Love is a 2015 eroticdramaart film[5] written and directed by Gaspar Noé.[6] The film marked Noé's fourth directorial venture after a gap of five years. It had its premiere at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival and was released in 3D. The film is notable for its unsimulated sex scenes.
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Gray Secret BL Short Movie Thai 2015 - SUB ITA Interpreti. Visto ed apprezzato nel webDrama Love. SUB ITA BTS - Outro - Love is Not Over (The most beautiful moment in life pt.1 - Traccia #9)Quella lunga notte ti sta seguendo Sembra stia solo scorrendo Il.
Plot[edit]
Murphy is an American cinema school student, living in Paris. He had a French girlfriend, called Electra, whom he dated for two years. One day, Murphy and Electra met and had a no-strings-attachedthreesome with another woman, a young blonde Danish teenager named Omi, as a way to add some excitement to their love life. But later, Murphy had sex with Omi behind Electra's back, as a result of which Omi became pregnant (the condom broke and she is against abortion). This unplanned pregnancy ended the relationship between Murphy and Electra on a horrible note, and it forced Murphy to live with Omi.
On a rainy 1 January morning, Electra's mother, Nora, phones Murphy at the small Paris apartment where he lives with Omi and their 18-month-old son, Gaspar. Nora asks Murphy if he has heard from Electra. Nora has not heard from her for three months; given Electra's suicidal tendencies, Nora is quite worried about her. For the rest of this day, Murphy recalls his relationship with Electra in a series of fragmented, nonlinear flashbacks. Those flashbacks depict their first meeting in Paris; their quick hookup; and their lives over the next two years, which are filled with drug abuse, rough sex and tender moments.
Cast[edit]
Production[edit]
Love is the screen debut of the film's two main actresses, Muyock and Kristin.[7] Noé met them in a club. He found Karl Glusman for the role of Murphy through a mutual friend.[8] The budget of the film was approximately €2.6 million.[1]Principal photography took place in Paris.[6] Noé has said that the film's screenplay was seven pages long.[9]
In a pre-release interview with Marfa Journal, Noé implied that the film would have an explicitly sexual feel. He asserted that it would 'give guys a hard-on and make girls cry'.[10]
The film is notable for its unsimulated sex scenes.[9][11][12] According to NPR, 'roughly half of Gaspar Noe's Love consists of raw, unsimulated sex acts – presented in 3D, no less'.[13] In most cases, the sex scenes were also not choreographed.[14]
Release[edit]
The week before its debut at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival, the film's U.S. distribution rights were acquired by Alchemy.[15][16] It was selected to be screened in the Vanguard section of the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival.[17] The film also screened in The International Film Festival of Kerala, held in Thiruvananthapuram.[18]
The film was refused a license to be screened in Russia.[19]
Reception[edit]
The film received mixed reviews, with a negative score of 39% on Rotten Tomatoes and an average rating of 5.01/10, sampled from 90 reviews. The website's consensus states: 'Love sees writer-director Gaspar Noé delivering some of his warmest and most personal work; unfortunately, it's also among his most undeveloped and least compelling.'[20] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 51 out of 100 based on reviews from 27 critics, indicating 'mixed or average reviews'.[21]
References[edit]
External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Love_(2015_film)&oldid=942589197'
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