Bad Blood

1986 [FRENCH]

Crime / Drama / Romance

IMDb Rating 7.2/10 10 8939 8.9K

Plot summary

Two aging crooks are given two weeks to repay a debt to a woman named The American. They recruit their recently deceased partner's son to help them break into a laboratory and steal the vaccine against STBO, a sexually transmitted disease that is sweeping the country. It's spread by having sex without emotional involvement, and most of its victims are teenagers who make love out of curiosity rather than commitment.



August 02, 2023 at 05:49 PM

Director

Leos Carax

Top cast

Juliette Binoche as Anna
Julie Delpy as Lise
Leos Carax as Le voyeur du quartier
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
1.07 GB
1194*720
French 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 59 min
P/S ...
1.98 GB
1792*1080
French 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 59 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by robert-temple-1 10 / 10

'A Haemophilia of Tears'

'By the time you finally learn how to live, it's too late.' This brilliant, bizarre, unique film is one more proof that Leos Carax is a genius. The film is so extreme in its technique and imagery that it can be placed in no category. Everything about it is original, even its derivative aspects. Carax is unconventional even when copying or echoing. Sometimes the film is so mannered and arch that it resembles a cartoon strip. But this is playfully misleading. At other times, the film is desperately emotional and heart-rending. It even has hyper-realistic close-ups of microscopic details. The lighting is crisp, hyper-real also. It is so hyper-real that it is utterly surreal. It is designed to oscillate between the real and the imagined constantly, at an ever increasing rate, in order to drive the viewer mad. Soon the viewer will be almost as insane as the director, or so the director hopes, and then the viewer will at last understand. One of the aims of the director is to reduce the viewer to pulp, but not just any pulp: he must be reduced to pulp fiction. Everything is a joke, but also everything is serious. Nothing has only one side to it. The heavily stylized approach is shown in every respect. The sets are carefully colour-coded, with red a major theme, appearing in ties and on walls, in velvet, in blood, often contrasted with black. There is a spectacular, manically exciting sequence where the young hero (Denis Lavant) impulsively runs down the street doing a spontaneous dance to a David Bowie song, and the camera tracks along beside him for a very long time. This kind of 'moving mania' (not unlike a totally berserk form of 'movie mania') has the restless and impassioned insistence upon constant motion that one sees in his next film, 'The Lovers of the Pont Neuf' with the speed boat on the Seine and the fireworks. In the story, also written by Carax, we have so much influence of Andre Breton's novel 'Nadja': love for the impossible woman who is obviously insane in her irresistibly fascinating way, chance encounters, the miraculous erupting in everyday life, impossible visions (when the hero first sees Juliette Binoche on a bus, but cannot make out her features properly through the glass, and yet knows that he loves her already because he 'feels' her). We have the impossibly beautiful Julie Delpy aged only 19, and already in her sixth film, with the unformed face of an infant, and yet her eyes deep pools of passion already, the eyes of a passionate child in that perfect Madonna face. Juliette Binoche is 22 but looks twelve, and her beauty is greater even than that of Delpy's, we cannot take our eyes off her, her calm is the calm of a lake when there is no wind, her face is the face of a lake with no clouds, her beauty is the beauty of a lake in the sunset, the sleekness of her movements is that of a fish glimpsed for a moment as it leaps above the surface of that lake. The story is purposely mocked by the film, its pretext of a thriller plot so absurd that we are encouraged to laugh, realizing there is no plot, there is only life. A virus is spreading: it is killing those who make love without loving, and the vaccine must be stolen. Such is the 'plot'. There are various inside jokes. The director himself plays 'the neighbourhood voyeur, who peeks through the window every night', a fine rebuke of the director against himself. Then there is an earnest conversation is a café where a hardened killer and gangster suddenly breaks off and insists that he sees Jean Cocteau on the other side of the room with his back turned, until he is reminded that Jean Cocteau is dead. There are many intensely stylized shots of the backs of heads. Features and faces are often masked: at one point, Binoche peeks through a hole she has torn in a paper napkin. In another scene, Delpy has a scarf stretched across her face below her eyes for the entire time. There is an interlude in the film in the middle of the night, when all the characters in the story are asleep. So of course, Carax being Carax, he shows them all sleeping in their respective beds in their respective abodes, just to let us see that side of them; the sinister American woman gangster ('the Americaine') has her lipstick all smudged as she lies unconscious, lost in her undoubtedly vicious dream. The young lead is called Alex, which is Carax's real first name (the name Leos Carax being an anagram, the man Leos Carax being an enigma, Alex Dupont being Leos Carax, this film being Alex Dupont being Leos Carax being a voyeur). Everything is original. It is true that some of it verges on farce, saved at the last minute by Carax's brilliance from jumping in front of the Metro just as a man does in the opening sequence. Carax is always about to throw himself and his film in front of the oncoming train. He is always about to throw his train in front of an oncoming film. He is always about to be serious, he is always serious. He is a daredevil. Just as his characters throw themselves into the sky from a plane, parachuting for no evident reason, with Binoche passing out before she can pull her ripcord but being saved by the hero who clutches her in his arms and pulls his for them both (we see shots of them looking down from inside the parachute, and how he filmed those I really cannot imagine), so Carax pulls his own ripcord over and over again, with every minute of the film, and saves it repeatedly from tumbling to earth, with the awe-inspiring audacity of his manic, uncontrollable creativity.

