You Go To My Head | Telescope Film
You Go To My Head

You Go To My Head

Critic Rating

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User Rating

In this suspenseful psychological drama, Jake, an architect living alone in an isolated desert home, finds a woman who has just been in a car crash. When he learns the woman is suffering from post-traumatic amnesia, Jake tells her she is his wife and takes her to live with him.

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What are critics saying?

90

Film Threat

You Go to My Head is a warped and lush tale of obsession, deception, and romance that’ll certainly go to your head. It’ll just take some time.

90

Film Threat by Andrew Stover

You Go to My Head is a warped and lush tale of obsession, deception, and romance that’ll certainly go to your head. It’ll just take some time.

80

Variety by Joe Leydon

If you can surrender yourself to the measured rhythms of the film and accept its mix of feeling and artifice, you may find much to admire here.

80

The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis

Until its surprisingly effective ending, You Go To My Head keeps its drama under the skin. Like an animal in captivity, Bafort, who is also a model, slinks and lounges with long-limbed grace; but it’s Cvetkovic who holds the movie steady, giving Jake a secretive, worn gentleness that’s tinged with tragedy.

80

The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck

From its desert landscapes to its principal setting of an architecturally distinguished house to its extremely photogenic lead actress, every frame of the psychological thriller proves visually stunning to behold. While the film never manages to achieve the level of suspense that would make it dramatically riveting, it certainly earns its art house credentials on a purely visceral level.

40

Los Angeles Times by Kimber Myers

De Clercq’s clear directorial talent gives the film the illusion of respectability, but it can’t remove the sweaty sheen of smarm.

30

TheWrap by Elizabeth Weitzman

If you hired an independent filmmaker to create a perfume ad, and then turned that ad into a full-length movie, you’d probably get something that looks a lot like Dimitri de Clercq’s directorial debut, “You Go to My Head.”