In this episode, I explore François Ozon's mysterious and emotionally devastating 2000 film "Under the Sand," starring Charlotte Rampling as Marie Drillon, a woman whose husband, Jean, unexpectedly disappears during a vacation on the beach. The film is about Marie's struggle to come to terms with the loss of Jean. I talk about the complex career of Rampling, why her performance is so powerful, and why I personally connect to this film because of its look at loss and death.
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Original artwork by Dhiyanah Hassan
Full Show Notes:
- Become a charter subscriber of The Criterion Channel
- My episode on Radu Jude's SCARRED HEARTS
- Radu Jude's THE DEAD NATION
- Nazis on retreat: the SS holiday camp near Auschwitz – in pictures
- A segregation that was never black and white: Gordon Parks’s photographs of 50s Alabama
- Peter Jackson's THEY SHALL NOT GROW OLD
- My episode on Jonathan Glazer's BIRTH
- My episode on L'AVVENTURA
- My episode on THE DOUBLE LIFE OF VERONIQUE
- More about Mubi
- My episodes on Ingmar Bergman: SUMMER INTERLUDE, WILD STRAWBERRIES,
and AUTUMN SONATA
- The Night Porter
- Charlotte Rampling: The Look
- Discovering Charlotte Rampling
- Picnic at Hanging Rock
- Bunny Lake is Missing
- The Vanishing
- Disappeared
- Unsolved Mysteries
- Francois Ozon's interview with The Talks
- Joan Didion's The Year of Magical Thinking
- The Waves by Virginia Woolf
- 45 Years
- Vive L'amour