Reviewed by Red-Barracuda 6 / 10

Ambitious yet uneven Leos Carax film

This second film by Leos Carax is one which continued his focus on romance between alienated youth. It is a more expansive film than the earlier Boy Meets Girl (1984) but is overall a little less satisfying. More than any of his other films, this one plays around with characters and motives of genre cinema. In this case, we have a heist plot as the basis for what is otherwise typical Carax material. The McGuffin is a sexually transmitted virus that effects people who engage in sex with no emotional involvement. A serum which can cure the disease is locked away in a high security government building. Marc, a gangster in deep debt enlists the services of Alex the teenage son of one of his friends to steal the precious drug. Alex falls in love with Marc's lover Anna.

In all honesty, the crime story was dealt with in a very half-hearted manner. I guess when you consider that the virus is of such an absurdly whimsical nature it's not so surprising that it's not exactly taken very seriously. Like all the other Carax films, you really have to get on board with his very cinematic style to have any chance of appreciating them. This one has its share of expressive moments that happen with little story-based sense but which are highly cinematic such as where Denis Lavant suddenly runs along a street while sound-tracked to David Bowie's 'Modern Love', it's a very typical Carax scene where the character can express his feelings in a manner that is pure cinema. Likewise, the impressively shot parachute scene is also coming from a similar place. On the whole, this is a very visual film with good use of colour throughout. I personally think that this is the least of the 'Alex' trilogy through. It feels a little too uneven and bitty overall, like the director had a lot of ideas but with no coherent plan of how to connect them together effectively. So, I would say that this is ultimately an interesting but flawed film.

Reviewed by morrison-dylan-fan 8 / 10

The Night Is Old.

Taking part in a French challenge event on ICM,I started trying to decide what the final film to watch would be. Seeing auteur Leos Carax's Boy Meets Girl and The Lovers on the Bridge during my own 100 days/100 French films last year,I decided that it was the perfect time to find out the age of the night.

The plot:

After the death of his dad,Alex is hired by his dad's old friends/fellow gangsters Marc and Hans to steal the only known created cure to a sexual virus. Leaving his girlfriend Lise,Alex joins up to prepare for the task. Staying at Marc's place,Alex meets Marc's young lover Anna. Soon falling in love for Anna,Alex starts pushing his mission to steal the cure aside,in order to focus on his new mission of getting Anna from Marc.

View on the film:

Joining the movement after it was established by Jean-Jacques Beineix's 1981 Diva,writer/directing auteur Leos Carax (who also has a cameo) & cinematographer Jean-Yves Escoffier fully embrace the stylisation of Cinema du Look. Caught in the middle of the lo-fi Boy Meets Girl and the blockbuster Lovers on the Bridge,Carax begins to expand on his major themes,with Girl's David Bowie tunes and rustic,crisp black and white overlapping images following Alex on the robbery. Lining the walls surrounding Alex and Anna in decadent wall paper,Carax drinks up his first colour film with ravishing Cinema du Look bright greens,blues,reds and neon yellow being splashed across the screen. Gliding along the colours,Carax and Escoffier unleash hyper-stylised camera moves such as extended tracking shots with razor sharp jump- cuts that give the tale a Sci- Fi atmosphere.

Starting as a hired hand heist mission,the screenplay by Carax uses Anna's feeling for the older Marc to draw Alex as the young Cinema du Look loner. Displaying an impressive level of ambition,Carax builds on his troubled young romance theme with an off-beat Sci-Fi twist. Whilst not going into too much detail over how the virus was created,Carax spins the Sci-Fi elements to give an urgency to Alex's love for Anna. Made before she went to Hollywood, Julie Delpy gives an enticing,siren call as Lise,while Juliette Binoche gives Anna a fittingly quirky attitude. Playing an "Alex" for the 2nd of 3 times in Carax's work, Denis Lavant gives a great performance,which finely balances Alex's slight cockiness with a sweet,romantic naivety,that reveals itself to Anna as the night gets old.

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