Experience world-class virtual golf with Golfzon Vision WAVE,
offering realistic 3D courses and global competition on any device.
*Compatible with both WAVE and WAVE Play
WAVE Skills is a mobile app that displays
detailed shot
data and swing analysis for
Golfzon WAVE users,
enabling
performance
tracking and improvement.
*Exclusive to WAVE
Elles (2011.)
WAVE Watch app connects to
your WAVE
device via Bluetooth for instant shot results
on your smartwatch, enhancing your golf
experience.
*Compatible with
Apple Watch and Galaxy Watch 4,5
The core of Elles lies in the starkly
Vision WAVE's mobile version is
set to launch in Q4 2023, offering support for both
iOS and Android devices.
*Compatible with
both WAVE and WAVE Play
By juxtaposing the lives of Alice and Alicja—two
WAVE Arcade is a mobile app that offers
6 innovative arcade games
instead of
traditional 18-hole play.
*Compatible with
both WAVE and WAVE Play
The core of Elles lies in the starkly different realities of the two young students Anne interviews. They do not fit the typical cinematic archetype of the downtrodden, coerced street walker. Instead, they are depicted as pragmatic operators navigating a hyper-capitalist society:
Watch Juliette Binoche in the Sexy Nc-17 Trailer for Elles - IMDb
Małgorzata Szumowska’s 2011 film Elles offers a provocative exploration of modern female sexuality, autonomy, and class division. By juxtaposing the lives of Alice and Alicja—two young university students engaged in sex work—with Anne, a privileged journalist researching their stories, the film challenges traditional cinematic representations of sex work. This paper argues that Elles operates as a critique of the modern bourgeois family, suggesting that the transactional nature of sex work is mirrored by the emotional and physical compromises required of women within conventional domestic structures. Through its unflinching gaze, Szumowska’s work dismantles the binary of the "empowered" versus "exploited" woman, forcing a reexamination of agency under late capitalism. Introduction
The following paper investigates how Elles contrasts the overt transactional survival of the young women with the covert, unfulfilled emotional labor within traditional marriage.
What specific are you targeting (e.g., undergraduate, graduate) or is this for a personal essay ?
This realization builds to the film's climax, where Anne's attempt to reconcile her reawakened desires with her mundane family life collapses, manifesting in a sensory and psychological overload during a dinner party. Cinematic Technique and the Female Gaze
Elles (2011) is a complex, uncomfortable, and deeply necessary critique of how modern society structures female desire and labor. Małgorzata Szumowska skillfully avoids easy binaries of victimhood and liberation. By aligning the experiences of student sex workers with the quiet desperation of a wealthy housewife, the film exposes the pervasive, transactional undercurrents of the patriarchy across all class lines. Ultimately, Elles suggests that true autonomy is incredibly difficult to maintain in a world where everything, including intimacy, has been reduced to a line item in a capitalist ledger.
Are there specific or sociological frameworks (like Marxist feminism or the "female gaze") you want me to expand on?