10 Movies With Mind-Bending Plots
10. Je T'aime, Je T'aime (1968)
A director who could easily contribute more than one film to this list, Alain Resnais is probably better known for critically acclaimed works such as French-Japanese drama Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959), documentary Night And Fog (1956) and the enigmatic Last Year In Marienbad (1961), but this underrated sci fi gem easily sits alongside the latter in terms of depth and style.
Following an attempted suicide Claude Ridder (played by Claude Rich) is approached by a shadowy scientific organisation who ask him to participate in an experiment concerning time travel. Ridder, who feels he has nothing to lose, agrees. The procedure is intended to send Ridder back into the past, where he will stay for precisely one minute before returning.
Instead, Ridder is cast into the time stream, and begins experiencing, or re-playing, his life in a disjointed, jarring fashion. These scenarios sometimes last mere seconds, playing in a loop like a stuck record. At other moments the scenes are more expansive. At first, the viewer is never quite certain as to the order of events we are witnessing but, gradually, a story emerges. Previously obscure references begin to make sense, character's motives become clear and the drama plays out in thrilling fashion.