Sustains a pervasive feeling of anxiety and suspense, despite an absence of dramatic conflict or resolution.
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What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
This is the weirdest film I've seen all year, or at least the weirdest good film. It's also among the most powerful.
This genuine curio maintains its mystery to the end.
New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman
A visually lush and eerily enigmatic parable of female sexuality, Lucile Hadzihalilovic's ominous fairy tale raises questions you'll be wondering about for days.
Hadzihalilovic succeeds brilliantly at crafting a meaningful enigma that somehow grasps the essence of adolescence, but only grows more mysterious with each revelation.
The New York Times by Manohla Dargis
The line between cinematic art and exploitation has rarely seemed finer and nervier, at least in recent memory, than in the French film Innocence.
Village Voice by Michael Atkinson
Innocence is not merely the year's best first film, but one of the great statements on the politics of being 'tween.
The more overtly allegorical Innocence becomes, the duller it gets.
The New Republic by Stanley Kauffmann
The Oxford English Dictionary says that an allegory is "an extended or continued metaphor." And to think that this definition was coined when a French film called Innocence was still very far in the future! But how aptly this film proves the point.
One of the oddest, most perplexing -- and delightful -- films to come along this year. And last year, too.