Dead Duck Film Club
Seb and Mark dig into The Stranger (2026), François Ozon's new adaptation of Albert Camus' L'Étranger (1942), a book long considered unadaptable, which Visconti already tried to film in 1967. Starring Benjamin Voisin as Meursault, Rebecca Marder as Marie Cardona, Denis Lavant as Salamano, and Pierre Lottin as Raymond. Set in 1930s French-colonial Algeria, the film follows an indifferent Frenchman whose life is reshaped by his mother's funeral and a senseless act of violence on a beach. The conversation covers Ozon's decision to strip out the book's first-person narration, Benjamin Voisin's performance, the film's real argument against capital punishment, how race and colonialism enter the courtroom, and why The Stranger and A Clockwork Orange are asking the same question from opposite ends. Spoilers flagged. Sidebar watches: Kristoffer Borgli's The Drama, Coherence (2013), and Seb's first time with A Clockwork Orange. They close by watching Ozon's six-minute student short Photo de Famille (1988) together, his brother murders the family for a photo. Recommendations: Kiyoshi Kurosawa's Cure, Ozon's By the Grace of God, and French picks Polisse (2011) and In Safe Hands (2018).
21 episodes
Comments
0Be the first to comment
Sign up now and become a member of the Dead Duck Film Club community!