Twentynine Palms | |
Director: | Bruno Dumont |
Producer: | Rachid Bouchareb |
Starring: | Yekaterina Golubeva David Wissak |
Cinematography: | Georges Lechaptois |
Editing: | Dominique Petrot |
Distributor: | Wellspring |
Runtime: | 119 minutes |
Country: | France Germany United States |
Language: | French, English, Russian |
Twentynine Palms is a 2003 film directed by Bruno Dumont.[1] Set in Twentynine Palms, the film is about an American photographer and his Russian girlfriend as they scout locations for a photo shoot.
With a Russian woman called Katia, a young American photographer called David drives a Hummer from Los Angeles to a motel in the little desert town of Twentynine Palms. As she hardly speaks English and he speaks no Russian, they talk in French, a language in which neither is confident. Much of their communication is therefore non-verbal and the two frequently misunderstand each other. Their days are spent driving and walking around the empty desert, sometimes naked. They make love, they fight, or just pass time. The camera contrasts the vastness, timelessness and emptiness of the landscape with the two small humans. Yet, as well as natural beauty, the desert contains menace. Stopped by a pick-up full of rednecks, David is beaten and raped while Katia is stripped and forced to watch. Back at the motel after their ordeal, David cuts off his hair before stabbing Katia to death. The police find the Hummer in the desert with his corpse beside it.