The Girl Without Hands (2016) Poster

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7/10
A good film
rawisnwo12 April 2019
This film is good. It adequately describes the Brother's Grimm tale and brings a lot of creativity and originality to the project. The whole story captivates you the longer you watch.

I liked the animation overall. However, some of the animations seemed rather lazy. One scene in particular when the bird was traveling through the mountains. Also, the disappearing characters. It is useful in scenes to convey meaning, but at other times it happens randomly and seems again, like lazy animation. But watch for yourself, maybe I'm missing something from the art.
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6/10
Artistically superb, cutting her hands, very disturbing
EliasEstatistics11 August 2021
I was amazed by the artistics. They were very clever, and superb. I was astonished by the nudity of the female actress. It was depicted very well. However, personnally, I found it very disturbing the violence of her father to cut the hands of her daughter. The violence was very raw. I have seen Game of Thrones. However, the setting is a different one (wars, personal intrigues etc.).

From that moment, I could not enjoy the film anymore. I was looking to go away, to leave summer cinema.
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6/10
Not My Cup Of Tea, Couldn't Finish It
TheHoodOfSwords3 January 2020
This film isn't bad, I want to start off by saying that. However, the movie just felt boring to me. I couldn't finish it. The animation style is unique? However the film's cover is not the animation style. This movie in my opinion should have been a short film. I got 40 minutes into this and had to turn it off. Some things in this film look beautiful, other seem messy and jumbled. Also, the story itself seems cool but in execution it just feels bland.
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Lovely
Red_Identity16 March 2018
The experience of watching this film is quite unlike any other. I found the poetic and metaphorical nature of the story to be complimented amazingly by the animation, which will not be everyone's cup of tea but which I personally found stunning. The story itself is lyrical and meditative, and the power doesn't entirely hit you at first, but it's on reflection that you truly realize it. Overall, this is a strong film that deserves more recognition.
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7/10
Worth a watch
damlacaglar11 April 2020
I can say i thoroughly enjoyed this film, the soundtrack was really good and i appreciated how they used water-color like animation to tell a story. It was really refreshing to see how a story can also be told with these rather 'unconventional' lines. Although the animation style is this film's biggest charm, ironically it is also it's biggest issue. At times the animation does feel a little bit jumbled and rushed which makes it a tad bit hard for the viewer to connect with the movie. With all that being said, i absolutely think it is worth a watch.
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9/10
Poetic and beautiful
pierrelacaze22 August 2018
At first sight you may get disturbed by the drawings and the storyline but then you progressively look more and more intensely. Every movement is incredible, every drawing is a dream Let you immerse in it
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9/10
Unique & imaginative animation drives a dark but compelling fairy tale adaptation
I_Ailurophile30 May 2023
This is surely some of the most striking animation work that I can immediately recall seeing, catching one's attention from the moment the picture begins, and on that basis alone filmmaker Sébastien Laudenbach is to be commended. It's not that the imagery is filled with detail, but rather that the the imagery largely declines detail: what we see before us would be described in other contexts as sketches, or storyboarding, or might reflect the type of simplistic illustrations we'd assume of Neanderthals drawing on cave walls. Figures and objects may be depicted without solid lines, or be effectively transparent; only the slightest of shapes and colors are used to visualize environments, structures, or basic dimensions or spatial awareness. There's a remarkable, beautiful, underhanded sophistication in that style, however, thoughtfully artistic in a manner that more fully fleshed out figures may not necessarily be. Everything we may possibly need to see is still shown to us, most surely, but in highly imaginative ways; the movement from one splash of lines or hues are marvelously fluid as we would suppose of any animated feature. There can be no doubt that in its fundamental presentation this movie is wonderfully unique and entrancing - and the excellence certainly doesn't stop there. 'La Jeune Fille sans mains' is fantastic!

While Laudenbach's visuals astound first and foremost, Olivier Mellano's sumptuous original music isn't far behind. His compositions occupy a space dancing between modern post-rock and 70s space rock, varying between tones light and airy, pensive, buoyant, or notably more harsh depending on what a scene requires. Whatever the mood, Mellano's contribution is a major treat for we viewers - and given the tale on hand, there are most certainly a lot of moods to cover. It's absolutely worth mentioning that like many fairy tales from Charles Perrault or, in this case, the Brothers Grimm, the story as written is incredibly dark and violent, and not remotely appropriate for children by modern standards. Laudenbach doesn't shy away at all from strong violence, nudity and sexuality, or the most grim of themes and ideas in his cinematic adaptation, with mutilation, manipulation, betrayal, deceit, and much more prominent in the narrative; suffice to say that despite a reasonable "fairy tale" label and the inventive art style, this 2016 feature is aimed at adults, not kids. With that said, the narrative is fabulously compelling, satisfying, and altogether rewarding, filled with twists and turns, stark characterizations and scene writing, and sharp dialogue. Why, maybe it's just a reflection of the urgency of the saga, & the hearty investment it readily inspires, but I rather wonder if the writing here, translating Grimm to film, isn't more complete and cohesive, and maybe even more faithful, than what some other fairy tale fare has given us over the years.

With Laudenbach having written this adaptation, directed, edited and animated, there's no mistaking that it's largely his baby. Yet all others involved are absolutely to be commended for the work that they put in, too, and that includes the cast. Voice actors don't necessarily stand out in animated work the same way that actors do in live-action movies, but I'd be lying if I said I wasn't impressed with the efforts here. Philippe Laudenbach, Jérémie Elkaïm, and not least Anaïs Demoustier, not to mention others on hand, all breathe fantastic life into their characters, voicing each with range, nuance, and personality that readily comes across throughout the tableau. At one time or another I think we've all seen or heard acting that was sufficiently poor to catch our attention in a bad way; conversely, sometimes if a performance is suitable it won't stand out at all. It speaks well to Demoustier, Elkaïm, and their co-stars that they do leave a mark on 'La Jeune Fille sans mains,' just as much as Mellano or the maestro himself. And with all this having been said, I'm so very pleased with just how good this is! While the animation style and then the music may be the most grabbing aspects, there isn't one component part that's not tremendously well done, and everything comes together exquisitely in this telling of a story from so long ago. I didn't know what to expect when I sat to watch, and I'm overjoyed with how engaging and even refreshing the viewing experience ultimately is. It bears repeating that this isn't an animated picture that's made for kids, but for anyone else who may have the chance to watch, I think this is well worth 75 minutes of one's time and earns my enthusiastic recommendation!
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