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Sovine HUK
again Patricia Highsmith, again appalling story about loneliness and the dark, but this time without Hollywood glazes and talented Sminkeraj Mr. Ripley
Unlike Ripley, who, driven by the need for mimicry and belonging, managed to travel around Europe, the main character Sovinog roar tends to retreat, most quiet possible existence. After marital shipwreck, he leaves the big city and finds peace in dormant town. The only satisfaction he feels when observing an unknown girl in the kitchen, secluded house. Strange and elusive, but some kind of balance undermines the moment when it is perceived and when the girl on the verge of breakup with fiance, wants to know him better. This initiates the whirl of the unfortunate circumstances that slightly in front of a danger to everyone involved in ovaj klimavi začudni ljubavni trougao.
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Based on a novel by Patricia Highsmith, Le Cri du Hibou concerns Robert (Christophe Malavoy), a commercial artist who has moved to a quiet neighborhood in Vichy, hoping to escape a severe depression brought on by the unpleasant breakup of his marriage to Veronique (Virginie Thevenet). Robert finds himself spying on his new neighbor Juliette (Mathilda May), but there's little or no erotic component to his voyeurism -- she seems to lead a simple and well-ordered life, and it makes Robert feel better to watch someone so secure and at ease. Robert even goes so far as to tell Juliette how much her admires her quietly contented existence, but beneath the surface, Juliette is hardly as secure as she looks. Robert's remarks make her wonder if her life has become too placid, and she decides to break off her engagement with Patrick (Jacques Penot) to pursue a relationship with Robert. This sends Patrick into a rage, and he plots an elaborate revenge -- he picks a dramatic fight with Robert, and then goes into hiding, leading people to believe Robert killed him. The ruse fools Juliette, who is distraught at the thought that her new love might be a murderer (even though Robert has expressed no romantic interest in her). Le Cri du Hibou was adapted and directed by France's leading suspense director, Claude Chabrol.
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