The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

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zedz
Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 11:24 pm

Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#51 Post by zedz »

You haven’t actually seen this film, have you?
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Peacock
Joined: Mon Dec 22, 2008 11:47 pm
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Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#52 Post by Peacock »

zedz wrote: Sun Feb 23, 2025 12:18 am You haven’t actually seen this film, have you?
No I’m not a big spaghetti western fan.
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Matt
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 4:58 pm

Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#53 Post by Matt »

I'm glad I'm not the only one to be complaining that there's a fantastic 95-minute film to be had in here. I paused it after a good while to feed my cat and groaned audibly when I saw that the movie wasn't even half over. It thankfully got better after that. The third act, however, had me repeatedly laughing out loud, especially when
Spoiler
the title card "Monstro Elisasue" came up, when she pastes the face on herself, when she vomits up the boob, and during the Carrie-esque climax.
Finch's reference to Stuart Gordon is right on the money.

I really could have done without the slavish Kubrick visual homages and the "ironic" needle-drops and Dennis Quaid's character who's essentially a "Powerpuff Girls" villain.

I wasn't a big fan of Fargeat's Revenge until the finale of that film either. So she's proving herself a master of the over-the-top third act, she just needs to get her first acts under control.
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tenia
Ask Me About My Bassoon
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Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#54 Post by tenia »

Rewatched this for an upcoming video review : I might have been too harsh scoring it 4.5 out of 10, since I did have some fun again with it, but man, it's just. so. long.
I have the opposite issue than you Matt, in that by the time the third act arrives, my mind has already checked out.
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pianocrash
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Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#55 Post by pianocrash »

willoneill wrote: Thu Feb 20, 2025 3:16 pm
Peacock wrote: Thu Feb 20, 2025 2:48 am
willoneill wrote: Thu Feb 20, 2025 1:30 am Picked up the 4K release today and couldn't help noticing that the blu-ray disc (older technology with less definition) has a picture of Demi Moore, while the 4K disc (newer technology with higher definition) is Margaret Qualley.
This is a reach.
What's the reach? I never stated it was intentional, I'm simply stating the factual display of the discs. Or are you arguing that blu-ray is neither older technology nor lower definition than 4K? I believe those are also facts.
Let's be honest here: a Reach ain't nothin' but a toothbrush to Coralie Fargeat, as per her scripts.

Biggest haha takeaway from this half-argument about the discs (which are definitely a choice by the director, who is very much in the literal pocket of the company who released it) is that the film was shot on 4K, then downgraded to 2K and up back to 4K to soften the photography, overall. So I suppose we are all reachin' 4 a new refutation of time & space (1993, respectfully), sometimes jokes just don't land, and it's not like anybody buys physical media anymore, amirite?
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captveg
Joined: Wed Sep 02, 2009 11:28 pm

Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#56 Post by captveg »

tenia wrote: Mon Feb 24, 2025 8:37 am Rewatched this for an upcoming video review : I might have been too harsh scoring it 4.5 out of 10, since I did have some fun again with it, but man, it's just. so. long.
I have the opposite issue than you Matt, in that by the time the third act arrives, my mind has already checked out.
Just finished it and this was my experience - by the 1 hr 45 min mark I was fairly checked out. The absurdity of the final 20 mins helped a little, but at best this just isn't to my tastes. A movie like Seconds has many similar ideas/themes and is more my vibe.
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Brian C
I hate to be That Pedantic Guy but...
Joined: Wed Sep 16, 2009 3:58 pm
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Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#57 Post by Brian C »

There is a brief moment of this film when I thought it was actually relatable - sometime after the first switch back to Elisabeth, when the film focuses, just for a moment, not on her vanity but simply her loneliness. It's about the time that she meets the old man in the diner, and of course the film explicitly verbalizes this theme when it doesn't have to, like it does all its other themes. But in that moment, I connected to it and to Moore's performance, and the feeling of waking up one morning and realizing that no one in your life seems to have much use for you anymore. It's incredibly bleak but it's something real and for just a minute or two, and for the only time, genuine sympathy for this woman bleeds through.

If there's a second thing I related to, it's the complete lack of helpfulness you get anytime you call customer support with even basic questions!

Other than that, this movie seems to hate pretty much everyone and everything, not least of all its two/one main character(s). It hates the self-pitying by Elisabeth and the empty vanity of Sue. It hates the entertainment business, it hates the entertainment product itself, and it hates the audiences that watch it. It hates the decay of being old and it hates the arrogance of youth, and it hates the vapidness of fame while it also hates the normies. It's just so bitter about the world.

I was prepared for the gore, but I wasn't prepared for how ugly the soul of the film is. I thought I was buying into a film making a simple-minded feminist point in an over-the-top way, and I skipped this in its initial release because that sounded tedious to me. But what I got was a film that's way worse, one that's disgusted by the woman/women it portrays and externalizes that disgust with a bunch of gory effects.

Completely repellant.
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Beloved Aunt
Joined: Tue Dec 14, 2021 7:28 pm

Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#58 Post by Beloved Aunt »

Oh Brian, we here at this forum find you useful, and interesting, and welcome!

PS,
Brian C wrote: Thu Feb 27, 2025 3:41 am If there's a second thing I related to, it's the complete lack of helpfulness you get anytime you call customer support with even basic questions!
is this really everyone's experience most of the time, or just a leftist trope? I've definitely had a few bad customer support experiences, but mostly I've found them helpful and I get what I'm looking for.
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Brian C
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Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#59 Post by Brian C »

Well, I meant it as a little bit of a joke to lighten my very cranky take on the film, but honestly ... mostly yes. My typical experience is that I can usually get what I need, but only eventually, after a lot of jumping through hoops and often talking to multiple people.

