
Age: 48
female
Sandra Hüller (born 30 April 1978) is a German actress. She has appeared in German, Austrian, British, French, and American films. She has received various accolades, including two European Film Awards, a César Award and three German Film Awards, and nominations for an Academy Award and two BAFTA Awards. Hüller has played Anneliese Michel in Hans-Christian Schmid's 2006 drama Requiem, for which she won the Silver Bear for Best Actress, and a troubled daughter in Maren Ade's 2016 comedy Toni Erdmann, for which she won her first European Film Award for Best Actress. She portrayed Irma Sztáray in Frauke Finsterwalder's 2023 historical black comedy Sisi & I. International recognition came in 2023 for her starring roles in Justine Triet's legal drama Anatomy of a Fall and Jonathan Glazer's Holocaust drama The Zone of Interest. Her performances in the former won her another European Film Award and a César Award, in addition to a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress. Description above from the Wikipedia article Sandra Hüller, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Sandra Hüller

Neighbor woman (Hungary)
for Neighbor woman (Hungary) in Flesh by David Szalay
Suggested by margie602

A visceral exploration of desire and disconnection, *Flesh* follows a middle-aged man navigating the murky landscape of casual encounters and digital intimacy. Trapped between loneliness and compulsion, he pursues fleeting physical connections through dating apps and chance meetings, each encounter revealing the hollow core beneath surface attraction. As he moves through encounters with various women—each with their own vulnerabilities and secrets—he confronts uncomfortable truths about himself: his inability to genuinely connect, his self-deception, and the emotional toll of treating intimacy as transaction. The narrative strips away pretense to expose the raw, often uncomfortable reality of modern desire. Szalay crafts a darkly honest portrait of a man searching for meaning in meaningless encounters, where physical closeness only deepens his isolation. A haunting meditation on human connection in an age of unprecedented access and profound emptiness.