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Mala sangre

Título original: Mauvais sang
  • 1986
  • 13
  • 1h 56min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,2/10
9,8 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Juliette Binoche and Denis Lavant in Mala sangre (1986)
Leos Carax made his international breakthrough with this swoon-inducing portrait of love among thieves. In the near future, an aging crime lord (Michel Piccoli) recruits young delinquent Alex (Denis Lavant) to steal a locked-up serum designed to fight a mysterious STD. When Alex falls for his boss’s girlfriend (a radiant Juliette Binoche), Mauvais Sang becomes something rarer: an ecstatic depiction of what it feels like to be young, restless and madly in love. With its balletic gestures and bold primary colors, much of the film plays as if through the eyes of its lovesick protagonist. And it hinges on one of the most thrilling scenes in modern movies: Lavant sprinting and cartwheeling through the Parisian night to David Bowie’s “Modern Love,” a bundle of desires set briefly and wildly free.
Reproducir trailer1:45
1 vídeo
93 imágenes
CrimeDramaRomanceThriller

Mientras un virus mortal que infecta a las personas que tienen relaciones sexuales sin amor se extiende por París, un paria solitario intenta robar un poderoso antídoto.Mientras un virus mortal que infecta a las personas que tienen relaciones sexuales sin amor se extiende por París, un paria solitario intenta robar un poderoso antídoto.Mientras un virus mortal que infecta a las personas que tienen relaciones sexuales sin amor se extiende por París, un paria solitario intenta robar un poderoso antídoto.

  • Dirección
    • Leos Carax
  • Guión
    • Leos Carax
  • Reparto principal
    • Michel Piccoli
    • Juliette Binoche
    • Denis Lavant
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    7,2/10
    9,8 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Leos Carax
    • Guión
      • Leos Carax
    • Reparto principal
      • Michel Piccoli
      • Juliette Binoche
      • Denis Lavant
    • 30Reseñas de usuarios
    • 64Reseñas de críticos
    • 74Metapuntuación
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 3 premios y 6 nominaciones en total

    Vídeos1

    MAUVAIS SANG Trailer (restored version, Carlotta Films US 2013)
    Trailer 1:45
    MAUVAIS SANG Trailer (restored version, Carlotta Films US 2013)

    Imágenes92

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    Reparto principal18

    Editar
    Michel Piccoli
    Michel Piccoli
    • Marc
    Juliette Binoche
    Juliette Binoche
    • Anna
    Denis Lavant
    Denis Lavant
    • Alex
    Hans Meyer
    Hans Meyer
    • Hans
    Julie Delpy
    Julie Delpy
    • Lise
    Carroll Brooks
    • The American woman
    Hugo Pratt
    • Boris
    Mireille Perrier
    Mireille Perrier
    • The young mother
    Serge Reggiani
    Serge Reggiani
    • Charlie
    Jérôme Zucca
    Jérôme Zucca
    • Thomas
    Paul Handford
    Charles Schmitt
    François Négret
    François Négret
    Philippe Fretun
    Thomas Peckre
    Ralph Brown
    Eric Vasberg
      Leos Carax
      Leos Carax
      • Le voyeur du quartier
      • (sin acreditar)
      • Dirección
        • Leos Carax
      • Guión
        • Leos Carax
      • Todo el reparto y equipo
      • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

      Reseñas de usuarios30

      7,29.8K
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      Reseñas destacadas

      jrwfzkknj

      Impeccable Vibes

      Mauvais Sang made me feel cooler just for watching it-like I'd chain-smoked a Gauloises in a neon-lit alley while reciting poetry to nobody in particular. It's moody, stylish, and occasionally baffling, but there's real heart pulsing beneath all that noir-drenched angst. I loved Juliette Binoche smouldering on screen, and Julie Delpy has that effortlessly aloof charm that just works. And Dennis Lavant-my god, the man dances. That scene? Electric. I honestly think it should be a law: Lavant must dance in every film. Not just the ones he's in-every film. The plot wobbles here and there, but the vibes? Impeccable.
      7JuguAbraham

      Weird tale, with very unforgettable use of color, cinematography, wonderful performances and choice of existing music

      Wonderful performances by Denis Lavant (best performance as mute prisoner in "The Night of the Kings"), Juliette Binoche (best performance is in "Certified Copy") and Julie Delpy (best performance "Three colors-White"). Carax is to be credited for casting all three and getting great performances when all of them were relatively unknown. Lavant has worked with Carax on his films (in "Boy meets girl" and in "Lovers on the Bridge", where his characters are called Alex!; and in "Holy Motors")

      Lavant's character is called Chatterbox. While character avers he was a silent child and survived 15 months of his served prison term by being silent. Yet, he is the most talkative character in the film, who is very knowledgeable about art and artists, correcting a "heavy" that Jean Cocteau is not alive but dead (Carax was possibly influenced by Cocteau). The film's script has several such nuggets.

