Summary
A hedonistic bisexual man, Jean, meets 17-year model, Laura, at a photographic interview.
Although Laura is turned down for the job, she becomes Jean’s lover. Meanwhile,
Jean is also going out with a rugby player, Samy. Laura’s relationship with Jean
is strained to breaking point when she finds out that he is HIV positive...
Review
An intensely personal film, Les Nuits fauves tackles the whole issue of AIDS and
the hedonistic youth culture with dazzling, indeed shocking, originality and honesty.
The film is based on Cyril Collard’s 1989 novel, which is a closely autobiographical account
of Collard’s own life after he discovered he was HIV positive. This is not a film
for the faint-hearted or the prejudiced. Any notion of political correctness or
attempt to present the illness in a soppy ennobling light is totally absent. This
is Collard’s own, highly contentious view of the subject, and, as such, it stands as one
of the most refreshingly honest and uncompromising films of the 1990s.
The main focus for the film is the effect that Jean’s illness has on his relationship
with others, principally his girlfriend Laura. Jean’s gradual acceptance of
his illness is accompanied by a growing realisation that he will never achieve fulfilment
through his hedonistic lifestyle. As the virus is destroying his body, Laura is
attacking his consciousness with equal ferocity and determination. Ultimately, Jean
manages to find a way through, to live with his condition and forge a better life for
himself. Surprisingly, then, the film ends on an optimistic note, even though we
know that its central character is nearing the end of his life.
The most impressive things about this film are the lurid, energetic photography and the
intensely emotional performances from its lead actors. Collard himself shows himself
to be a creditable actor and is perfectly cast as Jean (even though he had originally
envisaged someone else playing the part). Opposite him is Romane Bohringer, a stunning
newcomer who brings relentless energy to a very difficult part, the role of Laura.
Collard’s real-life partner, Corinne Blue, also appears in the film, as Laura’s mother.
Although the film seems to get a little weighed down in its second half, it manages to
recover with a visually stunning final sequence, involving some exceptional panoramic
photography. The effect is very uplifting and mirrors perfectly the change in mood
of the film’s central character when he finally learns how to live with the AIDS virus.
Collard’s rendition of his own melancholic songs gives the film a further note of poignancy.
The film rightly won critical acclaim on its release in 1993. It won four Cesars,
including the best film award and an award for Romane Bohringer in the best female newcomer
category. Collard was unable to receive this praise for his film, though - he died
three days before the Césars ceremony from AIDS-related complications, at the age
of 35. Collard’s first film was, sadly, to be his last, but he has left his mark
on French cinema.
© James Travers 2000
|