Hideaway (Le refuge)

    Hideaway (Le refuge)
    2009

    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 CarréMousse
    • Louis-Ronan ChoisyPaul
    • Pierre Louis-CalixteSerge
    • Melvil PoupaudLouis
    • Claire VernetLa mère
    • Jean-Pierre AndréaniLe père
    • Marie RivièreLa femme sur la plage
    • Jérôme KircherLe médecin
    • Nicolas MoreauLe dragueur
    • Émile BerlingLe dealer

    Recommendations

    • 75

      New York Post

      Just as my mind was floating back to the summery movies directed by Eric Rohmer, Marie Riviére -- a Rohmer favorite -- shows up as a mysterious woman on the beach. Surely, Ozon had Rohmer in mind when he co-wrote and directed this lovely film.
    • 75

      Washington Post

      Sometimes a movie makes a point that's been made before, but makes it so beautifully and so quietly that it feels like you're discovering it for the first time. Hideaway does that, with the obliqueness of an off-hand comment. The glancing touch makes it all the more hard-hitting.
    • 75

      Chicago Sun-Times

      For a time in her life, a woman's pregnancy is the most important thing about her. That is the subject of Hideaway.
    • 70

      Village Voice

      Though the psychological layering and thematic ambition of the screenplay do not quite result in the depth intended, Hideaway's unsentimental performances will hook you.
    • 70

      The New York Times

      But while the Pietà imagery startles, it makes increasing sense as the story builds around it. Because as Hideaway deepens and evolves, you understand that the image of Mousse cradling Louis is a manifestation of her love: this was how she held him, with a tender love that in its depth was itself holy.
    • 60

      Time Out

      This being a François Ozon film, there's beaucoup simmering sexual tension, as well as the prolific French director's usual thematic preoccupations: death and grief, familial animosity and female awakening.
    • 58

      The A.V. Club

      Hideaway bottles up stormy feelings of grief, guilt, and desire so tightly that register only in a few sharp, impetuous bursts. The rest of the time, it's dull and inscrutable-a film of almost vaporous subtlety.
    • 50

      The New Yorker

      The script is sketchy and somewhat puzzling (after a blissful night with Mousse, Paul leaves in the morning without explanation), but we're carried along by the potently ambiguous moods, the slow shifts from distant friendship to intimacy.

    Loved by

    • turandot