Perfect Sense
Struggling against a strange disease that hits the earth and leads to the loss of one or more than one sense of people's senses, Susan, an aspiring and intelligent scientist, who is asked to investigate in that strange case, struggles against finding out reasons behind that disease and falling in love with a chef.
23 January 1972, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
16 April 1970, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
1965
January 27, 1983 in Glasgow, Scotland, UK
22 November 1961
8 July 1965, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
3 July 1965, Elling, Frederikshavn, Denmark
1981, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
27 September 1947, Crieff, Perthshire, Scotland, UK
June 01, 2012
A seriously bleak little movie...
April 27, 2012
full review at Movies for the Masses
March 17, 2012
It's hard to grab hold of this piece, difficult to grasp on what it is exactly the director and the writer are trying to say, and while plenty of individual moments border on sensational on the whole this one left me scratching my head.
August 11, 2014
Ewan McGregor and Eva Green are excellent.
February 03, 2012
People around the world progressively lose their senses of smell, taste, hearing and, finally, sight. Too bad the filmmakers never seem to have had a sense of humor in the first place.
July 20, 2016
A love story that never is never corny or predictable. [Full review in Spanish]
February 02, 2012
A solemn sci-fi parable set in present-day Glasgow, whose deepening sense of foreboding is sustained by the enigmatic, pseudo-biblical reflections of an unseen narrator.
February 08, 2012
An intriguing apocalyptic romance with a multi-purpose title.
September 08, 2013
This film from David Mackenzie is such a curiously inert experience that never satisfies as a romance, a sci-fi drama or as a social parable.
February 07, 2012
The problem with Perfect Sense is its inability to be effective as either a character-based love story or something larger and more bold.
February 02, 2012
It's difficult to impart feelings of profound sadness with an image of Ewan McGregor shoving a stick of butter in his mouth.
February 09, 2012
Each deprivation is preceded by a flurry of emotion that leads to the film's most vivid sequences.

