Intimate Strangers | |
Director: | Patrice Leconte |
Producer: | Alain Sarde |
Music: | Pascal Estève |
Cinematography: | Eduardo Serra |
Editing: | Joëlle Hache |
Distributor: | Mars Distribution (France) StudioCanal (International) |
Runtime: | 103 minutes |
Country: | France |
Language: | French |
Budget: | $5.8 million [1] |
Gross: | $10.5 million [2] |
Intimate Strangers (French: Confidences trop intimes) is a 2004 French film directed by Patrice Leconte. The moody, stylish noir tells the story of a troubled young woman who in error starts telling her problems not to a psychiatrist but to a lonely tax consultant in the office next door.
William, a reserved and solitary tax consultant in Paris, is surprised when a distressed young woman comes into his office and starts telling him her marital problems. Her name is Anna and her appointment was in fact with Dr Monnier, a psychotherapist on the same floor. Before William can clear up the misunderstanding, she says she will come again next week and leaves. The next time, she gives even more intimate details and William again fails to make clear that he can only handle her tax problems.
When she does not reappear in the following weeks, William worries if she is alright and consults Dr Monnier. The shrink guesses where his interest lies and does not interfere. William also confides in his former partner Jeanne who, as a woman, quickly guesses what Anna is up to. Anna does come back to William's office and a strange relationship develops, where she tells tales of her life and sexual activities while he listens sympathetically. Her husband appears and threatens William, who is not deterred.
Eventually Anna, who has been getting less neurotic and taking more care of her appearance, tells William she is leaving her husband and moving away. He wishes her well. A few months later, he moves his business to the south coast, where he has discovered she is working as a ballet teacher. Anna arrives at William's office and lays on the bed in the office, and William starts telling Anna his problems .....
The film was shown in competition at the 2004 Berlin Film Festival.
On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 86% based on reviews from 104 critics. The site's consensus states "Intimate Strangers is Hitchcockian noir with a Gallic twist: Rather than simply imitating the genre's form, director/screenwriter Patrice Leconte delves into the underlying psychological drama."[7] On Metacritic the film has a score of 71% based on reviews from 28 critics.[8]
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave it 3.5 out of 4 stars, and wrote: "We find we cannot take anything for face value in this story, that the motives of this woman and her husband are so deeply masked that even at the end of the film we are still uncertain about exactly what to believe, and why."[9] [10]