Not too much to see on DVD and Blu-ray this week, with only a couple of solid skinema flicks hitting the shelves. First up, Marion Cotillard plays a marine park worker who loses her legs in a killer whale accident in Rust and Bone (2012). That doesn’t sound like a sexy time at the movies, but thankfully Marion exposes her perfectly unharmed 3 B’s, plus bonus nudity from Oc
Director Jacques Audiard’s nifty 2009 prison epic A Prophet took a classic arc — the rise of a young man through a criminal world — and found in it something bracing and transformative: an anti-hero for a diverse and changing France. His deeply enjoyable new feature Rust and Bone also feels like a fresh reworking of an older mode of filmmaking; the swooning romantic melodrama shaped by tragedy. The film has a beautiful heroine brought low by a terrible accident and a brutish hero who’s more eloquent with his fists than with words. It’s a pleasing film with old bones, though its surfaces are all brightly contemporary, including the unexpectedly emotional appearance of a Katy Perry song. Adapted by Audiard and Thomas Bidegain from a short story collection by Canadian author Craig Davidson, Rust and Bone is set in sunny Antibes in the south of France. It’s where Stéphanie ( Marion Cotillard ) works as an orca trainer at the local marine theme park and where Ali ( Matthias Schoenaerts ) washes up with the five-year-old son Sam (Armand Verdure) he inherited from a neglectful mother. Ali and Sam have come to stay with Ali’s sister Anna (Corinne Masiero), a supermarket cashier who, alongside her truck-driver husband, gets by with a combination of side gigs and expired food snuck home from work. Ali and Stéphanie first cross paths at a nightclub. He’s working as a bouncer, and she’s there to dance and to spite the lover she left at home. He comes to her rescue when a guy gets rough with her (while noting without censure that she’s dressed “like a whore”), but she shoos him away after he drops her off at home. Stéphanie is aloof and untouchable until an accident at the water park leaves her permanently changed: She wakes up in the hospital with both legs gone below the knee and a whole new life to learn. The next time our two leads meet, it’s because Stéphanie seeks Ali out, needing a semi-stranger and drawn to his bluff lack of pretense. Stéphanie is tentative and ashamed in her reshaped body, while Ali is all physicality. He’s a happy animal who takes up bare-knuckle brawling for cash on the side and who falls into sexual encounters with the comfortable ease of someone sitting down to a meal. There’s an evident class difference between the two, but it doesn’t bother Ali, who’s blithely indifferent to social niceties. And while Stéphanie might have cared once, her new reality has left her appreciative of Ali’s acceptance and lack of pity. Rust and Bone rests on its twin lead performances, and Cotillard daringly bares everything to play Stéphanie — her body, sure (this film rivals The Sessions for its frank, unruffled depictions of disabled sex), but also her unadorned face and the cool, distanced dignity she gives to her character who’s lost everything, including an aspect of the standard physical beauty that was part of her identity. “I liked being watched,” she tells Ali, as she struggles to deal with attracting stares for other reasons, and one of the film’s great satisfactions is watching her rebuild herself as a new and stronger person with the help of her companion and eventual lover. Schoenaerts, who played the lead in recent foreign language Oscar nominee Bullhead , is a real find. His hulking build houses a disarmingly sweet nature (as well as the ferocious temperament of a brawler) but no gift for forethought. The scenes between him and his son are beautiful when they aren’t terrifying. Ali lives in the moment, and as a simple guy himself, he can get along well with the boy. But he’s got no paternal instincts and this leads to a visceral parenting nightmare that’s unforgettably staged on screen. The chemistry between his character and Cotillard’s is unusual, meanwhile. The attraction, while there, is less important than the ways they end up inserting themselves into each others lives, and how each begins to recognize the other’s importance. Rust and Bone is very aware of our flesh and how we inhabit it. It’s there in the unreserved way it depicts Stéphanie’s path back to mobility, from her ecstatic first dip in the ocean after the accident to her careful navigating of the stadium steps at her old place of work. And it’s there in Ali’s dangerous, bloody and exhilarating fights, as he batters someone in slow motion and afterward, too wired up to sit and talk, has to go for a run. The film has its soapy moments — as will any movie in which a character drags herself across a hospital floor crying “What did you do to my legs?” But its generous awareness of how our bodies relate to our sense of ourselves makes Rust and Bone both one of the year’s most exceptional (and bittersweet) romances and a remarkable portrayal of how two people change and grow after traumatic experiences. RELATED: Movieline’s Toronto International Film Festival Review of Rust and Bone. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.
