![]() She choreographed that and also the dance on the truck at the end. I really enjoyed working with her cause I was dancing as well in rehearsals. We worked with a pole dancer that is super famous in Europe called Doris Arnold, who did an amazing job. I mean, that was a huge part of the film. This leads me to the choreography of the film. She also does this through her choreography, which is incredible in its ownership of the car and of all the representations that are linked to cars in general. And I think that when we get to Alexia, she actually reclaims the power of the gaze, by looking through the lens and looking directly at you, so that you're not looking at her, she's looking at you. Obviously it means that the gaze sexualizes the dancers. Somehow the fact that I try to somehow mimic the male gaze at the start. What made you decide to start the story with the two women, Alexia and Justine, dancing at the car show? And in the case of Virginie Despentes for a very long time. I think reclaiming the narrative and taking over the male gaze is something that a lot of women artists are interested in right now. ![]() This was not at all something that I thought about when I did this scene. Julia Ducournau: No, although I really love Virginie Despentes as a writer. The first killing of the man who follows Alexia from work made me think of Virginie Despentes and their reclaiming of the narrative, you know Baise-moi and all of these kinds of movies. Stephanie LaCava: I'd like to talk a little bit about the exotic dancing portrayed on the cars in the beginning. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity. We talked about choreography, the inescapable sway of Virginie Despentes and Claire Denis, and Simone de Beauvoir. ![]() Ducournau became the second female director after Jane Campion to win the Palme d’Or.ĭucournau spoke to me over Zoom earlier this week from Los Angeles while I was in her native Paris. Titane, the story of a sociopathic woman who has a titanium plate put into her head after a childhood accident, premiered at the Cannes Film Festival this telltale summer. ![]() This is the new-new, in theaters a few seats away from the bodies of others. Unnervingly affective, both of Ducournau’s films present a radical tenderness. ![]() Films about connection, the repulsion-body horror-is only what fixes you to the screen. It’s a little too easy to add this and the French director/screenwriter’s latest Titane to the long list of movies known as both cinema du corps or New French Extremity (the term coined by Artforum critic James Quandt nearly two decades ago). If you can’t wait for Titane (which will be released by Altitude in the UK and Neon in the US), this should tide you over – check out the full short film below.Julia Ducournau’s first feature Raw (2016) told the story of a young woman named Justine studying to be a veterinarian, faced with her own taste for flesh. The themes in Junior will be familiar to anyone who has seen Ducournau’s later work, examining the physical and psychological impact of puberty upon women, and the grotesque metamorphosis of the human body. The film was selected for Semaine de la Critique at Cannes in 2011, where Raw would also play in 2016 and receive the FIPRESCI Prize. Made after she graduated from the French film school La Fémis, Junior stars Garance Marillier in the titular role, who was just 13 at the time and would go on to take the central role in Raw (she also appears in a supporting role in Titane). But in the spirit of celebrating, the kind folks at UniFrance have made Ducournau’s first-ever film – her short Junior – available to watch on Youtube, absolutely free of charge. Only the second woman to ever win the Palme d’Or, we’re certain Ducournau has a bright future ahead of her, and we can’t wait to see what twisted nightmare she brings us next. Julia Ducornau is very much the woman of the hour at the moment, having bagged the top honours at the 74th Cannes Film Festival with her body horror nightmare Titane. ![]()
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