The narrative plunges us into the squalid, reeking underbelly of 18th-century Paris. Here, Jean-Baptiste Grenouille (Ben Whishaw) is born unwanted in a fetid fish market. Abandoned by his mother who is later executed for his attempted infanticide, Grenouille grows up in a brutal orphanage, a strange, detached boy blessed with a singular, almost supernatural gift: an unparalleled olfactory sense that allows him to memorize and distinguish every fragrance on the planet.
The film’s legendary climax occurs when Grenouille is caught and brought to the town square for execution. As he stands before a baying mob, he opens his bottle of perfume—made from the essences of —and dabs a drop on his handkerchief. What happens next is one of cinema’s most audacious sequences. The enraged crowd’s fury instantly transforms into adoration. They are not filled with anger but with a collective, uncontrollable sense of love and ecstasy. The executioners weep, the bishop proclaims Grenouille an angel, and the entire assembly, including the grieving father Richis, falls into a state of rapturous, orgiastic bliss. Grenouille has achieved his goal: he has created a perfume so powerful it can control the very emotions and free will of every person who smells it. perfume story of a murderer hindi dubbed