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The Strange Ones
Overlook Pick

The Strange Ones

A love story by Jean Cocteau
66
User Score122 ratings
TMDB 6.616+19501h 47mFrench
Drama

Synopsis

Elisabeth and her brother Paul live isolated from much of the world after Paul is injured in a snowball fight. As a coping mechanism, the two conjure up a hermetic dream of their own making. Their relationship, however, isn't exactly wholesome. Jealousy and a malevolent undercurrent intrude on their fantasy when Elisabeth invites the strange Agathe to stay with them -- and Paul is immediately attracted to her.

Director
Jean-Pierre MelvilleFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Melville Productions1 production companies
Release
March 29, 1950Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 17
Nicole Stéphane
Nicole Stéphane
Elisabeth
Édouard Dermithe
Édouard Dermithe
Paul
Renée Cosima
Renée Cosima
Dargelos / Agathe
Jacques Bernard
Jacques Bernard
Gerard
Jean Cocteau
Jean Cocteau
Narrator (voice)
Melvyn Martin
Michael
Maria Cyliakus
Mother
Jean-Marie Robain
Jean-Marie Robain
Headmaster

Trailers & Photos

No media available

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Dec 27, 2022

"Paul" (Edouard Dermithe) is a young man who comes off rather badly after a snowball fight; one finds it's mark necessitating a visit from their doctor who advises bedrest - on a pretty permanent basis! He is to be looked after by his sister "Elisabeth" (Nicole Stéphane) with whom he shares a room. What now ensues is a hybrid of the sibling and the marital as their love to hate to love relationship, bordering on the incestuous (but never actually more than bordering) evolves. Both characters are handsome to look at, there are undercurrents of homosexuality and depravity - moral, certainly, physical less so - but I have to say I found the whole thing just a bit on the sterile side. It's not that their relationship together, nor with the rather unattractive "Dargelos" (Renée Cosima) needed any sort of visual consummation - it doesn't; but there is little if any chemistry to raise this above a rather statically, though beatifically crafted, story of people who can't live with, or without, each other. i am certainly no expert on Cocteau on Melville, but I ought not to have to be - this film should be able to stand it's own merits, and for me it is just a rather extended, unremarkable family squabble, with occasionally pithy but all to frequently petulant dialogue that 70 years after lacks any real potency.

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