Human Flowers of Flesh

Human Flowers of Flesh is a 2022 French-German drama film directed by Helena Wittmann, starring Angeliki Papoulia, Ferhat Mouhali, Gustavo de Mattos Jahn, Ingo Martens, Mauro Soares, Vladimir Vulevic, Steffen Danek, Nina Villanova and Denis Lavant.

Human Flowers of Flesh
Directed byHelena Wittmann
Written byHelena Wittman
Produced byFrank Scheuffele
Karsten Krause
Julia Collen
Starring
CinematographyHelena Wittman
Edited byHelena Wittman
Music byNika Son
Production
companies
Fuenferfilm
Tita Productions
Release date
7 August 2022 (Locarno Film Festival)
Running time
106 minutes
CountriesFrance
Germany
LanguagesEnglish
French
Portuguese
Serbo-Croatian

Cast

  • Angeliki Papoulia as Ida
  • Ferhat Mouhali
  • Gustavo de Mattos Jahn
  • Ingo Martens
  • Mauro Soares
  • Vladimir Vulevic
  • Steffen Danek
  • Nina Villanova
  • Denis Lavant

Release

The film premiered at the Locarno Film Festival on 7 August 2022.[1]

Plot

Ida is the owner of a sailing yacht with an international crew consisting of five men: Vlad from Croatia, Farouk from Algeria, Falco from Germany, Mauro from Portugal, and Carlos from Brasil. They rarely speak to each other and go about their daily tasks on the ship in silence. In Marseille, Ida becomes enamored with the French Foreign Legion, which has its headquarters in nearby Aubagne. Together with her crew, she embarks on a journey across the Mediterranean Sea towards the Algerian city of Sidi Bel Abbès, the former headquarters of the French Foreign Legion until 1962.

Reception

David Jenkins of Little White Lies called the film "wholly intoxicating and immersive".[2] Sophie Monks Kaufman of IndieWire called the film a "meditative gem powered by images, shot by Wittmann herself, that, on their own terms, make the film worth your time."[1] James Lattimer of Sight & Sound called the film a "gorgeously immersive, fluid work of cinema."[3]

Neil Young of Screen Daily wrote that Wittman "struggles to assemble promising fragments into a satisfactory whole" and called the film a "textbook big-screen example of ambition far outrunning execution."[4] Marta Bałaga of Cineuropa wrote that the film is "on its very own level, either mind-numbingly dull or hypnotic."[5]

References

  1. Kaufman, Sophie (7 August 2022). "'Beau Travail' Inspires a New Take on French Legionnaires in 'Human Flowers of Flesh' — Review". IndieWire. Retrieved 9 October 2022.
  2. Jenkins, David (7 August 2022). "Human Flowers of Flesh – first-look review". Little White Lies. Retrieved 9 October 2022.
  3. Lattimer, James (8 August 2022). "Human Flowers of Flesh: a Mediterranean marvel". Sight & Sound. Retrieved 9 October 2022.
  4. Young, Neil (8 August 2022). "'Human Flowers Of Flesh': Locarno Review". Screen Daily. Retrieved 9 October 2022.
  5. Bałaga, Marta (11 August 2022). "Review: Human Flowers of Flesh". Cineuropa. Retrieved 9 October 2022.
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