It is directed by Gaspar Noé, the French director famous for transgressive movies like the ultra-violent Seul Contre Tous and Irréversible, which featured a graphic nine-minute rape scene. The last time there was this much sexual tension in a cinema it was for the limp Fifty Shades of Grey.
Noé delivers, although the sex scenes aren’t as hard core as one might expect – despite the film’s opening scene which features a man and woman cupping each other’s genitalia.
The man is Murphy, and as explained in one of Noé’s trademark inter-titles, Murphy’s law dictates that “everything that can go wrong, will”. Perhaps Noé had this fact in mind when he cast the awful Karl Glusman as his American in Paris. A scene from the film which features a threesome
In an opening sequence that features Murphy (badly) delivering a monologue describing where his life went wrong, he chides himself for thinking with his genitalia – the reason he is now living with a teenager Omi (Klara Kristin) and a baby. His ranting is cut off when he gets a call from the mother of his ex-girlfriend Electra (Aomi Muyock), informing him that she’s been missing for two months. He spends New Year’s Day reminiscing about the love of his life, especially their sex life, and hating the mother of his child.
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What sets Noé’s film apart from standard pornographic fare is his visceral brilliance, especially in his use of sound and red lens filters. Apart from a “money shot” that splurges out at the audience, he doesn’t use 3D for up-close perspective shots. His favourite angle for sex scenes is one taken from a light-bulb’s perspective. The most erotic scene is one involving all three protagonists; other sex scenes include orgies, and an ill-advised comic interlude featuring a transsexual.
There are many shots in which Noé seems to be paying homage to his own oeuvre, especially Irréversible: a passageway that leads to an orgy resembles the subway tunnel where the notorious rape took place, and the colour palette is straight out of Enter the Void. Also notable are the film posters that appear on walls. Murphy’s favourite film is 2001, although Love plays more like an improvement on Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut.
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