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The Strange Color of Your Body's Tears

Original title: L'étrange couleur des larmes de ton corps
  • 2013
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
4.6K
YOUR RATING
The Strange Color of Your Body's Tears (2013)
Trailer for The Strange Color of Your Body's Tears
Play trailer1:44
2 Videos
66 Photos
GialloPsychological HorrorPsychological ThrillerHorrorMysteryThriller

Returning home from a business trip to discover his wife missing, a man delves deeper and deeper into a surreal kaleidoscope of half-baked leads, seduction, deceit, and murder. Does anyone i... Read allReturning home from a business trip to discover his wife missing, a man delves deeper and deeper into a surreal kaleidoscope of half-baked leads, seduction, deceit, and murder. Does anyone in the building know something?Returning home from a business trip to discover his wife missing, a man delves deeper and deeper into a surreal kaleidoscope of half-baked leads, seduction, deceit, and murder. Does anyone in the building know something?

  • Directors
    • Hélène Cattet
    • Bruno Forzani
  • Writers
    • Bruno Forzani
    • Hélène Cattet
  • Stars
    • Klaus Tange
    • Ursula Bedena
    • Joe Koener
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    4.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Hélène Cattet
      • Bruno Forzani
    • Writers
      • Bruno Forzani
      • Hélène Cattet
    • Stars
      • Klaus Tange
      • Ursula Bedena
      • Joe Koener
    • 41User reviews
    • 144Critic reviews
    • 53Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos2

    The Strange Color of Your Body's Tears
    Trailer 1:44
    The Strange Color of Your Body's Tears
    The Strange Color Of Your Body's Tears Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:44
    The Strange Color Of Your Body's Tears Official Trailer
    The Strange Color Of Your Body's Tears Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:44
    The Strange Color Of Your Body's Tears Official Trailer

    Photos65

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    Klaus Tange
    Klaus Tange
    • Dan…
    Ursula Bedena
    Joe Koener
    Birgit Yew
    Hans De Munter
    Hans De Munter
      Anna D'Annunzio
      • Barbara
      Jean-Michel Vovk
      • L'inspecteur
      Manon Beuchot
      Romain Roll
      Lolita Oosterlynck
      Delphine Brual
      Sam Louwyck
      Sam Louwyck
      Sylvia Camarda
      Ann de Visscher
      Michael Fromowicz
      Alexandre Hornbeck
      François Cognard
      Manon Kaefer
      • Directors
        • Hélène Cattet
        • Bruno Forzani
      • Writers
        • Bruno Forzani
        • Hélène Cattet
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews41

      5.94.5K
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      Featured reviews

      6Red-Barracuda

      Visually amazing but a little unengaging

      Writer-directors Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani are the duo responsible for Amer. That film shares a great deal of similarities with their latest feature, The Strange Colour of Your Body's Tears. Both use the iconography and music of the Italian giallo films of the 1970's as the basic ingredients to construct an art film. Motifs familiar to fans of the genre include a character called Edwige, a black leather gloved assassin, retro phones, gaudy décor, early 70's looking women and a distinct lack of 21st century technology. We also have a soundtrack made up of a variety of music from 70's gialli – amongst others there are choice cuts from Killer Nun (1978) and All the Colors of the Dark (1972). Even its title is a knowing nod to the gloriously convoluted names that early 70's gialli often went under. Amer was made up of three parts, the middle section having no giallo influence at all; alternatively, The Strange Colour of Your Body's Tears is fully focused on a giallo influence from start to finish. But make no mistake, this film like its predecessor is really not a giallo per se. It uses the imagery and music from the genre in a highly experimental manner. Consequently, this is not a story-driven film in the least. It's all about the look and feel.

      Frankly, I found the story to be pretty incomprehensible to be perfectly honest. In brief summary, it's about a man who returns home to his apartment to find it locked from the inside and his wife mysteriously gone; his subsequent investigations lead to a variety of very strange events. It is pretty episodic, with some parts being more successful than others. While the film is overwhelmingly beautiful to look at, a problem I had with it was that its story and characters were very unengaging. This meant that it wasn't always easy keeping your attention on events. The cinematography is really very, very good though; if anything even more impressive than in Amer. The widescreen is used to its full extent, there is interesting framing, the use of colour is fabulous, there is inventive use of split-screen and black and white is interspersed with colour. It's consistently inventive and often quite gorgeous. But it is so pronounced and relentless that after a bit you almost feel tired-out by it. And because there are such distant, unengaging characters involved in such an incomprehensible story, this means that the beautiful imagery doesn't always amount to as much as it could if there was something we could empathise with going on.

      But don't get me wrong, the imagery is extremely alluring at times and there is an interesting atmosphere of mystery generated some of the time. In terms of visual artistry, this is rather good but as a thriller, it can try your patience. Overall, it's another very worthwhile effort from Cattet and Forzani but I sort of wish the next time they would employ their undoubted visual artistry around a thriller with a plot-line we can engage with more. If they can do that, then they could make something extraordinary. This one, impressed me in some ways but left me a somewhat frustrated as well.
      5willwoodmill

      Stylistically brilliant, but unfortunately flawed modern horror tribute

      The Strange Color of Your Body's Tears is a tribute to Italian Giallo slasher films of the 60s and 70s. The film begins with a man returning to his apartment after he has been away on business for two weeks, only to find that his wife is missing. The man then tries to find his wife. He searches through her stuff calls, the police, and visits a mysterious lady up on the seventh floor of his building. But things take a turn for the worse when he discovers something that has mysteriously appeared in his apartment. The film then becomes a disjointed serious of dream sequences and flashbacks that become increasingly hard to follow.

