Close Menu
Beverly Hills Examiner

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Watch Model/Actriz Perform “Cinderella” on Colbert

    June 19, 2025

    AI that can modify and improve its own code is here. Does this mean OpenAI’s Sam Altman is right about the singularity?

    June 19, 2025

    Military Couple Refuses to Surrender Constitutional Rights to the U.S. Air Force, As an Active-Duty Service Member’s Career Hangs in the Balance … With No Pay | The Gateway Pundit

    June 19, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Beverly Hills Examiner
    • Home
    • US News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Science
    • Technology
    • Lifestyle
    • Music
    • Television
    • Film
    • Books
    • Contact
      • About
      • Amazon Disclaimer
      • DMCA / Copyrights Disclaimer
      • Terms and Conditions
      • Privacy Policy
    Beverly Hills Examiner
    Home»Film»Julia Ducournau’s Indulgent AIDS-Era Genre Bender
    Film

    Julia Ducournau’s Indulgent AIDS-Era Genre Bender

    By AdminMay 20, 2025
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit Telegram
    Julia Ducournau’s Indulgent AIDS-Era Genre Bender


    Four years ago, French writer-director Julia Ducournau came to Cannes with her sophomore feature, Titane, a movie that both shocked and dazzled audiences, then shocked a few more people by walking away with the Palme d’Or. It was only the second time a woman won the festival’s top prize, after Jane Campion did so 30 years earlier. And it was certainly the first time that a film featuring a girl getting busy with a Cadillac, which winds up impregnating her, ever accomplished such a feat.

    Titane kicked off with orgasmic automobile intercourse and only got crazier from there, if such a thing is possible. It felt like three or four movies at once, all told simultaneously and as loudly as possible. And while Ducournau’s excellent coming-of-age debut, Raw, was at once half-crazy and half-contained, Titane was like a set by a DJ doing everything she can to hold down the dance floor, raising the volume to the max at all times, switching up records midway through each song to keep folks on their feet.

    Alpha

    The Bottom Line

    Too much of a new thing.

    Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Competition)
    Cast: Mélissa Boros, Tahar Rahim, Golshifteh Farahani, Emma Mackey, Finnegan Oldfield, Louai El Amrousy
    Director, screenwriter: Julia Ducournau

    2 hours 8 minutes

    The director applies that same approach to Alpha, a numblingly over-the-top AIDS-era parable that dishes out tons of fresh ideas, serving them with ample gore, VFX, pounding musical interludes and acting that’s turned up several notches. It can impress with its utter originality and technical know-how, but there’s so much going on for so long that many viewers will be exhausted by the midway point, if not earlier. You’ve got to give Ducournau credit for refusing to settle down or take the Hollywood route after winning the Palme, but you also have to wonder if her latest feature will please anyone but her.

    Which isn’t to say that Alpha doesn’t try to tackle a whole bunch of serious themes many of us can relate to. But again, there are too many themes crammed together into one giant metaphorical sandwich — albeit a sandwich that’s served on a tasty French baguette — to the point that the flavors all cancel each other out.

    First and foremost, the movie is a period piece revisiting the horrors of the AIDS epidemic with actual horror, transforming HIV-positive patients into humans whose bodies gradually turn to marble, like X-Men crossed with the Greek antiquities wing at the Louvre. It’s a powerful visual idea, taking the famous images of sores plaguing AIDS sufferers in the ’80s and transforming them into hauntingly beautiful works of body horror. But it’s also so overcooked that it seems kind of silly: Why not just show the real thing, which is more horrible than anything the special makeup effects department could come up with? (Though credit goes to makeup artist Olivier Afonso for making the marble look great.)    

    Second, or perhaps first as well — there are only firsts in Ducournau’s films, all of them screaming for attention — the film is a coming-of-age story about a 13-year-old girl, Alpha (the arresting Mélissa Boros), who gets a tattoo with a dirty needle in the opening scene and therefore may have contracted the deadly disease herself. We spend much of the story wondering if she’s sick or not, leading to numerous instances of Alpha bleeding out of different wounds and scaring everyone around her. Highlights include two standout school sequences: one involving a bloody volleyball game, the other a swimming class in which Alpha bumps her head badly and clears the water like the shark in Jaws.

    And finally, Alpha is a tragic family story about drug addiction and loss. The girl’s hardworking mom (Golshifteh Farahani) is a doctor both publicly, in a dingy hospital ridden with marbleized patients, and privately to her brother, Amin (Tahar Rahim), a cadaverous junkie who shows up on their doorstep jonesing for another fix. He winds up never quite leaving, oscillating between friendly respites in which he plays the fun uncle to Alpha and scenes in which he nearly overdoses and has to be resurrected with adrenaline by his sister. Between all the shooting up, blood tests and other injections, there are more syringes on display here than in Panic in Needle Park.

    Medical queasiness and gory bodily intrusions have been a specialty of Ducournau (both of whose parents are doctors) since Raw, which turned a veterinary school into a feeding ground for two cannibal sisters. In Alpha, she combines the trauma of Amin’s habit, which may or may not have given him the marble disease, with the fear and suffering experienced by kids growing up when AIDS came into existence. (It’s worth noting that in France, it took several years for the government to officially recognize the epidemic.)

    These are worthy ideas, but there are so many of them that we begin to lose count. At some point we realize that the skeletal Amin may be a product of the hallucinations (a scaffolding tearing apart in the wind, a ceiling crashing down on a bedroom) that Alpha has been experiencing since the start of the film. Without warning we’re jumping between past and deeper past, between hairstyles from the 1980s and 70s, as if Alpha also needed a time-hopping scenario added to everything else it’s already tossed at us.

