There’s a lot to say about Julia Ducournau’s Titane. The first thing is that ending (which we are indeed going to talk about). After leaving the theater it was probably very awkward and quiet between you and your car on the drive home. And hopefully you don’t drive a stick shift!
To "explain the ending" of Titane, and to imply that such a task would "spoil" the movie implies that the movie exists within the same realm of movies that have traditional, explainable, spoilable narratives. Julia Ducournau's bonkers genre-blender is an experiential film driven by vibes, style, and thematic explorations more than it is a film driven by plot.
Thus, think of this video as more of an ending exploration than an ending explanation. Yes, we will do our best to lay out, beat by beat, the actual, corporeal "things that happen" at the end of Titane. But more importantly for a film like this, we will do our best to articulate what kinds of feelings and statements all of these abstract, bug-nuts choices bring up. Straighten your hairpin and fasten your seatbelt.
In the end, putting aside all of the insane imagery pummeling your eyes, and one of the most interesting aspects of the film is its views towards family structure. To quote Carrie Fisher “It’s about family. And that’s what’s so powerful about it.” Vin Diesel's Dominic Toretto and the entire Fast and The Furious franchise would be proud.
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Titane stars Agathe Rousselle as Alexia, a woman who, after being injured in a car accident as a child, has a titanium plate fitted into her head. Vincent Lindon, Garance Marillier and Laïs Salameh also star.
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