Don’t use the term “killer whale” in front of Marion Cotillard. In her new Oscar contender Rust and Bone , the actress may play a whale trainer who loses her legs to one of the creatures, but at an advance screening of the picture in New York on Thursday, Cotillard told me she prefers the term “orca.” Free Willy the movie is not, but that didn’t stop Cotillard from bonding with her new aquatic pals. In my red carpet interview, below, Cotillard also has something to say about Americans who don’t watch French films. Cotillard looked stunning in Christian Dior, who hosted the screening along with Vanity Fair and The Cinema Society. Rust and Bone hits theaters Nov. 23. Follow Movieline on Twitter . Follow Grace on Twitter .
We’ve been providing you with breaking nudes on Piper Perabo’s return to nudity in Looper (in theaters September 28) and the nubile nude co-eds of Spring Breakers (release date TBA), but our Skin Skout has been knee-deep in hot starlets at the Toronto International Film Festival all weekend. Well, ok, that’s half true. Our Skin Skout IS at TIFF, but the closest he’s gonna get to the likes of Noomi Rapace , Marion Cotillard , Olga Kurylenko , Rachel McAdams and Naomi Watts is his seat at the premieres of their new movies. But he’s still getting an eyeful… Get the scoop on upcoming nudes from Passion, Cloud Atlas, Rust and Bone and more from TIFF after the jump!
We’ve been providing you with breaking nudes on Piper Perabo’s return to nudity in Looper (in theaters September 28) and the nubile nude co-eds of Spring Breakers (release date TBA), but our Skin Skout has been knee-deep in hot starlets at the Toronto International Film Festival all weekend. Well, ok, that’s half true. Our Skin Skout IS at TIFF, but the closest he’s gonna get to the likes of Noomi Rapace , Marion Cotillard , Olga Kurylenko , Rachel McAdams and Naomi Watts is his seat at the premieres of their new movies. But he’s still getting an eyeful… Get the scoop on upcoming nudes from Passion, Cloud Atlas, Rust and Bone and more from TIFF after the jump!
The Toronto International Film Festival is off and rolling. TIFF’s official opening night is Rian Johnson ‘s Looper with Joseph Gordon-Levitt , Bruce Willis and Emily Blunt… and all kudos to them, but Toronto is sharing the opening spotlight with Walter Salles’ On The Road , a “surprise” event for Dredd , Rust & Bone — starring Gordon-Levitt’s The Dark Knight Rises co-star Marion Cotillard — and others. As TIFFers arrived in town, the tradition of a slow opening night ended. It was full tilt as events, traffic, schmoozing and gossip about what movie is good, what is less so, was well underway. One prognosticator even had the Best Female Actress Oscar noms already lined up (at least in his mind) — and one is Rust and Bone ‘s Cotillard, pictured here with Sony Pictures Classics co-president Tom Bernard Thursday evening at a dinner hosted by Moet & Chandon Champagne at Michael’s in downtown Toronto. Of course no stranger to Oscar, the French actress won the Academy Award for Best Actress in 2007 for La vie en rose . She turns out another stunning performance in Rust & Bone , by French director Jacques Audiard, in which she plays a beautiful — naturally — woman who meets a club bouncer played by Bullhead actor Matthias Schoenaerts. Their chance meeting turns into a stronger bond that takes flight after an accident. “I was very excited after reading the script,” Cotillard said about her role playing Stephanie in Cannes in May . “When a script moves me, I find that I immediately understand a character. Of course not completely, but I do understand.” Read more from the Toronto Film Festival. Follow Brian Brooks on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .