Hideaway (Le refuge)

Hideaway (Le refuge)

2010 ""
Hideaway (Le refuge)
Hideaway (Le refuge)

Hideaway (Le refuge)

6.4 | 1h29m | en | Drama

Mousse and Louis are young, beautiful, rich and in love. But drugs have invaded their lives. One day, they overdose and Louis dies. Mousse survives, but soon learns she's pregnant. Feeling lost, Mousse runs away to a house far from Paris. Several months later, Louis' brother joins her in her refuge.

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6.4 | 1h29m | en | Drama | More Info
Released: September. 17,2010 | Released Producted By: Le Pacte , Country: France Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website: https://strandreleasing.com/films/hideaway/
Synopsis

Mousse and Louis are young, beautiful, rich and in love. But drugs have invaded their lives. One day, they overdose and Louis dies. Mousse survives, but soon learns she's pregnant. Feeling lost, Mousse runs away to a house far from Paris. Several months later, Louis' brother joins her in her refuge.

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Cast

Isabelle Carré , Louis-Ronan Choisy , Pierre Louis-Calixte

Director

Mathias Raaflaub

Producted By

Le Pacte ,

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Reviews

drarthurwells Two drug addicts have a baby but the father dies from overdose. This is before the birth of the baby.The mother manages to get help from someone who provides her a house in a village. She meets a friend, and then later, a one-night stand lover.The mother abandons the baby to the friend. Hopefully this friend will be a good parent, so she can find herself (get high?).We can predict the baby will likely become a future drug addict, lacking in responsibility, like his parents.This movie shows why a nanny-state nation degrades over time - dependency and irresponsibility are fostered by the nanny-state.Many viewers may be emotionally moved by the sad state of affairs depicted in "Hideway", but I see a situation that could have been prevented by a culture that encouraged less dependency and more responsibility in its citizens.
dbdumonteil The junkie atmosphere versus the bourgeois milieu the first sequences conjure up could lead the director into numbing Chabrol territory,but finally Ozon's innate narration sense keeps the film simple and direct.Chabrol's fans will probably notice the similarities between the beginnings of "Le Refuge " and "La Rupture" (1970):in both movies ,the young man of means runs away with a girl who comes from a much modest family ,then there's a bad trip;and the way the "mother-in-law" treats the girl recalls that of Michel Bouquet in the 1970 effort.When lil' brother comes to visit Mousse,we may fear a rehash of Irish's "I married a dead man" (filmed as "no man of her own" "J'ai Epouse Une Ombre" and "Mrs Winterbourne" ) but fortunately it is not : lil' brother is gay (the gay -or the lesbian- we find in every movie Ozon has made)and moreover ,he 's some kind of black sheep of the family (one sentence the mom said at the beginning is revealing "it's not him who should have died!" ;we only understand it halfway through the movie).That said ,and although the ending makes sense ,there's a tendency in the director's recent work to rest on his laurels .One sees little in "Le Refuge" of the taste for danger he displayed in earlier works such as "Sitcom" "Gouttes D'Eau Sur Pierres Brûlantes" or "Les Amants Criminels"
gradyharp François Ozon ('Time to Leave', 'Swimming Pool', 'Under the Sand', '8 Women', 'Angel', etc) continues to bring to his films a sense of intimate relationships offered in a style of filmmaking that makes them personal and unique. He often uses the same actors for his films, a trait that makes his work seem truly ensemble in nature. HIDEAWAY (Le Refuge) is a story about the tapestry of love in all its forms and as written by both Ozon and Mathieu Hippeau it is a delicate view of the many facets of relationships. Mousse (Isabelle Carré) and Louis (Melvil Poupard) are young and wealthy and deeply in love, but they are addicted to drugs. In an extended almost wordless scene we watch them inject themselves with heroin in a luxurious Parisian apartment. Days of drug induced idyll are suddenly disrupted one morning when Louis' mother (Claire Vernet) arrives and discovers the couple: Louis is dead from an overdose but Mousse survived and is taken to a hospital where she finally awakens and is informed she is pregnant. After the funeral and burial of Louis, his mother convinces Mousse that Louis must have no heir and sends the confused Mousse her off to terminate the pregnancy. Louis brother Paul (Louis-Ronan Choisy) looks on, empathizing with Mousse. Some months pass and we find Mousse in a seaside country house where she is a recluse during the pregnancy she has decided to keep: Mousse is now controlling her addiction with Methadone. Her only outside contact is the grocer Serge (Pierre Louis-Calixte) who delivers her food until Paul stops by to pay a visit. Mousse allows Paul to stay in her hideaway and they become friends - Paul admits to Mousse that he is not Louis' blood brother but was rather adopted. Paul is gay and not a threat to the very pregnant Mousse. Paul goes into town, meets Serge, and a love affair ensues. The manner in which Mousse and Paul relate and together with Serge form a type of family leads to a rather surprising ending. How the shared relationship with Louis (Mousse's lover and source of her pregnancy and Paul's longtime admiration of his adopted brother) bonds the two provides a surprising but satisfying ending to the story. Isabelle Carré is radiant as the conflicted Mousse and both Poupard (despite the brevity of his role) and Choisy are excellent. This is quality, quiet, intimate filmmaking at its finest. Another little masterpiece from François Ozon. In French with English subtitles. Grady Harp
film_ophile While I don't agree w/ Chris Knipp's view that this boiled down to a vague glossy ad....I am thankful that he used words like lyrical and elegance , which caused me to see the movie tonight as part of the Boston MFA's annual French Film Festival. I am a big fan of Ozon. I don't know what it is about him, but I feel very simpatico with his sense of humor,and his gazings and subtle observations about humanity. There is this allowance for space in his serious films, space for the characters to feel and grow, and space for the audience to partake in this. I do not find that space flat or boring; rather, it has me fully engaged as a viewer. In this film I was surprised and very taken in by the mesmerizing spiritual nature of Louis-Ronan Choisy . I have not seen him before and he was quite wonderful to watch.He was so perfectly cast for this role. I have been quite taken in by Isabelle Carre before, but I think it was a shame that her character in this film was not able to play to the ethereal and quite 'saintly'persona she has exuded in other roles.I was hoping to get at least a glimpse of the (in-reality) pregnant Carre with that beatific presence that she can emanate.All in all, the relationship between the two of them, and the scene with her being verbally harangued by the guilt ridden woman on the beach, were enough to make me recommend this film. I found it not perfect;too many things unanswered character and plot wise, but still quite lovely, and it left me with a feeling, a mood, that I am still carrying.