    Ducournau is definitely talented when it comes to craft and execution, jarring us with hyper-realistic horror that’s equal parts Cronenberg, Carpenter and Gaspar Noé. But she doesn’t know when to stop or just sit down for a moment and let the viewer breathe. Too much of a good thing, whether it’s marbleized body parts or blood dripping onto an overhead projector in a classroom, can become a bad thing when we have no time to take it all in.   

    She deserves credit, though, for thinking outside the box and having the skill to visualize such thoughts. Teaming up for the third time with Belgian cinematographer Ruben Impens, the director creates startling images from the very first shot, when the opening title transforms into a needle wound, to the last, when Alpha emerges in a stirring urban dust storm. Production designer Emmanuelle Duplay (Emilia Perez) gives all the interiors, whether bedrooms or hospital wards, an eerie claustrophobic feel, while costume designer Isabelle Pannetier recreates the carefree, punkish looks of the epoch.

    Of the three leads, Rahim is the most unrecognizable, having gone full Jared Leto-in-Dallas Buyers Club to portray a druggie at the very end of his tether. He hardly needs makeup to look terrifying, though his warmth comes across as well whenever Amin puts on a smile. The always good Farahani has a lot of screaming and shouting to do, pulling it off convincingly but then overdoing it in too many scenes of the same thing.

    And finally, newcomer Boros impresses as a combative young woman who gets repeatedly put through the wringer, barely coming out of the movie unscathed. She joins two other actresses — Garance Marillier in Raw and Agathe Rousselle in Titane — whom Ducournau brought to light, slathered in blood and then transformed into the unlikely heroines of her freaky cinematic universe, which grows more outlandish with each new work.



    Original Source Link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit Telegram
    Previous Article‘American Idol’ John Foster Breaks Silence After Finale Loss
    Next Article AI doesn’t know ‘no’ – and that’s a huge problem for medical bots

    RELATED POSTS

    28 Years Later review – Danny Boyle is finally…

    June 19, 2025

    Where to Stream Every ‘Jurassic Park’ Movie Online

    June 19, 2025

    Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders’ Kelli Reveals How She Really Feels About Squad Demanding Pay Increase

    June 18, 2025

    F1 review – speed is king, subtlety is…

    June 18, 2025

    Tom Cruise to Get Honorary Oscar

    June 17, 2025

    Trust Me, You Should Watch Paddy Considine’s New Movie With 93% On RT While Waiting For MobLand Season 2

    June 17, 2025
    latest posts

    Watch Model/Actriz Perform “Cinderella” on Colbert

    Last night, Model/Actriz made their TV debut playing the Pirouette song “Cinderella” on The Late…

    AI that can modify and improve its own code is here. Does this mean OpenAI’s Sam Altman is right about the singularity?

    June 19, 2025

    Military Couple Refuses to Surrender Constitutional Rights to the U.S. Air Force, As an Active-Duty Service Member’s Career Hangs in the Balance … With No Pay | The Gateway Pundit

    June 19, 2025

    Carly Simon calls Sabrina Carpenter album cover ‘tame’ as singer gets backlash

    June 19, 2025

    SpaceX’s Starship blows up ahead of 10th test flight

    June 19, 2025

    Your brain tracks your sleep debt – and now we may know how

    June 19, 2025

    28 Years Later review – Danny Boyle is finally…

    June 19, 2025
    Categories
    • Books (586)
    • Business (5,492)
    • Film (5,428)
    • Lifestyle (3,533)
    • Music (5,482)
    • Politics (5,478)
    • Science (4,839)
    • Technology (5,425)
    • Television (5,102)
    • Uncategorized (1)
    • US News (5,479)
    popular posts

    Hot Octopuss Pulse Duo Review: Not for Penetration

    I’ve heard a decent amount about sex toy brand Hot Octopuss from my male friends,…

    Monkeypox: Smallpox drug helped treat the disease in one UK patient in 2021

    May 25, 2022

    General Motors (GM) earnings Q4 2022

    January 31, 2023

    Obama-Biden’s ‘Climate Change’ Initiative Hurts Economy, Helps Iran, And Does Little to Prevent ‘Climate Change’

    July 26, 2022
    Archives
    Browse By Category
    • Books (586)
    • Business (5,492)
    • Film (5,428)
    • Lifestyle (3,533)
    • Music (5,482)
    • Politics (5,478)
    • Science (4,839)
    • Technology (5,425)
    • Television (5,102)
    • Uncategorized (1)
    • US News (5,479)
    About Us

    We are a creativity led international team with a digital soul. Our work is a custom built by the storytellers and strategists with a flair for exploiting the latest advancements in media and technology.

    Most of all, we stand behind our ideas and believe in creativity as the most powerful force in business.

    What makes us Different

    We care. We collaborate. We do great work. And we do it with a smile, because we’re pretty damn excited to do what we do. If you would like details on what else we can do visit out Contact page.

    Our Picks

    Your brain tracks your sleep debt – and now we may know how

    June 19, 2025

    28 Years Later review – Danny Boyle is finally…

    June 19, 2025

    ‘Bachelor In Paradise’ Adds New Element For Season 10

    June 19, 2025
    © 2025 Beverly Hills Examiner. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “Accept All”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies. However, you may visit "Cookie Settings" to provide a controlled consent.
    Cookie SettingsAccept All
    Manage consent

    Privacy Overview

    This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
    Necessary
    Always Enabled
    Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
    CookieDurationDescription
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional11 monthsThe cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-others11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
    cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
    viewed_cookie_policy11 monthsThe cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
    Functional
    Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
    Performance
    Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
    Analytics
    Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
    Advertisement
    Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
    Others
    Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
    SAVE & ACCEPT