In His Hands (2005) Poster

(2005)

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7/10
"Is that a scalpel or are you just happy to see me?!"
bowlofsoul235 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This French movie, written and directed by women (two different ones), falls squarely into the serial killer genre, or so it initially seems. It starts off rather typical, a mousy but beautiful blonde woman, Claire, who sports glasses (to show her extreme mousiness) and is often filmed wearing a tightly wrapped wool coat and painful-looking high heels, works as an insurance agent who examines people filing claims. She's a bit proper and a bit pushed around, as we come to see as her co-workers unload their work on her because they know she won't say no. She is married to a somewhat unambitious photographer husband, played by the yummy Jonathan Zaccai (I bought a ticket for this movie because of him, I'll admit it) and has a daughter, aged around 5 or 6, who is afraid of the dark. So far so good. We have a boring nuclear family.

Claire also has a "wild" friend Valerie. How do we know she's wild? She sleeps around a lot, dumps her boyfriends after one month, and in one particularly annoying scene, hears a song she likes on the radio, turns it up, and starts dancing wildly, much to Claire's bemusement. Yup, that slut has to die! She is essentially the opposite of Claire. Brunette whereas Claire is blonde, sexually and personally "liberated", while Claire is a slave to her family and job, wisecracking where Claire is austere.

Anyway, Claire investigates a vet's office, where the basement has flooded. We get an eerie scene, where the vet, Laurent, leaves Claire to walk around the dark, flooded basement, and from that moment on, the tension begins to build. To make a long story short, Laurent and Claire hit it off, Laurent initially doing more of the hitting until Claire falls in love with him, and he starts to back off. Why? Because he's got daddy issues and he feels the need to carve up slutty ladies and sees Claire as "different", someone he could actually love. For the first time in his life (cue the music).

This is where the film gets interesting. The audience knows Laurent is the killer, (at least I think we are supposed to) and as the story progresses, we start to actually like him. There's a key point here, up until late in the film we never see him kill anybody and that contributes greatly to our process of sympathizing. We see the Laurent that Claire sees. All until one scene, where we see a murder so graphic, so no-holds-barred, that we are shocked at our previous opinions. It's a brilliant cinematic move, arresting, indicting, grotesque.

However, Claire is not totally innocent either, as news reports of a man killing women with a scalpel arise, Claire begins to question what Laurent might be moonlighting as. Yes, she knows it and she can't bring herself to leave him alone, because she starts to feel- alive, which begs the question, does she like him for him or because he's a serial killer? She loses the glasses (isn't it interesting how actors never actually need the glasses they wear?), starts to wear makeup, leaves her home late at night to meet up with Laurent at seedy bars- we're very close to S&M territory here, but Fontaine never takes that route. We learn small things about Claire, such as when she was a child, she was forgotten at the beach by her family, or that when she was an adolescent, she used to cut herself to remind herself that she was living. Laurent just listens, passing no judgment, knowing his levels of craziness far outweigh hers.

I don't know which aspect of the movie is starker, the fact that Claire sympathizes with a serial killer, or that we do. Laurent is essentially like the sleeping lion? tiger? that we see him treat, potentially ferocious but sweet when asleep.

The film ends with a beautiful but ambiguous shot of Claire alone, walking towards the ferris wheel that she and Laurent rode together previously in the film. Ferris wheels seem to me to be emblematic of youth, innocence, first dates, first kisses, all of course from previous cinematic treatments of them, and I think one of the film's themes is innocence, the innocence of not knowing, of love, of hoping, of children, of animals, and the inevitable corruption of that innocence.

cococravescinema.blogspot.com
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7/10
Fear and Love
claudio_carvalho26 December 2007
In Lille, Claire Gauthier (Isabelle Carré) is an ordinary married woman with a young daughter that works in an insurance company analyzing losses of insured properties. When the single veterinary Laurent Kessler (Benoît Poelvoorde) claims damage in his basement caused by a flooding due to water leakage, Claire resolves the situation favorably for him. The weird Laurent visits Claire in her office successively, inviting her for drinks and lunch, and they get close to each other. Meanwhile, a serial killer is terrorizing Lille, killing women with a scalpel. Claire feels a great attraction for Laurent, who has an unusual behavior in her apartment. When Claire sees a scalpel in the pocket of Laurent's jacket, she fears him, but still loves him.

