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Innocence (2004)

Innocence (2004)
Member Rating:  
A strange institution prepares young girls for their future in a manner they don't truly understand in this surreal drama laced with fantasy. Iris (Zoe Auclair) is a six-year-old girl who arrives in a coffin (though alive and well) at a remote boarding school, where she and a handful of other girls are looked after by teachers Mademoiselle Eva (Marion Cotillard) and Mademoiselle Edith (Hélène de Fougerolles). Handpicked for the school and taken away from their families at a young age, each girl's age and place in the school's hierarchy is identified by the color of ribbon they wear in their hair (the oldest students, about 12, get purple ribbons), and they are forbidden to leave the campus grounds. Violating the rules is dealt with harshly, and their lessons focus on little besides ballet and biology. Each evening, the older girls are taken away to a different program they are not allowed to discuss, and the students get the impression that they are somehow being trained for future responsibilities, though what and why both remain a mystery. The first feature film from writer and director Lucile Hadzihalilovic, Innocence was adapted from a short story by Franz Wedekind. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Zoe AuclairBerangere Haubruge, (more)
Director(s):
Lucile Hadzihalilovic
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Innocence

A strange institution prepares young girls for their future in a manner they don't truly understand in this surreal drama laced with fantasy. Iris (Zoe Auclair) is a six-year-old girl who arrives in a coffin (though alive and well) at a remote boarding school, where she and a handful of other girls are looked after by teachers Mademoiselle Eva (Marion Cotillard) and Mademoiselle Edith (Hélène de Fougerolles). Handpicked for the school and taken away from their families at a young age, each girl's age and place in the school's hierarchy is identified by the color of ribbon they wear in their hair (the oldest students, about 12, get purple ribbons), and they are forbidden to leave the campus grounds. Violating the rules is dealt with harshly, and their lessons focus on little besides ballet and biology. Each evening, the older girls are taken away to a different program they are not allowed to discuss, and the students get the impression that they are somehow being trained for future responsibilities, though what and why both remain a mystery. The first feature film from writer and director Lucile Hadzihalilovic, Innocence was adapted from a short story by Franz Wedekind. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
120 mins

Complete Cast of Innocence


Director(s):
Lucile Hadzihalilovic
Writer(s):
Lucile Hadzihalilovic
Producer(s):
Patrick Sobelman
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR
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    Member Reviews
     
    Ann F.

    I wish that I could have those two hours of my life back. I even invested more by watching a 10 minute bonus to try to make some sense or worth out of the torture I just put myself through. Why this is rated 4 stars when the reviews are all one is unfathomable - please be warned. I stuck in there through the end of the painstakingly slow and uneventful movie waiting for a payoff that never happened. It's like watching paint dry and never being allowed to at least stand back and see the entire room at the finish. Whoever came up with the idea that the school makes money by selling seats to a girls ballet recital never went to one themselves - they're excrutiating to sit through, made bearable only if your own child or niece is performing. And that supposedly was the climax of this movie?

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    Jeremy D.

    I'm trying to warn those from seeing this movie that it could seen as offensive, but the language of my warning is being censored by this site, so that all I can really say is that you've been warned. The movie is dreadfully slow and obvious anyway. Skip it.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Wolfram K.

    I watched this movie on fast forward and it was still pain-stakingly slow. There was no plot, no characterization, and no point. I still have no idea what this movie is about, and strongly discourage watching it.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Read All 22 Reviews