Sunday, June 1, 2025

The Films of Julia Ducournau: An Introduction

 


            Director Julia Ducournau has become synonymous with the “feminist body horror” genre. By pioneering the idea of the horrors of femininity, without the loss of agency and autonomy for her subjects, has elevated Ducournau as a premiere auteur of indie filmmaking. Each of her three films to date have pushed the boundaries of expectation, understanding and taste. Boundary breaking, and at times, culturally caustic, Ducournau’s filmography challenges cinephiles through a lack of narrative conventions and a simultaneous allegorical richness, which requires repeat viewing. Whether her subjects be a vegetarian vet with a penchant for cannibalism, a nonbinary, gender-fluid serial killer with objectophilia for automobiles, or a self-destructive teen during a postapocalyptic future brought on by a pandemic with statuesque virulence, there is absurdity, and an unconventional construction of tone, plot and character to Ducournau’s films that is as refreshing as it is grotesque. Therefore, Julia Ducournau is the subject of my next director series that is sure to push the boundaries of conventional cinematic language into something beyond.

 

BREIF BACKGROUND      

Birthed from a gynecologist mother and a dermatologist father, on November 18th 1983, it is unsurprising that Julia Ducournau’s filmmaking trajectory is both within and guided by the body horror subgenre. While not “in her blood” as many who would use a biologically deterministic argument to explain how the award-winning director got her initial inspiration, it stands to sociologically reason that her parent’s careers, through the process of socialization, would have an indelible impact on their daughter. Given Ducournau’s films, the similarities between what is often the film’s subject and the expertise of her parents, there is little denying their influence. Ducournau cites their candid and direct discussions about the body and death led her to be fascinated with the flesh, consciousness, and the way that the body could be manipulated. This fascination became crystalized when Ducournau went to film school.  

Studying film and screenwriting at the prestigious La Femis, Durcournau’s auteristic tenure has been met with wide acclaim and critical success. The second female (cis or trans) to win the directing Palme d’Or at the CANNES film festival (behind Jane Campion for The Piano) her work has been described as revelatory, uncompromising, thrillingly provocative, with visuals that many find disturbingly erotic. Durcournau’s richly sparse trilogy of films has always been something to watch. Given the general acceptance of her films by cinephile critics, Durcournau’s latest venture, Alpha, has become one of the more anticipated films screened at Cannes in 2025, to the point of myths arising around the film that are akin to Freidkin’s The Exorcist. Yet, as of this writing, early reviews out of the festival seem to be the harbinger of mediocrity for Ducournau; the most scathing coming from artistically anarchic auteur apologist and cinephile champion critic David Ehrlich of Indiewire calling the film both “dour and dismal”. Thus, with her most recent feature, Ducournau may be beginning to experience the missteps and disparagement that inevitably accompanies artistic expression.       

 Ducournau’s inspirations have been cited as Lynchingly Cronenbergian with a sprinkling of Shelly and Poe. Ducournau uses both a command of the camera, including an eclectic series of shots, techniques and storyboards to crystalize this amalgamistic aesthetic of tone and style.  The body horror aspects of Ducournau’s feature length directorial triptych: Raw, Titane, and Alpha, can easily be laid at the feet of early Cronenberg (VideoDrome, The Fly) while the twisting reveals, and often radical shifts in composition, lighting, narrative and tone are positively Lynchian; specifically, The Elephant Man.  Because of these influences, Ducournau’s films are difficult to describe, but easy to spot, given the audience reactions to them out of context. “She ate him?” (Raw) “Did she just fuck a car?” (Titane) “Is she turning to stone?” (Alpha). Allegorically artistic, Ducournau channels those influences into a consistent expression of the horrors of the female body.  

 


THEMES

            In looking at Ducournau’s brief filmography there is a level of thematic consistency in her work. Coming from a desire to make genre films that blossom from reality, Ducournau understands that we draw from the world around us for inspiration and to say something about our everyday lives. However, she has also indicated that her films should not be pigeonholed into a political pamphlet.

This apolitical stance of filmmakers is common. It is often born out of a desire to maximize revenue and profit the most off of their art by a reluctance to produce anything that would be perceived as politically polarizing, or more artistically, allows the audience the freedom to interpret the filmmaker’s art independently, in their own way. This is understandable, even refreshing, but ultimately impossible, and often perceived as a cop out. Because film is a social and cultural product, it reflects both the time-period and the individuals that the film is telling stories about. This relatability is key. So, that even films set in the most fantastical world can still say something about the world we live in today.  The personal is political, as film is socio-cultural, regardless of the filmmaker’s economic or artistic intensions. Thus, if a socio-cultural and political stance is going to be presumably applied to the film anyway, filmmakers should make their intensions known, so that they are not misconstrued and their art is not misinterpreted and used in ways that do not align with the artist’s beliefs. However, intension is not a requirement for thematic embodiment, as with Ducournau’s filmography, there is an audience projection of themes that are present when consuming her art; specifically, those of feminism and body autonomy.      

            Feminism and body autonomy

            One of the many struggles that female directors face, in addition to the consistent misogyny brought on by the historical patriarchal exclusion and invisibility of women in such a creative and authoritative position, is the assumption that everything that director produces is perceived as feminist. A person’s genitalia, their sex assignment at birth, or their gender identity should never assume a political ideology, even as one as generalized and tepid as equity and equality for all women. Yet, unfortunately, anything a female director produces, there are attempts to politically commodify it and use their work to make a broader point[1], regardless of if it fits.

            Ducournau’s trilogy of films, carries with it a clear fascination and understanding of the female body. In an interview with The Independent, Ducournau has stated that women “…  have to accept some parts of us that are hard to watch, hard to acknowledge because it’s in us, because it’s scary.”. For her, from the embrace of the monstrous can result in emancipatory liberation, whether that be through cannibalism, objectophelic gender fluidity, or statuesque virulence. This is because of the contrast of the female monstrous body in comparison to its often-misogynistic sexualization, and a deification of the female body through the process of childbirth often projects a reference for the female body that has been mythologized. For Ducournau, by rejecting this understanding of the female body is to also reject a heavenly invoked gilded cage of patriarchy’s design. Instead, by embracing the utility and practicality of female bodies we can see their central power that is often obfuscated by the soft aesthetic that is applied to them. Ducournau’s films tear away at that façade and embraces the grimy grotesqueries of girlhood as their emotional prism of empowerment outside of the patriarchal structures that seek to control them.

            Because of Ducournau’s focus on depicting the often-literal deconstruction of the female body, much of the forthcoming analysis will be pulled from many post structural philosophers, feminists and sociological scholars. The central works of Michel Foucault, Judith Butler, Julia Kristeva, bell hooks, and Nancy Frasier may be used or make an appearance in the reference list of each film’s criticism. The link between body and identity, their mutual transformation and expression that Ducournau depicts on screen, shall be peered through this academic lens.   

           


CONCLUSION

            The modern body horror genre would not be as rich and vibrant without the work of Julia Ducournau. She challenges the way that we see and understand the female form. Through the embrace of the grotesque and its application to the female body, we can help to break out of the cultural misogyny of the near innate sexualization that objectifies and strips girls from the transformative power that they hold within themselves.



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