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Les cinq sens

Original title: The Five Senses
  • 1999
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
Les cinq sens (1999)
ComedyDramaMusic

Interconnected stories examine situations involving the five senses. Touch is represented by a massage therapist who is treating a woman, while her daughter accidentally loses the woman's pr... Read allInterconnected stories examine situations involving the five senses. Touch is represented by a massage therapist who is treating a woman, while her daughter accidentally loses the woman's pre-school daughter in the park. The older daughter meets a voyeur (vision), a professional ... Read allInterconnected stories examine situations involving the five senses. Touch is represented by a massage therapist who is treating a woman, while her daughter accidentally loses the woman's pre-school daughter in the park. The older daughter meets a voyeur (vision), a professional house-cleaner has an acute sense of smell, a cake maker has lost her sense of taste, and a... Read all

  • Director
    • Jeremy Podeswa
  • Writer
    • Jeremy Podeswa
  • Stars
    • Molly Parker
    • Gabrielle Rose
    • Elize Frances Stolk
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    3.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jeremy Podeswa
    • Writer
      • Jeremy Podeswa
    • Stars
      • Molly Parker
      • Gabrielle Rose
      • Elize Frances Stolk
    • 39User reviews
    • 33Critic reviews
    • 56Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 16 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Five Senses
    Trailer 1:53
    The Five Senses

    Photos17

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    Top cast33

    Edit
    Molly Parker
    Molly Parker
    • Anna Miller
    Gabrielle Rose
    Gabrielle Rose
    • Ruth Seraph
    Elize Frances Stolk
    • Amy Lee Miller
    Nadia Litz
    Nadia Litz
    • Rachel Seraph
    Mary-Louise Parker
    Mary-Louise Parker
    • Rona
    Daniel MacIvor
    Daniel MacIvor
    • Robert
    Philippe Volter
    Philippe Volter
    • Dr. Richard Jacob
    Clinton Walker
    • Carl
    Astrid Van Wieren
    • Richard's Patient
    Brendan Fletcher
    Brendan Fletcher
    • Rupert
    Paul Bettis
    • Richard's Doctor
    James Allodi
    James Allodi
    • Justin
    Gavin Crawford
    Gavin Crawford
    • Airport Clerk
    Sandi Stahlbrand
    • TV Reporter #1
    Amanda Soha
    • Sylvie
    Gisèle Rousseau
    • Odile
    • (as Gisele Rousseau)
    Damon D'Oliveira
    Damon D'Oliveira
    • Todd
    Marco Leonardi
    Marco Leonardi
    • Roberto 'Luigi'
    • Director
      • Jeremy Podeswa
    • Writer
      • Jeremy Podeswa
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews39

    6.73.1K
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    Featured reviews

    Buddy-51

    a true work of art

    In movies, as in most other art forms, the greatest of works often come in the smallest of packages. Such is the case with `The Five Senses,' an independent Canadian production that chooses for its subject nothing less profound than a meditation on what it means to be human. Writer/director Jeremy Podeswa has fashioned a work of great poetic form and insight centered around a group of people who share the universal need to find true love and acceptance in a world where wounded and shattered relationships all too often result in magnified loneliness and despair. Like all of us, each of these characters gropes towards the dual goals of intimacy with others and acceptance of oneself that are essential for human happiness. Some succeed, while others fail – just as in life – but none of the characters is left unchanged by the experience.

    `The Five Senses,' though it has a plot, is more of an emotional mood piece than a narrative-driven drama. Blessed with an outstanding ensemble cast, Podeswa is able to draw us in to the center of his world through the use of sensory imagery and deliberate, methodical pacing. In fact, one of the strongest themes running through the film is its examination of the part our senses play in defining our world and character. Podeswa understands that we have become desensitized to our senses. As a result, he uses this film to reconnect us to that crucial element of our beings. The quiet, hushed tone, the muted autumnal colors, the slowly moving camera, the haunting musical score all combine to create an atmosphere in which the audience can become conscious of every sight and sound that comes our way.

    In our effort to establish meaningful intimacy with other human beings, we most typically rely on the sense of touch – yet, this can serve, Podeswa shows us, as much to trap us into a false intimacy as to lead us into one that is genuine and lasting. A number of his characters use sex as a substitute for true closeness, while others make a physical connection on a much deeper level. One of the most moving moments in the film occurs when a gay man – most probably an AIDS patient – breaks down in tears during a massage session, his heart broken because no one has dared to touch him in so long a time. This film acknowledges the vital part that tender physical contact plays in the totality of a person's humanity.

    In a similar way, the film explores the beauty of sound, as one of the characters – ironically, an eye doctor, a man dedicated to preserving the organ of one sense – faces the prospect of impending deafness and yearns to create a mental catalogue of all the exquisite sounds of everyday life that he will soon no longer be able to hear and that we so routinely take for granted. Yet, like all the other characters, it is his spiritual emptiness and inability to make a meaningful connection with another human being that bring him his greatest obstacles to happiness. Podeswa also examines the part smell plays in making that vital human connection, as one of the characters – a lonely gay man – revisits his former lovers to take a whiff of their scent in an effort to discover if he can smell `true love.'

