-length animation has won prestigious Cannes parallel selection, Critics' Week Grand Prize.
    • Goofs
      The map on the bathroom door mistakenly reads Turkey above Greece whereas the name Greece (as well as the countries above it) is omitted.
    • Quotes

      Naoufel: Do you believe in fate? No, seriously.

      Gabrielle: That everything is written in advance? That we follow a trajectory?

      Naoufel: Yeah

      Gabrielle: And that we can't change anything?

      Naoufel: We think that we can, but we can't. It's an illusion. Unless we do... Something completely unpredictable and irrational. It's the only way to conjure the spell for good.

    • Connections
      Featured in 47th Annie Awards (2020)
    • Soundtracks
      Cello Suite No.4, BWV 1010, Prelude
      Written by Johann Sebastian Bach

      Performed by Maria Kliegel

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    FAQ15

    • How long is I Lost My Body?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 6, 2019 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Netflix (United States)
      • Official site (United States)
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • I Lost My Body
    • Production companies
      • Xilam
      • Auvergne Rhône-Alpes Cinéma
      • SofiTVciné 6
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,136,431
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 21m(81 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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