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Staying Vertical(Rester vertical)

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France · 2016
1h 38m
Director Alain Guiraudie
Starring Damien Bonnard, India Hair, Raphaël Thierry, Christian Bouillette
Genre Drama

Leo is a filmmaker seeking inspiration. During a trip to the south of France, he begins a relationship with Marie, a free-spirited shepherdess. Nine months later, she gives birth to their child — and abandons them in a bout of postpartum depression. This drama follows Leo as he tries to raise the child alone.

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What are critics saying?

70

Screen International by Allan Hunter

Exploring a bewildering range of issues from ideas of masculinity to assisted suicide and the fraying of societal ties, Staying Vertical is wildly eccentric, darkly comic and filled with you-don’t-see-that-often moments which are liable to render it an acquired taste.

66

TheWrap by Ben Croll

Call it scenery in search of a film. Call it a film in search of a purpose. Call me when Guiraudie releases his next one, because, damn, the guy’s got talent.

83

IndieWire by Eric Kohn

The film never quite flies off the rails so much as it careens from side to side on the same beguiling path, with the most remarkable outcome being that the enigmatic pieces fit together.

91

The Film Stage by Giovanni Marchini Camia

Apart from a middle stretch during which the narrative loses momentum and Staying Vertical feels temporarily aimless – something that Guiraudie soon rectifies by amping up the weirdness – the film is as engaging and consistently uproarious as it is perplexing.

50

The Playlist by Jessica Kiang

It’s less a convincing, involving narrative than an episodic picaresque that rambles loose-jointedly from absurdist encounter to vaguely fable-like incident.

60

CineVue by John Bleasdale

Guiraudie's humour is self-referential and at times hilarious. His tendency to shock might seem adolescent but he's also careful to identify taboos that perhaps shouldn't be taboos at all.

40

Variety by Owen Gleiberman

The technical bravura that Guiraudie summoned in “Stranger” — the subtle manipulation of light, weather, shot language, and temporal cunning — now falls by the wayside in a story that lurches from episode to disconnected episode.

60

The Telegraph by Tim Robey

Staying Vertical is a script by a hot talent never quite getting round to being fully written, and instead disappearing down a series of suggestive dead ends.

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