Remi Chauveau Notes
Yann Gozlan’s Guru unravels the seductive mechanics of influence through a tense psychological thriller where silence, identity, and the slow tightening of control chart a descent into manipulation.
Entertainment 🎯

What You Want Is What You Become: Inside Yann Gozlan’s Guru

24 January 2026
@allocine @pierreniney revient sur sa prĂ©paration physique ultra-intense (bains glacĂ©s, entraĂźnements sportifs
) pour son nouveau film Gourou, en salles le 28 janvier. Il Ă©voque aussi l’incroyable succĂšs du Comte de Monte-Cristo, devenu le film français le mieux notĂ© de l’histoire sur AlloCinĂ© ⭐ #OnRegardeQuoi #interview #gourou #montecristo #pierreniney ♬ son original - AlloCinĂ©

🌙 Where the Body Listens Before the Mind

ChloĂ© ThĂ©venin’s track “Distorted Dance” slips into Guru like a pulse beneath the skin, amplifying the film’s themes of seduction, surrender, and psychological sway. As the composer of the film’s original score, ChloĂ© shapes a sonic world where rhythm becomes a form of influence—mirroring the guru’s ability to bend perception without ever raising his voice. The track’s fractured beats and hypnotic repetitions echo the protagonist’s gradual loss of footing, as if the music itself were choreographing her descent. In this way, Distorted Dance doesn’t just accompany the narrative; it embodies it, turning the film’s emotional tension into something physical, something felt before it is understood.

đŸŽ¶ 🎬 🧠 đŸȘž 🌑 🎧 đŸŽ„ đŸ”„ 🌀 🌙 âœšđŸŒ«ïž 🔼 🌗 🔊 Distorted Dance - ChloĂ© ThĂ©venin




“The most dangerous gurus are the ones who don’t look like gurus at all.”

With this disquieting line, Yann Gozlan sets the tone for Guru, his new psychological thriller exploring the seductive mechanics of influence and self‑reinvention. After Boüte Noire and Burn Out, the filmmaker turns his lens toward the fragile spaces where personal doubt meets charismatic authority. The result is a gripping, elegant, and deeply human story about the promises we believe—and the identities we’re willing to trade for them.

🌑 A filmmaker drawn to the edges of control

Yann Gozlan has always been fascinated by characters who lose their footing, and Guru extends this fascination into the realm of psychological manipulation. The film follows a young woman who becomes entangled in the orbit of a self‑help mentor whose methods blur the line between empowerment and domination. Gozlan constructs this world with surgical precision, blending thriller tension with intimate drama to explore how influence quietly takes hold.

đŸ”„ A charismatic figure who thrives on ambiguity

At the center stands the enigmatic “guru,” portrayed with a magnetic mix of warmth and quiet menace. Gozlan avoids clichĂ©s, crafting a character who seduces not through force but through reflection—mirroring back the desires, wounds, and ambitions of those who seek him out. His power lies in suggestion, not coercion, making the film’s tension all the more unsettling.

đŸȘž A protagonist who becomes both witness and subject

The young woman drawn into this world is not naïve but vulnerable in ways the film treats with nuance. Her search for meaning, belonging, and transformation becomes the emotional engine of the story. As she moves deeper into the guru’s teachings, she becomes both observer and participant, revealing how easily personal fractures can be exploited when wrapped in the language of self‑improvement.

đŸŽ„ A visual and sonic architecture of seduction

Stylistically, Guru is among Gozlan’s most controlled works. Warm, enveloping tones gradually cool as the protagonist’s doubts sharpen. The sound design—whispers, breaths, silences—creates a sensory landscape that mirrors the tightening psychological grip. Every aesthetic choice reinforces the film’s central question: what does influence feel like from the inside?

🌍 A thriller rooted in contemporary anxieties

Beyond its narrative, Guru resonates with today’s culture of self‑optimization, online mentorship, and the blurred boundaries between guidance and manipulation. Gozlan doesn’t moralize; he observes. The film becomes a mirror held up to a society hungry for certainty and identity—needs that can be nurtured or exploited with equal ease.

🎬 Review

Guru stands as one of Yann Gozlan’s most mature and psychologically rich films. Its strength lies in its refusal to simplify: the guru is neither villain nor savior, and the protagonist is neither fool nor victim. Instead, Gozlan crafts a thriller grounded in emotional truth, where suspense emerges from the erosion of inner boundaries rather than external threats. The performances are magnetic, the direction razor‑sharp, and the thematic resonance unmistakable. Guru lingers like a question you can’t quite shake—one that follows you long after the lights come up.

#CinematicTension 🎬 #MindGames 🧠 #PsychologicalThriller đŸ”„ #IdentityUnraveled đŸȘž #DarkInfluence 🌑

The Power of the Empty Space

What He Doesn’t Say Makes Him Powerful
The film’s hidden power lies in what the guru withholds—his silences become a mirror where followers project their own desires. In that quiet, he turns absence into influence: every pause invites interpretation, every withheld answer becomes a space others rush to fill. What emerges is a figure who shapes the emotional terrain not through declarations but through presence. His restraint generates its own gravitational pull, drawing characters into orbit and letting them reveal more about themselves than he ever reveals about himself.

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