La Captive -2000- May 2026
Have you seen La Captive? Did you find it hypnotic or just slow? Let me know in the comments—I’m still trying to figure out if Ariane was ever really there at all.
Akerman, who was openly gay and a lifelong feminist, seems to be asking a brutal question: What if the most intimate relationship is actually a form of hostage-taking? The ending of La Captive is devastating not because of violence, but because of silence. Simon receives a piece of information that should free him—or break him. How he reacts tells you everything about the nature of his "love." I won’t ruin it, but I will say that the final shot is one of the most haunting images of emptiness I’ve ever seen. It’s a man standing in a room with nothing left to possess. And he has no idea who he is. Should You Watch It? If you love Proust, if you adore European art cinema (think Haneke’s Cache or Resnais’ Hiroshima Mon Amour ), or if you simply want to see what obsessive love looks like without the Hollywood gloss—yes, absolutely. la captive -2000-
★★★★☆ (4/5) – A brilliant, frustrating, essential masterpiece about the cage we call intimacy. Have you seen La Captive
But be warned. La Captive is not a comfortable watch. It will make you question your own relationships. Have you ever checked a partner’s phone? Waited for them to come home, inventing scenarios in your head? Akerman holds up a mirror, and it’s not flattering. Akerman, who was openly gay and a lifelong
But that’s the point. The film isn’t about solving a mystery. It’s about the agony of not knowing. It’s about how control masquerades as love. Simon doesn’t want Ariane to be faithful—he wants her to be empty , a reflection of his own needs. Every time she shows a glimmer of independent desire (a trip to the sea, a memory of a former lover), he short-circuits.
When you think of a "captive" in a movie, you probably picture chains, locked doors, or a physical prison. But Chantal Akerman, the brilliant Belgian director behind the feminist masterpiece Jeanne Dielman , had something far more insidious in mind for her 2000 film, La Captive .