Thanks to some brilliant casting, Venus Beauty Institute provokes ideas about women, movies, sexuality, and age that extend beyond its frothy fiction.
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What are critics saying?
Philadelphia Inquirer by Carrie Rickey
A pink-collar "Sex and the City" made urgent by the performance of Nathalie Baye.
Lets you indulge your taste for soapy heartache without leaving you feeling that you have to wash the bubbles out of your mouth.
At its core is a feminine realm (the beauty parlor) through which modern issues of alienation and casual-sex-as-a-drug are coupled with timeless questions about the natures of love and desire.
New York Post by Jonathan Foreman
Slight but entertaining and occasionally touching.
Portland Oregonian by Kim Morgan
Marshall does such a good job re-creating the otherworldly energy of a temple of youth that the rest of the picture feels strained and sometimes trite. Nevertheless, parts can be absorbing, reflective and touching.
Austin Chronicle by Kimberley Jones
Warmed my heart about as much as the cold cream Angèle slathers all over her wrinkling clients.
TV Guide Magazine by Maitland McDonagh
A beautifully acted slice of intersecting lives defined and driven by the business of beauty.
Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman
Clever and smooth, yet, like Angèle herself (or Nathalie Baye), the film is almost too placid for its own good.
Seattle Post-Intelligencer by Sean Axmaker
At its best when it remains with the women, and Marshall draws marvelous performances from all.