Titane Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our Titane quiz and we will tell you which Titane character you are. Play it now.

One of the many tattoos adorning Alexia’s lanky frame is “Love is a Dog From Hell,” which can be found between her breasts. It is just one of many that decorate her lanky frame. The tattoo serves as a deterrent to anyone who wishes to get close to Alexia, not just close to her breasts, but close to her in general, and it should be taken seriously. The majority of people choose to ignore the warning sign. Perhaps they simply believe she is a fan of Charles Bukowski. However, they do not “get” Alexia, whatever the case may be. ‘Titane’ is the title of Julia Ducournau’s delirious body-horror film, which is named after the titanium plate that holds Alexia’s skull together after a childhood car accident. Alexia is a feral and compulsively murderous stripper-gearhead who is at the center of Ducournau’s film.

Titane is a film that, like Ducournau’s feature-length debut, “Raw,” is fascinated by the body’s vulnerabilities and compulsions, its ravenous processes, and how the collective “we” attempts to deal with all of this by either gorging ourselves or, conversely, sublimating the need into other things. Neither process is pleasant, nor is it acceptable in social situations. You can’t exert control over something that is inherently uncontrollable. Despite the fact that “Titane,” the winner of the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival this year, is a “extreme” film that is violent, pitiless, and funny, the space it creates for not only tenderness but also contemplation makes it a “extremely” thought-provoking film as well.

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Whatever is “wrong” with Alexia, and there is a great deal wrong with her, predates the accident that caused her skull to be cracked in half. In the beginning, she is depicted as a dead-eyed “bad seed”-type child (played by Adèle Guigue), glowering at her father while making engine-revving noises in time with the vehicle’s movement. It’s difficult to avoid the impression that she intends for the car to crash, or at the very least that she wills the crash to occur. Coming out of the hospital, her stapled-together scar swirling around her half-shaved head, she throws her arms around the car and kisses the window as she drives away. It was a joyous reunion. Now fast forward a few years: Alexia (now played by Agathe Rousselle) makes a living stripping at car shows, with her hair still half-shaved on the side. This makes her an even more solitary and forbidding figure, which becomes even more apparent when she unexpectedly murders an aggressive fanboy who is trailing her to her car. Another ecstatic reunion occurs later that night, this time in a gas-guzzling Cadillac with flames painted on the sides, this time with a sexual overtone. A pregnancy results as a result of the car sex, and titanium-plated Alexia watches in horror as her belly bulges out, her breasts leak motor oil, and black oil pours out of her vaginal opening while she’s in the shower. Her body is now embarking on a journey that she is not a part of.
But you shouldn’t waste any more time and start this Titane quiz.

Meanwhile, however, the bodies continue to pile up. Alexia is a ruthless assassin who kills without mercy. These assassinations are gruesome to the extreme. She is forced to flee after leaving a witness at a murder spree, which results in her being captured. Alexia comes up with a brilliant idea after seeing a computer-generated image of what a famous missing child named Adrien would look like today. Without a second thought, she breaks her own nose, binds her breasts and pregnant belly, and goes to a police station, claiming to be Adrien, whom she has been searching for for years. What a bizarre and amusing plot twist, and it heralds the beginning of an entirely different tone for the second half of the film than it did for the first. In the film, Adrien’s father, Vince (played by an outstanding Vincent Lindon), is a muscle-bound fire chief who breaks down in tears when he sees his son. He shoots himself up with steroids at night, jabbing the needle into his bruised ass, his body a veiny tortured façade of now-failing impenetrability, his body a veiny tortured façade of now-failing impenetrability.

Titane Quiz

However, things are not always as they appear. Just as Alexia isn’t her surface (and Adrien isn’t his), Vincent isn’t his surface, either. A womanless world filled with macho half-clothed men, the fire station is decorated in a feminine manner, with soft neon pink interior lighting and bright pink bathroom tiles, among other things. As fast-paced as the first half of “Titane” is, it is the second half that really takes off, in which Ducournau delves deeply into her subject, venturing into unfamiliar and complex territory. The character of Alexia is more like the ragged, wild-eyed personification of the Fight-or-Flight response to any given situation (albeit pregnant with a baby fathered by a Cadillac). Vincent, on the other hand… Vinny is an actual person with a real story, and Lindon brings tremendous insight to the table, revealing the confusion and fear of a young child that lurks beneath those muscles. It is possible to see multiple metaphors at once, and Ducournau does an excellent job of maintaining fluidity by allowing things to work subliminally and/or visually rather than explicitly in language. There’s a scene in which Vincent, his eyes filled with misery, sinks his head into Alexia’s lap and falls asleep. The two figures are bathed in a soft pink light throughout. In a metaphorical sense, this Pietà image does a great deal of heavy lifting.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this Titane quiz.

The concept of “taking care” of one another is brought up on a number of occasions. In the world of “Titane,” what exactly does “taking precautions” imply? Everything appears to be in peril and in transitory! The importance of tenderness—and the pain that tenderness causes to those who are not accustomed to it—stands in stark contrast to the inexorable processes of the human body, as well as the body’s irritating penetrability and fragility, whether or not there is a magical titanium plate in place. These various and conflicting ideas don’t always work well together, and “Titane” alternates between a grisly first half and a family-melodrama second half throughout its running time (making it either top-heavy or bottom-heavy, depending on how you look at it). Those who were turned off or on by the frenzied pitilessness of the first half may find Ducournau’s inventive, bold, and fearless approach and sensibility too late in the game to appreciate the deeper thematic revelations, but she maintains her composure throughout the game. “Titane” doesn’t know either.

About the quiz

Only available in theaters today.Also, you must try to play this Titane quiz.

For more personality quizzes check this: Queen Bees Quiz.

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