37°2 le matin (1986)
Directed by Jean-Jacques Beineix

Drama / Romance
aka: Betty Blue

Film Review

Abstract picture representing 37 degrees2 le matin (1986)
After the comparative failure of his second film, La Lune dans le caniveau (1983), French film director Jean-Jacques Beineix managed to redeem himself in the eyes of both critics and cinema-goers with his third film, 37°2 le matin.  The film manages successfully to combine the glossy production values of Beineix's first film, Diva (1981), with the naïve poetry he sought to evoke in his second.

Renamed "Betty Blue" for its American release, this was to become a hugely popular cult film on both sides of the Atlantic, although critics were divided, some citing it as a masterpiece, others dismissing it as little more than a stylish piece of erotica.  The film's standing has perhaps improved following the release in 1991 of the director's cut version, which adds an extra hour of material.  This includes the touching scene where Betty kidnaps a young child and the tragicomic segment where Zorg pulls off a bank robbery dressed as a woman.

Despite its length (over three hours) and unhurried pace, the uncut version of the film is constantly mesmerising, thanks mainly to the high quality photography and excellent acting performances.  Béatrice Dalle and Jean-Hugues Anglade are perfectly cast as Betty and Zorg and have no difficulty holding our attention as they portray the moving story of a couple overwhelmed by an existentialist yearning for an unattainable better life.  The film's darker moments are sensitively counter-balanced by some pleasing comic touches, and it is only the film's unrealistic melodramatic ending which tarnishes an otherwise commendable piece of cinema.
© James Travers 2002
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Jacques Beineix film:
IP5 (1992)

Film Synopsis

Zorg is a free-spirited thirty-something who earns a modest wage repairing holiday bungalows in the south of France.  One day, he meets Betty, an impulsive young woman to whom he is instantly attracted.  A passionate and intense love affair quickly ensues, but Betty soon grows tired of their new life together.  She comes across a box containing several notebooks and deduces that her lover must have been working on a novel before they met.  Seeing that Zorg has talent as a writer, Betty encourages him to complete the novel and try to get it published.  Zorg doesn't share Betty's faith in his abilities and contents himself by finding work as a waiter in a restaurant.  As one publisher after another turns down her lover's novel, Betty slowly starts to lose her grip on reality.  Zorg cannot bear to witness his partner's mental deterioration and decides that he must put an end to her suffering...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Jean-Jacques Beineix
  • Script: Jean-Jacques Beineix, Philippe Djian (novel)
  • Cinematographer: Jean-François Robin
  • Music: Gabriel Yared
  • Cast: Jean-Hugues Anglade (Zorg), Béatrice Dalle (Betty), Gérard Darmon (Eddy), Consuelo De Haviland (Lisa), Clémentine Célarié (Annie), Jacques Mathou (Bob), Vincent Lindon (Richard le jeune policier), Jean-Pierre Bisson (Le commissaire (complete version)), Dominique Pinon (Le dealer), Bernard Hug ((complete version)), Claude Aufaure (Le médecin), Louis Bellanti (Mario), Dominique Besnehard (Client pizzeria), Raoul Billerey (Le vieux policier), Nathalie Dalyan (Maria), Nicolas Jalowyj (Le petit Nicolas), André Julien (Le vieux Georges), Bernard Robin (Deuxième locataire), Claude Confortès (Propriétaire des bungalows), Philippe Laudenbach (L'éditeur, Le gynéco)
  • Country: France
  • Language: French
  • Support: Color
  • Runtime: 185 min
  • Aka: Betty Blue ; 37.2 Degrees in the Morning

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