Juliette Binoche Movie:

Code Unknown



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Juliette Binoche Movie:
Code Unknown



Movie
Code Unknown
Code Unknown
List Price: $29.95Label: Kino Video

Salesrank: 82583

Released: August 6, 2002
Our Price: $14.95
Used Price: $5.98
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Color
  • DVD
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Juliette Binoche
  • Thierry Neuvic
  • Josef Bierbichler
  • Alexandre Hamidi
  • Maimouna Hélène Diarra
  • Code Unknown Reviews:
    The complex intertwinings of every day life 4 Star Review
    2009-08-02 - This unusual film presents a `slice of life' view of several individuals' lives who reside in Paris. We follow each person, learn a bit about their life, their ups and down, and see how their lives interconnect in random ways. The main characters are an actress, a photographer just back from the Balkans, a teen-age boy, and an illegal immigrant from Romania. Each has their own problems, successes, and failures, and they all have some interaction, often relatively minor. The primary theme of this film is, I believe, to make the viewer more aware of the complex lives of everyone they pass and ignore on the street every day. This is definitely an unusual film in that there is no real plot or grand denouement at the end. The viewer just sees snippets of everyone's daily life, and the action bounces back and forth between the various characters. The style can be a bit off-putting initially and hard to follow as it isn't clear what is going on. Stick with it though as you will, I think, be rewarded for your patience. This is definitely the kind of film that will raise you awareness of strangers as they come into and out of your life - you'll understand the title of the film at the end. This is also a `thinking-person's' film, there is little action and no plot. A good film, but the reason that I give this four stars is that it isn't a film you'll watch over and over again. Once, maybe twice. If you like other Haneke films (such as The Piano Player or The Time of the Wolf), I think you'll find this one worthwhile.

    Code Unknown: Another example of why I love French cinema. 4 Star Review
    2007-09-29 - "A feature film is twenty-four lies per second." -- Michael Haneke.

    Austrian filmmaker Michael Haneke (The Piano Teacher (Unrated Edition), Cache (Hidden)) is known for his "disturbing" style. "My films are intended as polemical statements against the American 'barrel down' cinema and its dis-empowerment of the spectator," he says. "They are an appeal for a cinema of insistent questions instead of false (because too quick) answers, for clarifying distance in place of violating closeness, for provocation and dialogue instead of consumption and consensus." That said, his 2000 French film, Code Unknown: Incomplete Tales of Several Journeys (Code Inconnu: Recit Incomplet De Divers Voyages), is set primarliy in Paris, although several scenes occur in Mali and Romania, where the fates of five very different characters intersect, connect, or disconnect, as the case may be. Juliette Binoche plays Anne, a semi-successful actress who, in a nine-minute unbroken opening shot, bumps into Jean (Alexandre Hamidi) on a busy Paris street. He is the disgruntled younger brother of her remote war photographer boyfriend Georges (Thierry Neuvic). After revealing that he has run away from his father's farm, Jean insults Maria (Luminita Gheorghiu), a Romanian street beggar by callously tossing his trash into her lap. Amadou (Yenke), a principled black teacher of deaf children observes the incident, angrily confronts Jean, and demands an apology. The gendarmes arrive and tell Jean to leave, while arresting Amadou (presumably because he is black) and commencing the deportation of Maria. This brief incident has a ripple effect, linking the lives of these characters for the remainder of the intellectually fierce film, a film which confronts issues of communication, xenophobia, victimization and consumer society head on. The point of the film seems to be that modern society is heartless, and that it is infected with prejudice and bigotry which threaten to destroy it unless addressed on individual and political levels. Haneke uses long, unedited camera takes, jarring fades, and Godardian edits characteristic of French cinema, which some viewers might find frustrating. I say be patient with this very rewarding film.

    G. Merritt

    Not hollywood, but a work of art 5 Star Review
    2007-06-26 - Without giving anything away, let me offer a comparison to the hollywood oscar winner "Crash" because they have similar themes. They both deal with the psychological and communicative dis-functions particular to our modern, multicultural world. Both films also deal with the suffering we create through our behavior toward one another by way of our assumptions, beliefs, and prejudices.

    Stylistically, however, these two films have little in common. Whereas "Crash" plays like a pilot for a tv series, weaving its characters and their stories together in support of its themes (as it holds our hands throughout and takes us where it wants us to go), "Code Unknown" is a puzzle in fragments that we must assemble ourselves from the layered information we are given. Whereas "Crash" connects too many improbable conversations and events with possible ones in order to hit us over the heads and wrench our hearts with its message, "Code Unknown" entrusts us with cinematic clues and metaphors that we must use to construct our own understanding. In "Crash" everyone tells us everything they feel and think thereby limiting the possibilities of what we are allowed to imagine. To the contrary, "Code Unknown" invites us to rely our own abilities (as perceivers) to discover what truths there are."Crash" has a few brilliant scenes, but once we have seen it there is nothing left to experience, wonder about, or really discuss. The show is over, and now we know everything about it (just as with every hollywood film) . "Code Unknown" (like all works of art) is made up of one brilliant scene after another, but more importantly it entreats us to reflect, as well as interpret. It also invites us into conversation about it, even asks us to return and discover again.... cinewest

    What we have here is a failure to communicate... 5 Star Review
    2006-07-19 - Code Unknown was a revelation. The first Michael Haneke film I've seen, I was surprised at how vitriolic the reviews have been here and on the film's IMDB page - arty-fartsy and incomprehensible seems to be the general concensus, yet I found it remarkably vital and accessible for a film revolving around race relations and everyday failures to communicate. Starting with an incident on a French boulevard where misinterpreted actions have consequences for all the wrong people, it proceeds in a series of incomplete scenes by people linked by the incident or their relationships with those involved, taking in a multi-ethnic city where so many people have shut off from those around them that they either fail to understand each others' problems or to even make the effort.

    What's particularly interesting is that it plays on the audiences own prejudices and presuppositions - at one point we naturally assume that a young black character is seated away from the window booth he requested in a restaurant because of his color, but no: it's because he turned up 45 minutes late and the place is busy. Similarly, it doesn't presume that people in what are supposed to be empathetic or compassionate professions are inherently good - when Juliette Binoche's actress asks her war photographer boyfriend advice about the sounds of child abuse from a neighboring flat, he doesn't want to know and her anger is more because he won't give her an out but forces the situation back on her. Her solution: ignore it. Even the innocent victim of the opening incident has to admit with shame that she herself had done the same thing to people she looked down on. It's beautifully worked out with several powerful sequences that are uncomfortably familiar to city dwellers (the metro sequence is particularly powerful) and somehow comes across as exhilarating as it is uncomfortable.

    Great filmmaking - although if you have a multi-region player you may be better off getting the UK PAL DVD for a better transfer than Kino's Region 1 disc (and it has a nice extras package, too).



    Code Unknown: Reality Unknown 4 Star Review
    2005-10-08 - This is a masterpiece of collage. The non-linear sequence of the story can make it hard to watch, but very intreging. It blows open the thoughts that we have in everyday life. That we are the most important, it shows that every life is insignificant to other people. The story deals with racism and mature themes, underlying troubles. It gives us glimpes into the fact that at times we can reach out and change other peoples' lives but in fact we choose to change only our own, as you see in the very end of code unknown. The interweaving of the storyline makes it a wonderful way to see the daily interaction between people that don't know eachother, and choose not to know eachother. There is only one linear scene in the entire movie and that would be the drum scene, but everything is brought together in the end. I would highly recommend this story to anyone that has the time and patience to sit down and watch a good/uncoventional movie.










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