"Entre Ses Mains" is a weird romance between a common but charming woman that seems to have a perfect marriage and a strange and lonely veterinary. Isabelle Carré and Benoît Poelvoorde have magnificent performances, slowly developing the relationship between Claire and Laurent, with some slight touches of eroticism and tension, but never falling in the easy way of the sadomasochism, as I expected that would happen based on the mixed feelings of fear and love of Claire. There is no explanation for the behavior of Claire, feeling attraction for a man with antagonistic attitudes but only things of love. However, the ambiguous conclusion is a little disappointing. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "Em Suas Mãos" ("In Your Hands")
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7/10
Whose pair ? (tv)
leplatypus16 October 2015
Warning: Spoilers
I wanted to watch this movie to complete Benoit's filmography as he is among my short list of artists. Usually, he is a funny comedy man but here he tries a romance/drama. In a way, his part reminds of Robin Williams in « insomnia » because it was the same experience for him and their characters are like cousins : loner, crazy, twisted lover… Beyond, this movie was a really good surprise because it's not the usual french movie : here, the action happens in Lille, a north city and not Paris ; the characters really work to earn their life instead of being lazy upper class ; Thus i'm interested in the story and characters, all the more than i have also experimented a close relationship that was started as a job relation. When the movie turns into a thriller, it keeps being original because it's not clear to say who manipulates who ! As Benoit's love interest, Isabelle Carré is excellent as unlike famous french actresses, she plays with simplicity and truth ! In conclusion, it's a really good movie that allows to discover real France and which offers an original examination of passion
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8/10
Again a great Anne Fontaine movie
virginie-barranger1 October 2005
Anne Fontaine's movies always have some kind of strange relationships. In this particular one, a nice sweet girl, an insurance company employee, meets a strange vet who is quite mysterious ans fascinating, while a serial killer with a scalpel kills women in the area : we are just like Isabelle Carré (perfect as usual), because Benoît Poelvoorde is a pure magnet. We have always known him as a very funny comedian and it's quite a revelation to see him play this obscure character. Apparently, he was quite traumatized to play this part and he says in magazines he never will play that kind of thing again : that would be a shame !
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For "butcher" read "vet"
jandesimpson23 March 2009
As one of my missions is to impart enthusiasms I very rarely write about a bad film or one I don't like. Just occasionally however I will take a scalpel (the weapon used in "In His Hands") to demolish one that has made me really angry. Generally I avoid remakes like the plague particularly if the originals are wonderful. Curiosity once got the better of me and I sampled the more recent version of "Cry the Beloved Country" originally so sensitively and beautifully directed by Zoltan Korda in the late 'forties. What a disaster! Never again! After that you can keep your second time round "Brief Encounters", "Psychos" and "Manchurian Candidates". My anger at "In His Hands" is that it does not acknowledge it is a remake so that I was trapped halfway through with the realisation that I had been conned into watching a regurgitated version of Chabrol's masterly "Le Boucher" which, as a psychological thriller, in my opinion, eclipsed everything Hitchcock ever made. For "Tremolat" read "Lille", for "schoolmistress" read "insurance agent", for "butcher" read "vet" and there you have it, the same type of serial killings gradually creeping from the background to the foreground of the plot, the same motivation, the same relationship between the two central characters, the same ending. Whatever possessed the creators of this film to disguise this plagiarised abortion of a masterpiece and pass it off as something new beggars belief. I suppose that, in itself and were it not for the original, "In His Hands" is a passable thriller. However for those of us who adore "Le Boucher" this health warning is essential.
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9/10
Hands Off This One
writers_reign22 October 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Ann Fontaine doesn't like to repeat herself. This is as different from Nathalie as that was from How I Killed My Father and equally good. It would be easy to describe this as a cross between Brief Encounter and Le Boucher because it displays elements of both, the former inasmuch as it features a young, fairly unremarkable wife and mother who enjoys - if that's the right word - an unconsummated affair with an equally unremarkable medico, the latter because there's a serial killer on the loose and Claire (Isabelle Carre) slowly comes around to suspecting her medical friend. There are, of course, concessions to the modern world, unlike Laura Jesson, who was a full-time housewife and mother Claire has a job and for that matter her passion is kindled by a vet as opposed to a doctor, albeit one who treats lions rather than hamsters. It's a real delight to see Isabelle Carre building on the success of her breakthrough role in Se Souvenir des Belles Choses and earning co-star (Holy Lola) and now sole star billing which she more than justifies. This is a real gem and should not be missed.
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9/10
A breath taking psychological thriller
danaburlac24 September 2005
Warning: Spoilers
It is a purely french movie, with a subtle character analysis , a clever and calculated progression . But with a hint of dark and anguishing 30's movie . Two main characters : a pretty young woman, a wife and a mother with a normal life. Girl meets boy. Classic... But there is a twist, the man is a duplicitous, attractive and repellent persona . The end is too delectable to be revealed. But, as the young woman, the spectator is drawn to the Machiavellic character , and the more we sense its dangerous personality, the more we want to get close to him. Until the last minute , lulled by the intense music, we are hypnotized by the relationship , by the love and death link between Isabelle Carré and Benoit Poolvoerde (both INCREDIBLE). A must see.
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8/10
Anne Fontaine quietly succeeds
bob99810 April 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Reading some of the reviews, I was struck by the willingness to review any film but the one under discussion. I don't care what Chabrol did with Le Boucher, still less what Mann did with Manhunter or Hitchcock with Rear Window or you name it... Let's look at the quiet piece that Anne Fontaine has made.

