[18+] Personal Shopper
Personal Shopper is centered on a ghost story in the fashion underworld, as it gets more complicated for a lady who wants to meet again with her dead twin.
21 January 1976, Berlin, Germany
1 December 1981, Vienna, Austria
9 April 1990, Los Angeles, California, USA
20 January 1973, Villefranche-sur-Saône, Rhône, France
April 13, 2017
Stewart's finest performance ... the film is the equal of Clouds of Sils Maria and up there with Assayas' best ... keeps shifting gears with highly-engineered precision ... Easy answers are not readily apparent [but] the whole is immensely satisfying.
March 24, 2017
"Personal Shopper" is tough to pin down, but it's a strange and stunning ride - haunting without being hokey, with surprises around every turn.
March 23, 2017
"Personal Shopper" draws you in, interesting from all angles.
April 12, 2017
It's a bit crackpot as drama, but Personal Shopper has such controlled burn, such depth of feeling around this topic of grief, and such an aching performance from Stewart, that it hardly matters that it doesn't quite make sense. Logic is over-rated.
April 23, 2017
A ghost film haunted several times over, and haunting in just as many ways.
March 24, 2017
A riveting, impossible-to-shake masterwork that leaves the audience spooked, not by its telling but by its commitment to abstract themes of grief, solitude and coming of age.
March 24, 2017
The production is in equal parts mesmerizing and perplexing, intriguing and frustrating.
April 18, 2017
Personal Shopper constantly shifts from family drama to horror film and psychological thriller without losing the pace. [Full review in Spanish]
March 23, 2017
Assayas is among France's most respected filmmakers, but just what he was attempting to do with this film is something of a mystery.
April 12, 2017
When used well, she's an arresting screen presence. But the flatness of Stewart's intonation works against her in this film.
March 23, 2017
As much a study of solitude, intimacy and otherworldly longings as it is a contemporary ghost story, the film is both genuinely scary and psychologically serious.

