Interesteg
What makes it different from others?
SeeQuant
Blending excellent reporting and strong storytelling, this is a disturbing film truly stranger than fiction
Billie Morin
This movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows
Asad Almond
A clunky actioner with a handful of cool moments.
info-6595
This movie reminds me of Balzac, the little hero Lucien (here Jan) who starts at a remote village in the deep of Flanders and moves to the great Paris (Brussels). It is the astonishing encounter of the fourth kind with beautiful ladies and the fauna of the night crowd of a roaring city. Artists, whores, poets and all the like mix up in this beautiful expressed and imaged close up of the capital of the Belgians in the seventies. This movie has nothing to do about sex, it is just a romantic comedy of life. This movie remains actual by its surprising flair and capturing of mind and imaginative dialogs. In some Line it is difficult to translate this film. One of the best Belgian movies I ever saw, deserves a 9.
rmutt
First movie of the belgian conceptual artist and disrespectful director
Jan
Bucquoy. This film starts the series of the sexual life of the belgians,
composed by 4 full-lenght films that introduce subversion in belgian
cinema
history, also whit an independent production system. You'll not find any
explicit sexual sequence, you'll find the representation of a complex
ideological system, the history of a non conventional life, the
alternative
vision of a country that hide aspirations of general revolution of life.
Bucquoy build a conceptual cinema that try to destroy the "representation"
of the spectacular cinema in order to leave all the place to the ideas.
The
word "sexual" hides the words "politics","art", "desire",
"communication"...
it hides all words to reveal the language free by all social
deviation.
This first movie show 28 years of the life of a man who try to find the
best
answer to the only really important philosophical question, as the french
writer Camus wrote: is it worth living life or not? From his little
village
in Flandre to Bruxelles, trough sexual relationships, political activism,
literature dreams, you will see the existential journey of Jan Bucquoy
(the
name of the protagonist) who try to grow in the body and in the
intellect.
jphv
Before he made movies, Jan Bucquoy was a famous and controversial comic book writer. Based on Vidon and Bucquoy's original graphic novel "La vie sexuelle de JP Leureux, Tout va bien",this first feature is a touching mix of Cynicism and dead pan humor. The story revolves around the chronological thread of the various women of the narrator's life. Whereas the original comic book was built on a succession of many quick portraits and short cynical reappraisals, the film comes out as single ongoing framework, sarcastic, yet tainted with nostalgia. Overwhelmingly successful at indy film festivals around the world, its obscure and rather limited distribution seem to ad a certain cult value. You won't find the video tape at Blockbuster's, but it's out there...
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When I saw the movie for the first time I was less enthusiastic than now.You have to see the movie at least two times,otherwise you think that it is a movie for idiots.Jean-Henri Compère is strong as a writer who explores the sexual life of the capital of Belgium and his indifference to his own fate is pathetic.His fatalism is in strong contrast to his will-power to become famous.Is this why as a young boy his sexual awakening came too late in his Flemish village?Or because his mother was opposing his career outside of the place where he had a rather happy youth?Marriage seems to be the turning point of his life,but it is not what he expected.Many Belgians have a divorce after being married for some years and he will not be the exception.The sexual life of the Belgians may be boring in itself,but in this movie you never have the impression that things do not go on.Every scene is a surprise and to this you can certainly add the beautiful images by Michel Baudour,and the music of Will Tura and Marc Aryan.