2005, 90 min
A.K.A.: Cinq Fois Deux
Country: France
Studio: Thinkfilm
Cast: Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi, Stéphane Freiss
Director: François Ozon
Screenwriter: François Ozon
Cinematographer: Yorick Le Saux
Rating: R
TLA Rating:
5x2
2005, 90 min A.K.A.: Cinq Fois Deux Country: France Studio: Thinkfilm Cast: Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi, Stéphane Freiss Director: François Ozon Screenwriter: François Ozon Cinematographer: Yorick Le Saux Rating: R TLA Rating:
SKINOPSISHoly shit, that was hot! You'll be breaking out the tissues or whatever it is you clean up your cum with after the hottest sex-turned-rape scene we've seen in quite a while. It starts out with Valeria Bruni Tedeschi looking bored while getting her tits fondled by her bearded friend. Then he starts gently humping her before rolling off, revealing her neatly-shaved landing strip of a bush. Then beardo gets another idea and pushes her face down and starts pounding her hard from behind while she screams for him to stop and cries, but beardo is relentless and he gets his. You go beardo, you get yours... who gives a shit whether she gets hers. -- Rick Stanko
3 REASONS TO BUY THIS FILM
REVIEW
Of course, a new film by François Ozon is always a cause for celebration. France's auspiciously talented and prolific filmmaker has given us the impressive quartet of Swimming Pool, 8 Women, Under the Sand and Water Drops on Burning Rocks in about as many years — and he doesn't disappoint with this latest film. 5x2 is the trenchant study of a couple torn apart. However, what sets Ozon’s story apart from other serious cinematic portraits of tormented relationships is that — in the hopes of ferreting out revelatory information — it doesn't remove layers of narrative as it goes along. Instead, Ozon’s film travels in the opposite direction by telling its story backwards (think Christopher Nolan's Memento, Gaspar Noe'sIrreversible or Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's 21 Grams), thereby provocatively adding layers to the tale as it unfolds. The title refers to five key developments in the relationship between two people (played by Valerie Bruni Tedeschi and Stéphane Freiss). We meet them as they are in the throes of divorce, and then trace their shared path back to a momentous party, childbirth, marriage, wedding night and, finally, to their first meeting. And so the film bursts with initial intensity before ultimately morphing into something softer. Ozon has said that, "We start off like Bergman and end up like Lelouch." And that says it all. (French with English subtitles) -- Joe Baltake
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