Something like this recent (true) scenario:

ME: I'm calling to report an internet outage at my apartment.
CS: I don't see an outage in your area.
ME: Yes, I saw on the online coverage map that it's not showing an outage. That's why I'm calling to report it.
CS [after a half-hour of resetting router, time on hold while they make calls on their end to other depts, etc]: OK, we've confirmed an outage in your area and we are dispatching someone to investigate, ETA is within 72 hours.
ME: Thanks, but 72 hours????

Just a ton of effort and I had to push them into even confirming the outage. Didn't even realize this was particularly a leftist trope.
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tenia
Ask Me About My Bassoon
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Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#60 Post by tenia »

Brian C wrote: Thu Feb 27, 2025 3:41 amIt's incredibly bleak but it's something real and for just a minute or two, and for the only time, genuine sympathy for this woman bleeds through.
Same for me here, I did feel, both during my first watching and the second one, that it suddenly was a much better scene than anything before, something both more relatable but also deeper and more in-line with the Very Serious Movie Fargeat was seemingly wanting to do. But then, the movie doesn’t really know what to do with it anyway and goes back to normal without thinking about it ever again.
This being written :
Brian C wrote: Thu Feb 27, 2025 3:41 amOther than that, this movie seems to hate pretty much everyone and everything, not least of all its two/one main character(s). It hates the self-pitying by Elisabeth and the empty vanity of Sue. It hates the entertainment business, it hates the entertainment product itself, and it hates the audiences that watch it. It hates the decay of being old and it hates the arrogance of youth, and it hates the vapidness of fame while it also hates the normies. It's just so bitter about the world.
It IS bitter about the world, but I don’t think it’s aiming that much directly to the characters (at least, not the main ones) but rather what the society they’re living in kinda forces them to do. It’s about performances and masks, the hoops the society makes you go through, or at least the ones it makes you believe you have to go through, and the myths it creates about how people should behave, how they should look, what they should be and do. I don’t think it’s disgusted by the women it portrays, however, but rather at what powerful people like Harvey makes them go through, to the point someone like Elisabeth will believe she needs to go through The Substance even if the movie really never clarifies why it is exactly that it brings to her (both because there are quite a few plot holes regarding that, but also because it’s quite clear she could stop all this self-destructing experience but can’t resort to “just because”). In the same fashion, Sue doesn’t really have to be vain, but it’s what the world around her expects her to be : some kind of feminine ideal that can’t be anything else, because of course such a gorgeous woman cannot be anything else than a sexualized fantasy with no brains.

But I think your feeling about this rather goes towards the gap between the ideas behind the movie and their execution. One of my main issues with it, for instance, is that the movie has countless butt shots for instance, and while they’re supposedly pastiching male gaze, it’s actually tough on-screen to set them apart from this. And sure enough, Fargeat might say the team was careful about the shots used for the movie’s marketing, in order to avoid such shots getting reduced to that, but I’m not surprised they were : because they actually can. It’s like those mediocre comedies that supposedly subvert clichés but actually just repeat them. And I might have been more forgiving with a movie that’s not 2h20 long, because such a duration allows for the time to frame such things correctly, but the movie doesn’t.
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colinr0380
Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 8:30 pm
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Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#61 Post by colinr0380 »

Brian C wrote: Thu Feb 27, 2025 6:05 am Well, I meant it as a little bit of a joke to lighten my very cranky take on the film, but honestly ... mostly yes. My typical experience is that I can usually get what I need, but only eventually, after a lot of jumping through hoops and often talking to multiple people.

Something like this recent (true) scenario:

ME: I'm calling to report an internet outage at my apartment.
CS: I don't see an outage in your area.
ME: Yes, I saw on the online coverage map that it's not showing an outage. That's why I'm calling to report it.
CS [after a half-hour of resetting router, time on hold while they make calls on their end to other depts, etc]: OK, we've confirmed an outage in your area and we are dispatching someone to investigate, ETA is within 72 hours.
ME: Thanks, but 72 hours????

Just a ton of effort and I had to push them into even confirming the outage. Didn't even realize this was particularly a leftist trope.
It could be worse: I had BT say they were pulling out of the landline business around December 2023 reported by my local ISP, who said they would take over the phone line and in the process upgrade me to a fibre connection too. Awesome! But after cutting me off the internet completely for ten days in February last year (at which point when I called to ask how they were doing the lady in the office angrily said "if you don't like us find another ISP!"), they said that fibre thing couldn't happen because of the lack of infrastructure in my area, which they had not thought about when initially offering it. Then whilst waiting for them to 'seamlessly' change my phone over in October I got a surprise "we're sorry to see you go" letter from BT and my phone was cut off. I went to the ISP to ask about this and they said "sorry but we had you down to move over in our next tranch of customers in January 2025, but you had a new neighbour move into your street and I accidentally told them to cut your phone line off instead". Six months later I still have no landline, and presume they are in no hurry to connect one.

So I share your despair about 'customer service', particularly regarding communication providers, Brian C!
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mfunk9786
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Re: The Substance (Coralie Fargeat, 2024)

#62 Post by mfunk9786 »

The layer of this film that really appealed to me is its open-ended commentary on the ways in which our behavior as young people impact who we are as older people. Who do we alienate? How do we treat our bodies? What are we willing to do to our minds? Are we able to establish an inner foundation that holds up to inevitable changes and disappointments?

At its best, The Substance feels more like a Charlie Kaufman homage than the more obvious David Cronenberg comparison. Because of the tug-of-war between Elisabeth/Sue, the film is thought-provoking instead of just indulgent, but mileage is going to vary on its indulgence - that stuff is a hoot too, but obviously isn't going to be everyone's cup of tea.
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