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Trouble Every Day

Eric Freeman

Beatrice Dalle in Trouble Every Day

French director Claire Denis is one of the most visceral directors in the world today, and Trouble Every Day showcases her at her most tactile. The plot is simple: a mild-mannered scientist (Vincent Gallo) goes to Paris on his honeymoon, but he feels a constant compulsion to feast on human flesh. At the same time, a remarkably feral young cannibal (Beatrice Dalle) with an unclear role in the newlywed’s past continually escapes from a homemade prison so she can literally eat off the faces of random men. Not much happens over the course of 101 minutes, but every moment is full of tension and foreboding: When will Gallo give into his desires and chomp away? Will Dalle cover herself in blood and metamorphose into a wolf right on screen? Just how loud creepy can Denis make deep breaths and panting? Unlike the common stereotype of a French film, Trouble Every Day does not fixate on philosophical questions; instead, everything on its mind is communicated by Gallo staring longingly at a hotel cleaning woman’s neck or Dalle desperately rattling the bars on her window. This is perhaps the best compliment I can give the movie: Even though there are only three or four acts of cannibalism, I fully expected every living thing that appeared on camera to get attacked.  – Eric Freeman

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