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First things first: Yes, Gaspar Noé’s arthouse
The film is a heartsick portrayal of a man examining what he’s done and what he’s lost.
There are dustups and drug use and other lovers, too, plus an endless scene of Murphy shouting in the streets: “I’m the one who’s hurting right now!” and “Open the door, you selfish cunt!” As in most arthouse
At least in Love, the characters are getting off. See them spent and happy, on crimson linens, blowing smoke rings up at the camera. You probably won’t care about them, feel for them, or quite believe they could exist, but at least every moment of their lives is sumptuously composed. The cut after each shot is exaggerated, a full brief blackout, as if to leave behind any of Noé’s images is itself a little death. The non-penetrative scenes are marvels, too, with strobing nightclub lights and journeys over and through city bridges and tunnels all reinforcing the film’s fleshier themes.
Noé’s homages and history-of-cinema jokes make it clear that all his steady, stately kink is designed to awe rather than to sweep us up. “I want to make movies out of blood, sperm, and tears,” Murphy natters at one point, before dressing down his lover for never having seen 2001, a film not known for its sensual rawness. Noé cuts on occasion to a red bulb in close-up that, but for its blinking, might as well be the movies’ most infamous computer. If you ever wondered what HAL might jerk off to, Love is for you.
Love
Starring Karl Glusman, Aomi Muyock, Klara Kristin, and Juan Saavedra. Written and directed by Gaspar Noé. Opens Friday, November 13, at Bill Cosford Cinema and Miami Beach Cinematheque. 135 minutes. Not rated.