Trouble Every Day
Claire Denis’s notoriously divisive, seductively erotic horror film rises again, with Béatrice Dalle and Vincent Gallo in all their grisly, sensuous glory.
American doctor Shane (Gallo, Buffalo 66, MIFF 1998) arrives in Paris with his new wife, hoping to track down Léo (Denis fave Alex Descas, Bastards, MIFF 2013; 35 Shots of Rum, MIFF 2009), the physician he once worked with on a bio-prospecting mission in the tropics. Shane is afflicted with the same bloodlust as Léo’s wife Coré (Dalle, Betty Blue; Night on Earth, MIFF 1992) – who, when not snacking on unfortunate strangers in the woods, must be locked up in order to restrain her gruesomely libidinous appetite.
Met with a largely hostile reception upon its release in 2002 (and never afforded a general Australian release), Denis’s follow-up to her beloved Beau Travail (MIFF 2000) confounded critics and audiences alike with its graphic, sexually charged violence and its dreamy, elliptical style that favours sensation over story. But this outlier from one of cinema’s singular artists has since attracted a burgeoning cult following, reconsidered as a key work of the New French Extremity and a forerunner to the flesh-eating likes of Julia Ducournau’s Raw. An enigma at once sinister and deeply tender, it will leave its mark on your skin – and your psyche.
“Denis’s often misunderstood 2002 film only gets better with age, and, like all of the director’s work, stays inside you long after viewing … Supremely hypnotic and unsettling.” – Metrograph
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This screening will be introduced by writer and critic Michael Sun (The Guardian), and a panel discussion will follow the film.
Michael Sun is a critic and essayist who currently works in culture and lifestyle at The Guardian, where he recently hosted the internet culture podcast Saved for Later. His writing on film and music has also been published in The Saturday Paper, The Monthly, ABC Arts, Sydney Review of Books, Australian Book Review and many more. He hosts a weekly show on FBi Radio in Sydney, where he lives.
Dr Alexandra Heller-Nicholas is a multi-award-winning film critic, author and editor of 14 books on cult, horror and exploitation film, including 1000 Women in Horror, which featured in Esquire magazine’s list of the 125 best books about Hollywood. She is a columnist at Fangoria magazine, a contributing editor for Film International, a top critic on Rotten Tomatoes, a member of the Alliance of Women Film Journalists and on the board for the Miskatonic Institute of Horror Studies, which has branches in London, New York and Los Angeles.
Dr Keva York is a New York–born, Melbourne-based writer and critic, and an alum of MIFF Critics Campus (class of 2017). In addition to regularly reviewing films for ABC Arts, she has contributed to The Monthly, MUBI Notebook and the Metrograph Journal, among other publications. In 2020, she completed her doctorate on the subject of Crispin Glover’s It trilogy, with the intention of turning it into a monograph, eventually.