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This is a film about intruding into spaces (spoilers)


Reviewers and ordinary viewers on IMDb and other web sites have pointed out lots of reasons for disliking this mumblecore movie. The film feels random and unexplained. The camerawork is amateurish, handheld 16mm. Motivations? None. We can only explain the heroine's thefts by assuming she's klepto. Why Josh goes along with this very risky car theft, I don't know.

Most irritating is the director's failure to pass any kind of judgment on the thefts. The actress is or was Safdie's girlfriend--maybe that's why.) But she really hurts people. Strangely, though, I also found her thefts in a curious kind of way endearing. She shows a kind of childlike innocence. It is as though other people's belongings, things they take seriously, exist for her only as playthings. That's an odd reaction on my part. Why do I get this feeling?

All these negatives said, let me point out something in the film's favor. It does home in on one particular theme that runs consistently through the whole movie. People--Eléonore, but others, too--intrude on other people's private spaces.

The theme begins in the opening when Eléonore rushes across the street to embrace someone she really doesn't know and slip the startled woman's shoulderbag onto her own shoulder. Later, we see her pawing through the bag, pulling stuff out. She steals grapes from a corner grocery. She enters a table tennis tournament where she has no business playing these experts. Having stolen a Volvo, she starts driving on the streets of New York when she doesn't know how to drive. In the Metropolitan Museum she grabs at some sign. In a children's playground, she pokes through one of the mothers' handbags and gets arrested for doing so. She constantly enters somebody else's space.

Sometimes she just changes what's in a space. In Josh's apartment, she puts an intruding horsefly outside. In a music store, she switches CDs between her player and the store's boxes. But she's constantly dealing with spaces, usually intrusively.

And it isn't just Eléonore who intrudes on spaces. Other people do. Her neighbor Mike tries to push his way into her apartment. The dog she steals becomes an unwelcome presence in her building. In a rest stop men's room, Josh squirts cologne on himself, smelling up the Volvo. The horsefly gets into Josh's apartment. A man bursts into a bar offering drinks for all, then sheepishly reneges. In her own apartment, the noise of someone's trumpet intrudes. Someone else has been harassing animals at the Central Park Zoo, a space she wants to get into and does.

The clearest idea of getting into a space comes when Eléonore fantasizes, at the Central Park Zoo, that she gets into the polar bear's enclosure. But then there is a vertical wipe (like a glass partition rolling down), and she and the polar bear--a polar bear so outrageously obviously fake that it says right out loud, This is fantasy--she and the bear splash around in a pristine stream. But not pristine. Even there, a man intrudes on the scene and tosses a bag of what looks like garbage into the stream.

This is a film as much about space as about theft. Having one's own small space that others don't barge into, that's the essence of city living. (And the street photography in Pleasure is quite good.) But people do barge in on you. As she says when she opens the bag with the kittens, "I know what it's like to be in a tote bag with a wild dog." You need your own space, the very spaces that she violates. This is very much a film of city life in the early 21st century. That's why the fantasy episode, romping with a polar bear in a pristine stream, is such a telling contrast.

In the message board for this film on IMDb, one viewer ("Coporal-Tunnel") suggests that the scene with Eléonore and the bear in the stream "was part of a whole Eve-in-the-Garden motif, where her innocence is total because she is living in a state of grace, childlike, without any notion of sin. " Her subsequent "splash into the river feels a bit like a baptism (this point was contributed by the actress in a discussion of the film)." And the bear (being fake) doesn't kill her--more Garden-of-Eden stuff.

I think that's a fruitful point, particularly when combined with the theme of intruding into spaces. Eléonore intrudes into a space, in imagination, but it's all right because it's in imagination and because it's in nature, not a city. In nature spaces flow into one another, but not in Manhattan. She's an innocent treating city spaces as though she were in the Garden of Eden. That leads us to the most obvious "pleasure of being robbed," that is, by paying to see this movie (to enter the IFC theater and Joshua Safdie's imaginative space).

Perhaps this child-of-nature idea explains my odd reaction, feeling that she's an innocent when she commits these rotten thefts. Yes, in a city, it's mean and awful when people intrude on your space and take things from it. But in the world that Eléonore fantasizes, a state of nature, where even bears are benevolent and playful, it works. The problem is, she tries to live that in the heart of downtown New York. She does seem an innocent, but also guilty as hell. The mix yields an intriguing, if not particularly pleasing, film. Read more at http://www.asharperfocus.com/Robbed.html.

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Great explanation/review

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"And it isn't just Eléonore who intrudes on spaces. Other people do"

Yes, it's called living on earth: people intrude into other people's spaces.

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[deleted]

Great insight. I was uncomfortable watching this film, but your commentary put it in context. Originally from the Midwest, I moved to NYC in the early 80's, eventually getting a studio apartment in Chelsea, thence commuting into Manhattan from rural Bucks County, PA and finally returning to the Midwest 3 years ago. My biggest dislike about New York was the constant intrusion by others into my space. I could handle the crowds on the streets with no problem but it was people that shoved themselves in my face to demand my attention that finally got to me. I used to walk to and from work in Manhattan, a trip that normally would take some 35 minutes. But to avoid all the petitioners, the street sales people, the aggressive homeless, the fervent religious nuts just to have a pleasant walk in the city eventually evolved into a tortured hour+ route. After 10 years I gave up to commute from Bucks, where I owned a townhouse on a corner that my neighbors' dogs constantly left piles on the lawn, then finally returning to the Midwest as I began to value my own unviolated space more and more. While the Midwest isn't perfect, we do tend to respect our neighbors space. So your review / commentary hit a chord with me, the East Coast tolerance of people that aggressively intrude upon other's spaces and when called upon it are outraged that there is objection.

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Hi, Harry,

It sounds as though you had an awful time in NYC, a city that I love, although, yes, people do get in your face. As they do in THE PLEASURE OF BEING ROBBED. Thanks for your comment.

Yours, Norm Holland

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I too lived in NYC during the '80's and loved it. Can't say the same about this movie. This isn't a movie about intruding into spaces, this is a movie about NOTHING! It is among the most boring, pointless movies I have ever seen. Here's the plot, girl steals car in NYC, drives guy to Boston (even though she has never driven before), stops at convenience store on the way, gets to guy's apartment, stays up talking with him most of night,(about nothing of interest to anyone), gets a few hours of sleep and drives back to NYC. Wow, how did anyone ever come up with that genius plot? Did I leave anything out,like maybe she smoked a cigarette during the ride or brushed hair out of her face?


"Don't "yeah,yeah" me, Lois."

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