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Ben Whishaw,
Ben Whishaw,
Alan Rickman,
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Tom Tykwer,
Xavier R. Bernadbeu,
Tom Tykwer,
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: Dreamworks Video
: Drama, Suspense/Thriller, Costume Drama/Period Piece, Crime
: 147 min.
: English
: English, Spanish, French
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An obsessive French perfumer with a highly developed olfactory sense and an all-consuming drive to capture the essence of love eventually resorts to murder in his unrepentant quest to find the key ingredient for his recipe in director Tom Tykwer's adaptation of author Patrick Suskind's best-selling 1985 novel. Born in a fetid fish market and raised in a dilapidated orphanage, Jean-Baptiste Grenouille (Ben Whishaw) toiled his childhood away in a rank tannery run by the thuggish Grimal (Sam Douglas). Subsequently obsessed by smell, Grenouille's keen olfactory sense becomes so finely tuned that it eventually overpowers such human qualities as love and compassion. Though he has indeed discovered the unmistakable scent of a woman, Grenouille finds it impossible to connect with the fairer sex on any sort of meaningful level. Roaming the streets of Paris late one night, Grenouille catches the scent of a young girl selling plums and impulsively strangles her, later sniffing her nude corpse in a twisted attempt to preserve the distinctive scent in his memory. After persuading legendary perfumer Giuseppe Baldini (Dustin Hoffman) to take him on as an apprentice, Grenouille travels to the town of Grasse in Southern France in order to learn the art of enfleurage at a firm run by the highly respected Mme. Arnulfi (Corinna Harfouch). It is there that Grenouille becomes dangerously drawn to the vestal aroma of the young and beautiful Laura (Rachel Hurd-Wood), the daughter of widower merchant Antione Richis (Alan Rickman). Soon driven to madness by such a pure scent, the spellbound Grenouille continues to claim the lives of the numerous young girls in a tragic attempt to bottle the impossibly elusive smell of virginal womanhood. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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| Scent of Several Women
by talltale
July 24, 2007 - 9:20 PM PDT
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2 out of 3 members found this review helpful
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The NY Times' A.O. Scott may have hated it, but PERFUME proves a pretty good visual paean to the wonders of scent. German director Tom Tykwer is a good match for this lurid yet chaste, luscious but dark tale of 18th Century France and the young man who made it a good deal less safe for young women.
Tykwer finds an almost-always appropriate manner in which to visually highlight the idea and sense of scent. And his cast, production and set designers, cinematographer and the rest of his crew abet him beautifully. The movie divides into three parts: the first is a wondrous though bleak account of the main character's childhood and adolescence; the last is a bizarre and semi-apocalyptic rendering of the world, once his dream has been achieved. In between is an only fitfully interesting tale of serial murder and its paltry investigation. This does lessen the movie's impact over-all. But not enough to destroy the wonder it so exquisitely and horribly achieves.
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GreenCine Member Rating
(Average 7.70) 33 Votes
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