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Womb

✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Germany, Hungary, France · 2010
1h 51m
Director Benedek Fliegauf
Starring Eva Green, Matt Smith, Lesley Manville, Peter Wight
Genre Romance, Science Fiction

A woman's consuming love forces her to bear the clone of her dead beloved. From his infancy to manhood, she faces the unavoidable complexities of her controversial decision.

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What are critics saying?

25

Slant Magazine by

Too abstract to suggest a coherent moral lesson, but too remote to foster a satisfying emotional connection, Womb feels barren, an attempt to do too much that ultimately does very little.

40

The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis

If the 20-odd seconds of blank screen squatting pointlessly amid the opening credits aren't enough warning that you're in for some seriously sluggish storytelling, then the adoption of a snail as one of the central motifs should drive the point home.

60

NPR by Mark Jenkins

An incestuous payoff might be expected, given the casting of Green; she first attracted widespread attention in Bertolucci's "The Dreamers," as a young woman who is unusually close to her brother. But whatever happens, Womb is more melancholy than erotic.

75

New York Post by V.A. Musetto

You are unlikely to see a movie about incest made as sensitively and tastefully as Womb. And although the characters speak English, the film is firmly anchored in European sensibilities, thanks to its Hungarian director, Benedek Fliegauf.

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