Your Company
 

Based on a True Story(D'après une histoire vraie)

✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

France, Poland, Belgium · 2017
1h 37m
Director Roman Polanski
Starring Emmanuelle Seigner, Eva Green, Vincent Perez, Dominique Pinon
Genre Thriller, Mystery, Drama

A writer goes through a tough period after the release of her latest book, as she gets involved with an obsessive admirer.

We hate to say it, but we can't find anywhere to view this film.

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

58

IndieWire by

A stylish but ultimately stiff collection of old tropes about writers and their audience, fiction vs. reality, and the Other that becomes you.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Deborah Young

There are multiple levels on which to enjoy Roman Polanski’s Based on a True Story (D’Apres une histoire vraie), none of them very deep or complicated. But together they raise the resonance of a masterfully made psychological thriller in the traditional mode.

58

The Film Stage by Giovanni Marchini Camia

Polanski sleepwalks his way through the film, manifesting precious little of the skill and invention that fueled the slow-burn suspense and sinister atmospheres of superficially similar works such as Rosemary’s Baby and Repulsion.

80

Screen International by Jonathan Romney

Polanski and the supremely genre-savvy Assayas know exactly what they’re doing, and whenever you think you’ve seen it all before, you realise they’re actually doing something else entirely – the film is an expertly navigated maze of misdirection.

40

The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw

This is a movie which begins with confidence and style, wearing its influences pretty insouciantly; the film sashays about the screen with a kind of sexy-chic smirk, like the unvarying facial expression of its co-lead Eva Green. But it wobbles at the brink of plot-holes which undermine the vital realistic plausibility of a film like this.

40

Variety by Peter Debruge

Although the screenplay contains all the beats needed to generate tension, Assayas’ gift for conveying information between the lines is almost entirely lost on Polanski, who doesn’t give his actresses the opportunity to flesh out the subtext of their most awkward interactions.

20

The Telegraph by Robbie Collin

Nothing in this feeble psychological thriller rings true for a moment, though its unhinged machinations feel as pedestrian as soap opera in execution.

Users who liked this film also liked