Improvised confident agile productivity meets frustrated restrained routine continuity in the heartwarming new odd couple film, Intouchables, the two dimensions elastically forging an incorporeal amicable trust.
Or friendship. Friendship is another way of describing that which they forge.
Philippe
(François Cluzet) is a wealthy aristocratic quadriplegic who requires
the aid of a live-in attendant. Driss (Omar Sy) comes from the projects
and only applied for the position to demonstrate to social assistance
that he's looking for work.
It quickly becomes apparent
that Driss's honest, easy going, cheeky camaraderie is precisely that
for which Philippe has been searching, having grown tired of fawning,
hesitant, by-the-book cookie cutters.
And the result is mutually cathartic.
The mix of different attitudes regarding artistic modes of expression is invaluable.
Oddly enough, it seems that there are still a lot of people who don't mix the classical with the popular.
Which is just simply weird.
Illustrating
the rewards of embracing alternative therapeutic methodologies in order
to rediscover innocuously rebellious invigorating affects, Intouchables acrobatically and celestially displays its inclusive joie de vivre without losing its practical edge.
Worth checking out.
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