I am convinced that Isabelle Carré is one of the best actresses now active, right up there with Cate Blanchett, Marion Cotillard, Rosamund Pike. She really inhabits a role that has no spectacular moments, nothing that would win a César. This woman is under pressure: her friend has been murdered, she may be being stalked by the killer, yet she's got to remain calm for the sake of her family. It's a wonderful performance.

Benoit Poelvoorde as the veterinarian with a lot of unhappy secrets gives the other remarkable performance. I don't know much about this actor, but his sad, hang-dog look coupled with sudden attempts to be engaging kept me involved throughout his scenes.
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8/10
In His - Her - hands
searchanddestroy-121 February 2022
This is a terrific role for Benoit Poelvoorde, so ambivalent, ambiguous. It seems that this actor is made for this genre or character. See for instance his first long length feature C'EST ARRIVE PRES DE CHEZ VOUS. This is a good character study, the relationship between a young insurance agent, mother of a young kid and married with an ambitious husband, and a veterinary, who happens to be someone different from what he seems to show himself. This scheme is not new at all but if it is done properly, you can't get tired of it. This is not GASLIGHT nor SHADOW OF A DOUBT though, despite the obvious Hitchcock inspiration. Isabelle Carré is also excellent. Pooelverde in nearly the same kind of topic in Fabrice Du Welz INEXORABLE.
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9/10
Most "undertonned" played characters' movie...
Elisabetha4919 August 2007
As a thriller, this movie must be one of the most "laid-back" kind of psychological 'who-done- it' criminal survey of the human potential for understanding and/or entropy of the freckled- mind ... Both main actors are just "plainly" superb and truth-worthy... Isabele Care is so natural and Poolvoorde so much "evil"...without "pathos"...The general feel or attitude rendition by the actors is just right to the point, with a naive witness and an faulted main character, whom reveals witness' ambivalent attitude and feelings toward the same perceived sick or morally tainted "main" character"...All subtle and slightly perceived, apparently superficiality felt by main "witness" character... Just incredibly well understood and acted by both main characters !
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