Perfume: The Story of a Murderer

DVD Cover - Perfume

Perfume: The Story of a Murder
Screenplay by Andrew Birkin & Bernd Eichinger & Tom Tykwer. Directed by Tom Tykwer.
Hollywood, CA: DreamWorks Home Entertainment, c2007.

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R, 147 mins. (Paramount)

Smell--the most primal and evocative of the senses--is also the most difficult to translate into words and pictures anywhere near as powerful as the act of smelling itself. In Perfume, a coolly sensuous adaptation of Patrick Suskind's terrific 1986 international best-seller, the young British actor Ben Whishaw offers a potent translation of smell and its effect. Playing Jean-Baptiste, a near-feral orphan in stinking 18th-century France who is blessed, but mostly cursed, with a supernaturally sensitive nose, Whishaw somehow gives his entire begrimed, sinewy body over to the thrall of sniffing. The first time he inhales the aroma of a beautiful young girl, the experience is orgasmic enough to become an obsession, and it's clear he's destined to become the world's greatest perfumer--never mind that his preservation of natural fragrance involves murder. (J-B's teacher in odoriferous arts is played, with amusement and rouge, by Dustin Hoffman.)

Tom Tykwer, the inventive German director of Run Lola Run, is a spicy match for the erotically charged novel. He makes effective use of images sliced thin as transparent garlic slivers to convey sensual buildup. And he conjures up a great, fleshly be-in as aroused townsfolk get a whiff of J-B's infernally perfected fragrance. Perfume misses some of the subtler base notes of Suskind's creepier, more self-aware original, but Whishaw and Tykwer blend the movie into something quite heady in its own bottle. B

Review from Entertainment Weekly -- Lisa Schwarzbaum

Compare the book to the movie or for commuters, we have the book on mp3 cd.