    Yet `The Five Senses' is not merely a movie built on a clever `gimmick.' On the contrary, it breathes with the fullness of humanity because each of its many characters emerges as a fully developed, instantly recognizable human being. There are teenagers alienated by their own inability to fit into the accepted norm of society and made to feel guilty by their acts of careless irresponsibility. There are mothers terrified of losing their children, in one case, literally, as her young girl wanders off and disappears and, in another case, figuratively, as her adolescent daughter seems to be slipping away into inexplicable `strangeness.' There are adults unable to comprehend a life filled with failed relationships who strike out in desperation for that one last opportunity for happiness, often with the result that they end up further away from that universally desired goal than ever.

    One of the most daring aspects of `The Five Senses' is that it does not succumb to the temptation to provide either a `happy' ending or even a conclusive one for all of its characters. The film acknowledges that life is a messy, never ending process of changing fortunes and personal growth and it stays true to that theme all the way to the end.

    This brave, haunting and mesmerizing film definitely stands as one of the true movie finds of recent years – a true work of art!
    7ToldYaSo

    A film about connections

    Chosen as the film to start the Perspective Canada series for the 1999 Toronto Film Festival, "The Five Senses" explores numerous lives in turmoil that are also intertwined in many ways.

    Shot in Toronto, the story revolves around the disappearance of a little girl and how it affects the lives of those who knew her and those who feel responsible. More predominantly though, I believe it is about the bonds that are forged from one person to another in a variety of relationships and the strains that can test them. From friends old and new, parent to child, employer to employee, client to vendor, lovers past and present. All of these associations undergo a transformation of some kind in this film.

    The film is beautifully shot with interesting set-ups but is not edited evenly throughout the feature. Scenes with Molly Parker and Mary Louise Parker are tightly edited and executed nicely, while some other scenes just seem to be drawn out a bit too much, the pace is a slow one, with numerous subplots that attempt to liven the drama.

    But for art's sake and support of Canadian filmmaking, I would prefer not to draw negative attention to this film. There are some very moving scenes and excellent performances, but at the same time, I'm not sure I can recommend this one to just anyone.
    lou-50

    Love lost and found

    "The Sixth Sense" bedazzled us last year with its supernatural trickery. This year, "The Five Senses" deserves equal success by being merely natural -being able to tell a human story intelligently. The film is a collection of love vignettes with each character cleverly highlighting one of the human senses. Writer and director Jeremy Podeswa has intertwined a human drama of finding a missing little girl with each player contributing an intriguing and equal share of the story, crisscrossing each other's lives in near perfect structure and execution. "The Five Senses" is what "Timecode" wishes it could have become. Mary Louise Parker heads a powerful cast, each member with an absorbing tangent that you merrily want to follow: Robert (Daniel MacIvor) the gay house cleaner who pursues true love by trying to find that distinct scent, Rona (Parker) the hopelessly unlucky lover who only sees what she wants to see in a relationship, Roberto (Mario Leonardi) her amorous counterpart too wrapped up in Italian cuisine to understand American courtship, Richard (Philippe Volter) the French doctor so consumed with his ominous deafness until he is rescued by an unexpected consort, Ruth (Gabrielle Rose) the massage therapist who tries to consummate her love for her deceased husband every time she touches a client, and finally Rachel (Nadia Litz), a composite of all the senses, a young woman blinded by guilt both past and present and yet using her senses to strive for forgiveness. "The Five Senses" is intelligent enough to show us how each individual uses their senses to try to escape their human quandary - some succeed and some don't.
    8Tom-191

    Impressed by the atmosphere and authenticity of this metropolitan-people drama.

    The promise Jeremy Podeswa gave with his first film "Eclipse" is really fulfilled now in his second "Five Senses". Authentic atmosphere and the various aspects of a little bit neurotic life-feeling of metropolitain people is again in his new film. Podeswa has an astonishing hand for showing the daily tragedies with credibility and he really cares about his protagonists. Intelligent dialogues and good actors complete the very good first impression. A director with a great future !
    erod_a

    amazing film

    without any doubt, this film is a perfect manner to exemplify the human been that we are. In this country at this time, it is difficult to find it in the video store. All this kind of events can occurred and it is probably that in certain moments one pass some experience like some of the characters. Incredible. Perfect. Marvelous. Sensitive

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The characters representing the five (5) senses begin with the letter 'R' Ruth : Touch Rupert : Sight Rona : Taste Robert : Smell Richard : Hearing
    • Quotes

      Robert: You look good.

      Rona: Of course I look good; all I do is fuck and eat.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: X-Men/The Five Senses/The Eyes of Tammy Faye/Chuck & Buck (2000)
    • Soundtracks
      AMARILLI MIA BELLA
      Written by Giulio Caccini

      Performed by Daniel Taylor

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 10, 2000 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Languages
      • French
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • The Five Senses
    • Filming locations
      • Toronto, Ontario, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Alliance Atlantis Communications
      • CTV Television Network
      • Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $497,091
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $26,653
      • Jul 16, 2000
    • Gross worldwide
      • $515,847
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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