:
Vincent Gallo,
Vincent Gallo,
Tricia Vessey,
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Claire Denis,
Claire Denis
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: Not Rated
: Horror, Suspense/Thriller
: 89 min.
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IN THEATRES: MARCH 2002 (LIMITED)Claire Denis' TROUBLE EVERY DAY is a spine-tingling chiller. When the young couple Shane (Vincent Gallo) and June Brown (Tricia Vessey) embark on their honeymoon, they share a champagne toast in plush first class seats as they soar over the Atlantic on their way to Paris. Shane pays an extended visit to the men's room where he has a foreboding vision, and June is worried, but her concern soon passes as she shares an awkward embrace with him. In Paris, a pretty young hotel maid (Florence Loiret-Caille) shows the couple to their room, and Shane stares her down with the hunger of a wolf. The couple refrains from sex, though as June undresses for a short nap, an irritated bite mark is visible on her arm. Shane leaves his wife to her nap, and hurries to a laboratory where he desperately searches for scientist Léo Sémeneau (Alex Déscas). Meanwhile, at Leo's house, the frothing Coré Sémeneau (Béatrice Dalle), his wife, is locked away in a room where she seethes with blood lust. Slow, languorous camerawork and detailed attention to the contours of bare skin hint at the trouble to which the title refers, while a near-complete lack of dialogue and a moody musical score by Tindersticks keeps viewers calmly at bay. When the truth about Léo, Shane, and Coré comes out, two graphic sex-murder-cannibalism-mutilation scenes reveal the extent of the trouble at hand.
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GreenCine Member Rating
(Average 6.00) 7 Votes
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| New French Extremity |
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| Predominately films that would be classified as 'horror' with a few notable exceptions. Many films get lumped into this catagory because the director has made films considered "transgressive". |
kraigpdx
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