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On a late 19th-century estate, a celebration of wine and beer lets loose inhibitions and innerpassions. Jean (Mullan), the Count's footman, takes the advances of the Count's daughter (Burrows) too far with a scandalous encounter in the kitchen. And over one night, it becomes clear that these two lost souls desperately need each other in order to escape the confinesand trappingsof their lives. But can a servant support a noblewoman, who, without her father's money, is no more privileged than he? (official distributor synopsis)

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novoten 

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English I don't remember the last time I saw a film that rustled paper like that. The concept is interesting, but the screenplay is not. What good are the performances of the actors when their characters only alternate heartfelt confessions with vulgar attempts to humiliate each other? And I won't forgive Figgis for ruining the strongest scene of the film with a split image. Negatively inventive theater adaptation. ()

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