      The Strange Color of Your Body's Tears is second film by the Italian horror duo, Hélène Cattet and Bruno Frozani. And let me just say that these two know what they're doing, the film is very well crafted, the blocking and camera work in this is some of the freshest I've seen in any film from the past few years. The cinematography (shot by Manuel Dacosse) is fantastic. The film is vibrantly colorful, has flawless lighting, and does a great job of getting you up close and personal with the characters in the film. The sound design is also insanely good. There's little dialogue in the film, (we get most of the information about the characters through what we see.) but the void the absence of dialogue has made is filled with some of the most detailed and complex sound design I've heard in a horror film.

      But where The Strange Color of Your Body's Tears succeeds in style, it fails in story. With all of its jumping around, cryptic storytelling, and dream sequences it becomes nearly impossible to follow, (at least towards the end.) and thus the film fails to engage its audience. The story in itself wasn't that great to start with, and they never really add anything onto it, if anything they take away from where the story started by making it so confusing and to make it worse they don't do much to try and make you follow their film. Their are aspects of the story that are really good, (like the back story of the lady on the seventh floor.) but on a whole the story is alright at best, and a muddled mess at worst.

      While not bad a bad film, The Strange Color of Your Bodies Tears could have been much better than it actually was. Hélène Cattet and Bruno Frozani both definitely have talent, they just need to work on focusing in on a single theme or story, and making it coherent. If they are able to do these two things the film they make will almost definitely be a masterpiece. But for now I'm satisfied with The Strange Color of Your Bodies Tears.

      5.9
      6thalassafischer

      A Few Excellent Scenes but Did Not Impress Me

      At first I couldn't really explain why I didn't like this film. After all, the foyer and staircase in the building are the kind of atmospheric luxury one expects in a giallo or apartment horror, and the old lady upstairs reminded me a bit of The Sentinel, one of my favorite films ever.

      I think it's the main guy. I don't like him. Not that I like every horror protagonist or "point of view" killer in giallo, but I couldn't empathize or feel horror, I just felt a kind of worldly distaste. The kind of distaste I feel for Wall Street moguls, tax accountants, and Republicans. Not the kind of supernatural fascination or psychological curiosity one might have in the horror/thriller genres.

      In fact nothing about this felt haunted to me. There was no pang of nostalgia, no whisper of ghosts (real or imagined), no monstrous memories sparked, no sleeping dogs refused to lie. The Strange Color of Your Body's Tears is more of surreal modern nightmare centering about a rich white man. His dream felt incoherent in a bad way, it did not compel me to pay attention, I could barely get through this. But I have to give it 6 stars for the incredible beauty of particular scenes.
      5richshire

      Over stylized ? why don't you be the judge

      I love Giallo stuff and when there's a movie that pays tribute or respect to the genre, I'd give it a go. So with this one, seeing a really cool cover of the DVD and being French and all, hey off course :) I like the idea of a missing lover story and I really like the stylized detailed, closed up shots and sounds of many of the scenes. BUT I find it a bit much. I feel that with Giallo, being psychedelic doesn't mean,psychedelic shots of every scenes, this movie has an amazing / best art nouveau back drop that it self already gives a certain persona. I find my self looking the other way just every now and then to rest my eyes also press the ff button just because my brain is telling me " yes I got it, got the idea...next ". However I still recommend it to you, because it has a very good story and all this stuff I'm writing about is worth to look at. But for me.....a bit over done
      8mario_c

      I was amazed with the strange colors of this film!

      Being visually stunning this movie is great essentially for its amazing cinematography and the way the camera is used.

      Detailed and wonderful plans, vivid colors, amazing sets inside Art Deco buildings; it all have an astonishing visual effect.

      The plot is mysterious and complex.

      It's all about a murderer that is killing people inside their houses, but without breaking anything or leave any clue. But who is this murder anyway?

      It's one of those movies you can't figure out the entire plot at the first sight! At least I didn't!

      But I was amazed with the strange colors of this film!

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      Related interests

      Jacopo Mariani in Deep Red (1975)
      Giallo
      Daniel Kaluuya in Get Out (2017)
      Psychological Horror
      Rosamund Pike in Gone Girl (2014)
      Psychological Thriller
      Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
      Horror
      Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
      Mystery
      Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
      Thriller

      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        The film features fragments of Ennio Morricone's Erotico Mistico from the film Maddalena (1971) and Peppino De Luca's Rito a Los Angeles from the film Dorian Gray (1970). Both songs bear strong resemblance to different parts Iron Butterfly's 17-minute classic In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida, from 1968.
      • Goofs
        In the scene where Dan finds some flowers and a note left for him, the backdrop is a huge mirror. Red blinking lights, probably a reflection from video equipment, can be seen in the mirror.
      • Crazy credits
        SPOILER: End credits reveal a slightly different title : "L'étrange douleur des larmes de ton corps" ("The strange pain of your body's tears").
      • Connections
        Featured in Horror's Greatest: Hidden Gems (2025)
      • Soundtracks
        Magico Incontro
        Written by Bruno Nicolai

        Courtesy of Gemelli Edizioni Musicali

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      FAQ16

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • March 12, 2014 (Belgium)
      • Countries of origin
        • Belgium
        • France
        • Luxembourg
      • Official sites
        • Anonymes Films (Belgium)
        • Official Facebook
      • Languages
        • French
        • Danish
        • Flemish
      • Also known as
        • The Strange Colour of Your Body's Tears
      • Filming locations
        • Maison Bergeret, 24 rue Lionnois, Nancy, Meurthe-et-Moselle, France
      • Production companies
        • Anonymes Films
        • Tobina Film
        • Epidemic
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Budget
        • €1,880,000 (estimated)
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $7,182
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $1,535
        • Aug 31, 2014
      • Gross worldwide
        • $7,182
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 42m(102 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Dolby Digital
      • Aspect ratio
        • 2.35 : 1

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