Les Intouchables Transcript 💯 🆕

If you have only seen the trailer for Les Intouchables , you know the basic beats: a wealthy, paralyzed aristocrat hires a poor, young ex-con from the projects to be his caregiver. Cue the soundtrack by Ludovico Einaudi, a few laughs, and a teary ending.

But the most revealing line comes later, during the job interview that Driss sabotages on purpose. Philippe asks the standard, sterile question: “Why do you want the job?” les intouchables transcript

(shrugging) “No. She’d laugh at your jokes. That’s what you miss, old man.” The transcript shows Driss refusing to treat Philippe’s sexuality as a tragedy. He treats it as a logistics problem. That’s the core of their bond: Driss never once says “I’m sorry.” The word “sorry” appears exactly zero times in their conversations. Pity is a poison, and the transcript is an antidote. The Silent Pages: Where the Real Emotion Lives One of the most powerful passages in the transcript is actually silent. It’s the scene at the opera. Philippe drags Driss to see The Birds by Offenbach. The transcript describes: [Driss watches a singer in a tree costume perform a 20-minute aria. His face moves from boredom to confusion to… laughter. Loud, uncontrollable laughter. The entire audience turns. Philippe tries to shush him, but Philippe is also now laughing.] No dialogue. Just laughter. Then the transcript notes: [For the first time in the film, Philippe forgets he is in a wheelchair.] If you have only seen the trailer for

But the transcript remains untouchable (pun intended) because of one truth: Driss doesn’t cure Philippe’s paralysis. Philippe doesn’t turn Driss into a bourgeois gentleman. They simply give each other something rarer than a cure — the freedom to be a complete pain in the ass to everyone else. Philippe asks the standard, sterile question: “Why do

In a lesser script, this is where Driss offers a platitude. Instead, the transcript gives us this: (lathering Philippe’s face) “You want me to find you a woman? I know a few.”

The transcript avoids victim language entirely. When other caregivers speak of “his suffering” or “his tragedy,” Driss speaks of “his bad parking job” (referring to Philippe’s wheelchair). The transcript is a masterclass in how to write disability without writing tragedy. There’s a moment midway through the film that should not work. Driss is shaving Philippe. Philippe asks if Driss has ever had a real relationship. Driss jokes about his many girlfriends. Philippe says, quietly: “I haven’t been touched by a woman since my accident.”

(not looking away from the woman) “I know.” The transcript doesn’t show Philippe crying. It doesn’t show Driss patting himself on the back. It shows two men who have given each other permission to be vulnerable — and then walked away. Why the Transcript Still Matters Today In an age where diversity and representation are rightly scrutinized, Les Intouchables occasionally gets criticized: two able-bodied actors playing disabled and able-bodied? A white director telling a story about a Black caregiver? Fair critiques.