Touch Me Not backdrop - movieMx Review
Touch Me Not movie poster - Touch Me Not review and rating on movieMx
2018125 minDrama

Touch Me Not

Is Touch Me Not a Hit or Flop?

FLOP

Is Touch Me Not worth watching? With a rating of 5.025/10, this Drama film is a mixed-bag for fans of the genre. Read on for our detailed analysis and user reviews.

5.02559 votes
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Touch Me Not Synopsis

Together, a filmmaker and her characters venture into a personal research project about intimacy. On the fluid border between reality and fiction, Touch Me Not follows the emotional journeys of Laura, Tómas and Christian, offering a deeply empathic insight into their lives. Craving for intimacy yet also deeply afraid of it, they work to overcome old patterns, defense mechanisms and taboos, to cut the cord and finally be free. Touch Me Not looks at how we can find intimacy in the most unexpected ways, at how to love another without losing ourselves.

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Top Cast

Laura Benson
Laura BensonLaura
Adina Pintilie
Adina PintilieAdina
Tómas Lemarquis
Tómas LemarquisTudor
Christian Bayerlein
Christian BayerleinChristian
Irmena Chichikova
Irmena ChichikovaMona
Grit Uhlemann
Grit UhlemannGrit
Hanna Hofmann
Hanna HofmannHanna
Seani Love
Seani LoveSeani
Rainer Steffen
Rainer SteffenStefan
Georgi Naldzhiev
Georgi NaldzhievMale Escort

Official Trailer

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Touch Me Not worth watching?

Touch Me Not has received mixed reviews with a 5.025/10 rating. It might be worth watching if you're a fan of Drama movies.

Is Touch Me Not hit or flop?

Touch Me Not has received average ratings (5.025/10), performing moderately with audiences.

What genre is Touch Me Not?

Touch Me Not is a Drama movie that Together, a filmmaker and her characters venture into a personal research project about intimacy. On the fluid border between reality and fiction, Tou...

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Critic Reviews

CinemaSerfSep 1, 2024
★ 5

...or perhaps just "Watch Me Not"? In theory this could have made for quite an interesting look at just how different people deal with intimacy - emotional and the more tactile variety. To that end we spend an over-long two hours in the company of "Laura" (Laura Benson) whose proclivities, attitudes and remarkable recoil and roaring abilities are demonstrated, as are those of her subjects."Tómas" (Tómas Lemarquis) and "Christian" (Christian Bayerlein). Much of this is relayed through a series of scenes with a very much more participative analyst than many in "Hanna" (Hanna Hofmann) who is a transexual but that's neither here nor there to this meandering exercise in soft-porn introspection disguised as "insight". What simply doesn't work is the sheer amount of pointless verbosity, from start to finish, that ensures that this takes on more of a lecture (or documentary) for the curiously prurient than an engaging drama. Auteur Adina Pintilie (who also features here) obviously has a message she wished to convey, but she didn't establish enough distance between the reality and the fiction of this production to enable me know just what she's getting at. Everyone has boundaries, and these are not consistent - either personally, emotionally or physically - so what's the point of taking this rather monotonically simplistic approach to human nature and suggesting it's going to induce empathy. Baring the soul isn't always an easy thing to watch, but when you are this detached from the subject matter is just becomes too observational. I felt like I was sitting in on conversations that were none of my business between people about whom I couldn't really care less. By half way through I was looking at the cinema ceiling wondering if I could ever find myself - or my peccadilloes - interesting enough to put on display in such a contrived and unnatural fashion. Maybe I just wasn't in the mood, but this falls uncomfortably between half an dozen stools and was wasted on me, sorry.