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Love

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France, Belgium · 2015
Rated NC-17 · 2h 14m
Director Gaspar Noé
Starring Karl Glusman, Aomi Muyock, Klara Kristin, Ugo Fox
Genre Drama, Romance

Murphy is an American living in Paris with his girlfriend and child. When his ex-girlfriend's mother calls him concerned about the whereabouts of her daughter, Murphy is prompted to recall the relationship he had with her and the decisions he took that led to his current situation.

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What are critics saying?

40

Screen International by

Despite early frissons from the very game lead trio, the overall effect is a lugubrious turn-off. In its spacily numb longueurs, Love effectively invents a new, singularly unsatisfying genre: chill-out porn.

60

Time Out London by Dave Calhoun

In the end, Love is more silly than sordid, and even a little soppy in its late – too late – love-filled moments. Many teens will love it; most adults will roll their eyes.

58

IndieWire by Eric Kohn

Love plays out like the fragmented outline for a more engaging movie. But the one found here lacks substance both on the level of story and graphic reveals.

75

Hitfix by Gregory Ellwood

Love may not be as erotic as many expect. The gratuitous sex may eventually start to bore many viewers. Some may even take off their 3D glasses because they simply aren't necessary. Yet, for all its faults, Love is a film that somehow still resonates.

67

The Playlist by Jessica Kiang

While the sexuality is pushed far too far for mainstream audiences, it's also true that Noe's conception of sentiment and romance pulls the film back from being truly transgressive about its gender or sexuality politics.

60

CineVue by John Bleasdale

Though an entertaining-enough stab at a new kind of orgiastic extravaganza, Noé's Love is so mired in its own hang-ups and conservative gender views that it never gets past the first stroke.

60

The Hollywood Reporter by Leslie Felperin

If the metrics by which you want to measure Love are its brute sexiness and technical panache, then the film is indeed rather extraordinary. Thanks to Noe's regular collaborator Benoit Debie (who also shot such recent visually bravura films as Spring Breakers and Lost River), Love contains some of the prettiest shagging scenes in cinematic history.

60

The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw

It’s hardcore, yet much softer-core than Noé’s earlier movies, without the terrifying shock factor of Irréversible and Seul Contre Tous, and without the visual brilliance of Enter the Void, and Love is preposterous and badly acted and talky in a way that porn films haven’t been since they were designed to be shown in cinemas.

60

Variety by Peter Debruge

Given the escalating ambition of Noe’s oeuvre and the pornographic promo materials teased in advance of the pic’s Cannes premiere, who would have thought that Love would ultimately prove to be Noe’s tamest film?

40

The Telegraph by Robbie Collin

So if the sex is such a ball, what’s wrong with Love? The answer, unfortunately, is absolutely everything else, of which there’s more than you might initially expect.

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