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Under the Sand
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List Price: $19.98
Our Price: $9.50
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Product Details
- Starring: Charlotte Rampling, Bruno Cremer, Jacques Nolot, Alexandra Stewart, Pierre Vernier
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- Audience Rating: Unrated
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- Binding: VHS Tape
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- Director: François Ozon
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- EAN: 9780794201456
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- Format: Color, NTSC
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- ISBN: 0794201458
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- Label: Fox Lorber
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- Manufacturer: Fox Lorber
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- Number of Items: 1
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- Product Group: Video
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- Publisher: Fox Lorber
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- Release Date: 2002-10-22
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- Studio: Fox Lorber
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- Theatrical Release Date: 2001-05-04
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- Title: Under the Sand
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- UPC: 720917017143
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Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: François Ozon's Under the Sand revolves around a tender, frightening contrast not easily forgotten: the dead live on only as long as we remember them. Marie (a luminous Charlotte Rampling) and Jean (Bruno Cremer), a middle-aged couple, are on vacation. As they ready the beach house almost wordlessly, a long-standing, intense love is immediately understood. While Marie naps on the shore, Jean goes off for a swim from which he never returns. Six months later, back in her empty Paris apartment, Marie goes about her life as if Jean is still there with her, reading in bed, massaging her feet, sitting at the breakfast table. At dinner parties and lunch dates, her close friends are visibly appalled her behavior. It becomes clear that Marie's place in society is increasingly precarious with a ghost at her side: her husband's bank accounts remain frozen because no body has been identified, her lectures at the university end abruptly in silence, her untimely laughter frightens a new lover. Ozon does not manipulate the viewer with surprise endings or try to charm with gags. Instead, we are intimately drawn into Marie's refusal to let go and her awful panic as Jean begins to fade. --Fionn Meade
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Customer Reviews
One of Ozon's true masterpieces!
The director once again dives into human's soul. And the result is an extraordinary portrait of grief, that hounts you for days after you've watched the movie...
And you MUST see Ozon's Time to leave (the next chapter in his death-themed trilogy)!
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Superb Storytelling
Although it may seem there is a whole lot of nothing much going on in this film, what little that is going on says volumes about life for all of us. The acting is the finest I have ever seen in a long time on film; the cinematography is skillfully and artistically executed, propelling the ambiences, thoughts, and feelings of the various characters. The audience gets a real sense of the characters, as some of them struggle to accept reality, others being supportive and understanding while some are harsh and judgmental, others too young to understand etc. etc.
Watch this one for the superb acting, poetic cinematography, and a simple story that explores a fact of life that not too many movies try to do.
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A good film
I could see why many consider this to be one of Francois Ozon's best films.
It is good. You just have to be in the right frame of mine to appreciate it. Charlotte Rampling does a good job interpreting the lead character and the settings are wonderfully shot.
It is a film about loss and how at times we cope with it unrealistically. It's a REAL kind of film.
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Life, Death, Grieving, Loss and Coping
François Ozon is a rare director, one who takes a simple story, places it in the eyes and bodies of his cast, and simply lets the tale tell itself. SOUS LE SABLE (UNDER THE SAND) is an unforgettable film experience that probes deeply into our psyches, hearts, and reason: how do we cope with sudden death?
Opening quietly in the French countryside, a loving middle-aged couple begins a brief vacation in a family house, quietly and lovingly going about removing dustcovers, opening shuttered windows - settling in for a time of being alone together. Marie (Charlotte Rampling) is a professor of English in Paris (her specialty is Virginia Woolf) and Jean (Bruno Cremer) is her retired husband. Their long-term love is palpable: Ozon provides almost no dialogue, as none is needed to establish this special relationship, so powerful is the non-verbal communication between Rampling and Cremer. They visit the beach the next day and while Marie is sunbathing, Jean goes for a swim - and never returns. Marie searches for him, engages lifeguards, and ultimately returns to Paris, trembling but intact. Months later, while Jean is never found, we see Marie reacting as though he still exists. She visualizes him in various situations and the two actors (yes, Jean is present in these scenes) interact as though nothing has changed. But Marie's friends note with great concern that she is 'delusional' and make various attempts for her to seek professional and emotional help. When news eventually arrives that Jean's body has been found, she internally denies this possibility but eventually returns to the vacation house town to identify the bloated corpse. Even at this point, though obviously in shock, she denies that the corpse is that of her beloved Jean. She walks back to the site where she last saw Jean and in the distance a figure rekindles her hope...
Charlotte Rampling delivers a performance wholly committed. She communicates the spectrum of feelings of this challenged strong woman with her eyes, her gazes in the mirror, her interaction with her class of students, her friends, her admirer with such power that makes her Marie a wholly credible creature stricken by loss yet surviving in her chosen manner. It is one of the great performances of cinema. The entire small cast of this film is perfection. Ozon is a magical director and continues to prove he is one of the most honest and quietly powerful figures in today's cinema. Highly recommended. Grady Harp, July 05
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very stagnant
I like Francois Ozon's Swimming Pool a lot. I think he has caught a very exceptional line in that movie. But Under the Sand is a very typical French movie which makes most people don't want to watch one as soon as they hear it is a French movie. I finally persuaded my husband that Francois Ozon is different and this movie will be good, it turned out to be a nightmare, pointlessly soul strangeling movie. I would not recommend unless you are a big fun of Ozon or this type of movies.
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