Catherine Deneuve / Françoise Dorléac
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Catherine Deneuve / Françoise Dorléac
Catherine Deneuve dans "Un Flic" de Jean-Pierre Melville (1972), avril 2026.
Catherine Deneuve par Jean-Loup Sieff, a Paris pour Le Monde (1997)
Catherine Deneuve mange un morceau de pain.
Can you do headcanons of what tattoos and/or peircing the guys would get, if any at all.
L Lawliet
Tattoos: None, by choice.
If he ever got one, it’d be minimalist — a thin black line on his wrist to mimic a chain or cufflink. Something that reminds him of his restraints (literal or mental). Symbolic, not decorative.
Piercings: Unlikely.
He doesn’t like unnecessary pain or sensation and would see piercings as impractical. If he were to get one, it would be hidden — like a single black stud in one earlobe as a private reminder of something unsaid.
Why: He’s too focused on control and functionality. But under duress or emotional influence (maybe by a partner), he might submit to a small, discreet, symbolic tattoo. It would never be performative.
Light Yagami
Tattoos: None publicly.
Light sees tattoos as potentially unprofessional. However, if he got one, it’d be hyper-symbolic: something like Scales of Justice hidden under his collarbone, or a phoenix low on his ribcage — elegant and easily covered.
Piercings: No.
Light would think they’re beneath him or damage his clean-cut image. Unless manipulating someone into thinking he’s rebellious or edgy — then maybe one temporary lobe piercing to fit an aesthetic.
Why: Image is everything. His body is part of his performance. Any mod he allows would be part of a larger psychological tactic, never an emotional decision.
Mihael Keehl
Tattoos: Yes, absolutely.
Mello would get a large back piece — maybe angel wings with one damaged or burning, to reflect his self-destructive sense of justice. Possibly a bullet wound tattoo that overlaps with a real scar. He wears pain like a badge.
Piercings: Yes.
At least one earring, possibly both ears, maybe a lip ring or eyebrow stud. Piercings are part of his armor — visual aggression to match his interior volatility.
Why: Mello externalizes everything. Pain, rebellion, and symbolism are inked onto his body. His look screams “Don’t underestimate me,” and he wants to be watched.
Mail Jeevas
Tattoos: Yes, but understated.
Something ironic or tech-related — like pixel art, barcodes, 8-bit hearts, or a controller on his forearm. He might also get a memorial tattoo — cryptic initials for someone lost.
Piercings: Yes.
Probably multiple ear piercings, maybe even a septum ring or eyebrow piercing if the vibe suited him. He’s the most relaxed about it — doesn’t need a reason, just thinks it looks cool.
Why: Matt uses mods as self-expression, not self-defense. He’s chill about it and wears tattoos the way others wear T-shirts — an extension of his humor or mood.
Nate River
Tattoos: None — except maybe one, late in life.
If he got one, it would be hyper-minimalist: a single number, binary code, or a chess piece in small, fine ink. Something encoded and meaningful only to him.
Piercings: No.
He wouldn’t tolerate the sensory distraction or understand the point.
Why: Near isn’t expressive through his body. If he did allow one modification, it’d be subtle, precise, and cerebral. Likely post-case, symbolic of emotional growth or loss.
Misa Amane
Tattoos: Yes — decorative and symbolic.
She might have a small wing tattoo behind her ear, or a heart with a chain on her ankle. If grieving Light, she might get his name or initials tattooed in cursive on her ribs or wrist. She chooses aesthetic first, meaning second.
Piercings: Yes — multiple.
Misa canonically wears multiple earrings and might have a belly button piercing, maybe even a dermal anchor or nose stud. She plays with fashion, pain, and beauty all at once.
Why: For Misa, modification is identity. She wears beauty, heartbreak, and loyalty like jewelry — openly and dramatically. She might even change them based on her emotional phase.
C'est fou comme les gens ont de moi cette image de femme sophistiquée, glaciale. C'est une telle erreur, c'est tellement mal me connaître.
- Catherine Deneuve on herself in Belle de Jour (1967)
In anticipation of a new film this summer by Catherine Deneuve called ‘Bernadette’ where she plays Bernadette Chirac, the wife of French Jacques Chirac, I’ve been re-watching some her back catalogue of films. She’s done over 64 films and at almost 80 years old she’s still going strong. And yet out of her many films I’ve always been drawn back to one film which has become a cult classic. Watching it and re-watching it and even gorging on books on its making, new intriguing details reveal themselves about this landmark French art house classic - Belle de Jour (1967).
I once had the privilege of having dinner with her - or rather sat around the same table - through a Parisian host and his lovely wife who had gathered an eclectic group of friends across generations together. I was too self-conscious to talk about her film career directly. I was on surer ground when we indulged in small talk where she was perfectly down to earth and very pleasant. I felt it would be rude to go all fan girl on her and pepper her with questions about Belle de Jour in particular as she’s known to be very ambivalent about her experience of the film - a film that really defined her in the eyes of many people.
But it didn’t mean she didn’t recognise its cultural importance though as she was quite happy to amuse us with a funny story about Belle de Jour. A newly restored 35mm version was funded by the fashion house Saint Laurent back in 2018. Deneuve always had a close relationship with Yves Saint Laurent and also the fashion house. She was the one to introduce Buñuel to Saint Laurent. So the fashion house had a glitzy premiere in New York. But they didn’t count on many of their guests being late. Most of the guests were stuck in the New York traffic and the rain. However Martin Scorsese was the only one to get out of cab and run like a mad man through the pelting rain and huge traffic. A true cinephile, he was so desperate to see the film restored to its former glory that he would go to any lengths to see it.
In Belle de Jour, Catherine Deneuve, whose limpid beauty is capable of sustaining any interpretation, is a perfect Severine and demonstrates a remarkable control in progressing, with enormous economy of gesture and movement, from frigidity to physical warmth as the bored housewife who indulges in part time sex work.
“I felt they showed more of me than they’d said they were going to,” Catherine Deneuve remarked to Pascal Bonitzer in 2004, about the making of Luis Buñuel’s 1967 Belle de jour. “There were moments when I felt totally used. I was very unhappy.”
The story of Séverine, a deeply disenchanted haute bourgeois Paris housewife who finds erotic liberation through byzantine psycho-sexual fantasies and part-time work at an upscale brothel, Belle de jour certainly made extreme demands of Deneuve: her character is flogged, raped, and pelted with muck, among other assaults. But despite her objections to the way she was treated and her difficulties with Buñuel, Deneuve’s performance in Belle de jour turned out to be one of her most iconic.
Deneuve, who had become a star only three years earlier, as the melancholy jeune fille in Jacques Demy’s 1964 all-sung musical The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, was just twenty-three when Belle de jour came out; notably, Buñuel’s film was released in France less than three months after Demy’s radiant, MGM-inspired musical The Young Girls of Rochefort, starring Deneuve and her real-life sister Françoise Dorléac.
But Belle de jour, more than any other film from the first decade of her career, defined what would become one of the actress’s most notorious personae: the exquisite blank slate lost in her own masochistic fantasies and onto whom all sorts of perversions could be projected. (Deneuve as deviant tabula rasa was first seen in Roman Polanski’s 1965 Repulsion, in which she plays a damaged beauty plummeting into psychosis; but Belle de jour doesn’t portray its heroine as mad, instead remaining deliberately ambiguous about the origins of her unconventional desires - and presaging the bizarre libertines she would later play in such films as Marco Ferreri’s Liza, 1972, and Tony Scott’s The Hunger, 1983.)
Mylène Piccoli - Les créatures