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Interviews with Charlotte Rampling and Ludivine Sagnier; outtakes; poster and picture galleries.
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
2. Main Titles [7:15]
3. London [7:09]
4. Arriving in Lubéron [4:03]
5. Sarah Works Alone [4:22]
6. Julie's Arrival [5:24]
7. The Swimming Pool [7:10]
8. The Food [8:05]
9. The Men [3:39]
10. The Inspiration [5:07]
11. The Absence [7:45]
12. The Dinner [:01]
13. Julie's Revenge [10:57]
14. Sarah Investigates [11:07]
15. Removing the Evidence [7:53]
16. Goodbyes [2:25]
17. Return to London [3:22]
18. Julie/Julia [1:34]
19. End Titles [3:35]
Filmmaker Francois Ozon, contemporary French cinema's master of eroticism, outdoes himself with this sultry thriller, a Hitchcockian exercise bound up in guilt, panic, and deceit, and additionally laced with overt sexuality. It provides a great leading role for the charming Charlotte Rampling, here playing a celebrated English mystery writer offered the loan of a French villa by her publisher (Charles Dance). The tired, repressed author is annoyed when her privacy is shattered by the unexpected arrival of her host's daughter (Ludivine Sagnier), a voluptuous little sexpot who brings men to the villa for sexual adventures and even seduces one of the older woman's potential paramours. Up to this point the film is little more than tawdry melodrama, but Ozon takes a sharp left turn by having Rampling's character commit an uncharacteristic act that she spends the rest of the movie attempting to conceal. The storytelling is unusually facile (for Ozon, anyway), although the pacing is a bit slow by Hollywood standards. Ultimately it's Rampling's audacious performance that distinguishes Swimming Pool, although she's ably supported by the fetching Sagnier, a swift-rising starlet and favorite of the director. If you're in the mood for a sophisticated, engrossing tale of suspense, look no further. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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