A Lost Man

Summary

A Lost Man (French: Un homme perdu, Arabic: رجل ضائع rajulun ḍāˀyiˁ, Levantine Arabic rajolon ḍāˀyeˁ) is a 2007 Lebanese film by the Lebanese director Danielle Arbid.

Un homme perdu - رجل ضائع
Poster used in Cannes 2007
Directed byDanielle Arbid
Written byDanielle Arbid
Produced byCharles Gilibert
Nathanaël Karmitz
StarringMelvil Poupaud
Yasmine Lafitte
Carol Abboud
Alexander Siddig
Sarah Warde
CinematographyCéline Bozon
Release date
  • 19 September 2007 (2007-09-19)
Running time
97 minutes
CountryLebanon
LanguagesArabic, French

The film premiered on 18 March during the 2007 Cannes Film Festival, in the Directors' Fortnight section.[1] It is possibly the most sexually graphic film ever made by an Arab director.[2] The film was inspired by the life of the French photographer Antoine D'Agata.

Synopsis edit

The story is about a French photographer Thomas Koré (Melvil Poupaud), who is searching for extraordinary experiences. Koré has become so detached from humanity that the only way he can connect with other people is to have—and photograph—bizarre and demeaning sexual encounters with prostitutes. When he meets Fouad Saleh (Alexander Siddig), a man with memory problems, he realized that Fouad is even more lost than he, and befriends him. Koré then tries to uncover Fouad's history.

References edit

  1. ^ Directors' Fortnight | Un homme perdu Archived September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Variety article

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Un homme perdu at IMDb  
  • Directors' Fortnight page on Un homme perdu
  • A trailer of the movie on YouTube