      Though the film has a weird tale, the strength is first of all in the use of color--clothes, exterior walls, furniture--transforming each scene into a painting.

      The second awesome sequence is Denis Lavant's athletic dance in the empty street keeping to the beat of David Bowie's song "Modern Love," which is supposed to reflect the weird theme of the film of loveless sex. Carax' choice of Prokofieff's and Britten's music is creditable.

      Carax worked with cinematographer Jean-Yves Escoffier until his death in 2003. Another good decision made by Carax for whom visuals, music and actors matter.
      7aciessi

      Modern Love

      You have amazing scenes here. The energetic and nail biting heist scene, the sky-diving scene, and of course, the scene in which Chatterbox runs down the street to "Modern Love" by David Bowie. How shamelessly Noah Baumbauch stole this scene for Frances Ha, which compared to Mauvais Sang is a sophomore year, film school project. This is a master class in filmmaking. However, it's conversation scenes lag on for far too long, don't amount to much, and extend the run time of the film. It didn't need to be two hours.
      chaos-rampant

      Joint internal flight

      I think music used throughout this reveals quite a bit of the cinematic exercise.

      • Prokofiev's Roméo and Juliette, so a ballet, a cinematic opera on forbidden love between youth that aches to dream. Love that cannot be consummated in the ugly day of light and has to take to dreams, liebestod, Tristan and Isolde.


      • Limelight tied into this, that precious bit of Chaplin beneath the big old sappy narratives that was purely evocative body, that was in essence a dance between innocence and star-crossed fate.


      • David Bowie, 'Modern Love' aptly enough, so the rush of purely energetic instrumentation, dazzling camera beats, irony, New Wave atonality, in this case the song randomly caught on radio and meant to guide feelings, a dadaist gesture. Denis Lavant leaps across the frame with his wiry seething-petite frame that reminds a bit of the old silent comedians, he's a real pleasure to watch just move.


      In something like Beau Travail also with Lavant and operatic, space is arranged bodily, the whole thing is cinematic and flows. Not so here. The guy responsible for this wants to be a little like Godard, so we have the interminable recitations, the poetry, the deliberately crude crime plot where you only need a gun and a girl, always Godard's weaker spots.

      This too bad. Because there are visual moments here that left me practically giddy, for example love as a matter of leaping from a plane, a matter of joint flight and tenderly balancing mid-air.

      Instead we get a patchy, stuttery ride that only now and then blossoms into some internal scenery.

      The opportunity missed is that the eye dances but is not fully consumed with its musical capacity. Nouvelle Vague ruins this by proxy. I like to think that Wong Kar Wai saw this and immediately knew which parts worked.
      10robert-temple-1

      '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.

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      Argumento

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      • Curiosidades
        Julie Delpy says she came out of filming this movie traumatized: "Yes, it was a very difficult shoot. I had a motorcycle accident. In order to make the insurance work, I wasn't taken to the doctor right away. As a result, my leg became gangrenous - one more day and it was amputation. Moreover Leos Carax was not easy. The actress was not easy either. It was a set of things where I was really traumatized when I got out of this movie. It was at the limit where I wondered if I wanted to continue what. It wasn't a pleasant shoot, no", Delpy unveiled without detour, thus engaging in the passage on 'the actress' that was Juliette Binoche.
      • Citas

        Alex: I was a frighteningly silent child, apparently. I kept silent... but that's not right. Silence keeps us.

      • Conexiones
        Featured in À la folie, pas du tout: Episodio fechado 16 noviembre 1986 (1986)
      • Banda sonora
        Simple Symphony Op. 4 - Variation on a theme of Franck Bridge Op. 10
        Written by Benjamin Britten

        Chandos Records

        ed. OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

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      Preguntas frecuentes19

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      Detalles

      Editar
      • Fecha de lanzamiento
        • 26 de noviembre de 1986 (Francia)
      • Países de origen
        • Francia
        • Suiza
      • Sitios oficiales
        • Juliette Binoche: The Art of Being - Official Fansite
        • Official site (Spain)
      • Idioma
        • Francés
      • Títulos en diferentes países
        • Bad Blood
      • Localizaciones del rodaje
        • Rue Emile Richard, Paris 14, París, Francia(crossing the American Lady on the way to the airfield)
      • Empresas productoras
        • Les Films Plain Chant
        • Soprofilms
        • FR3 Films Production
      • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

      Taquilla

      Editar
      • Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
        • 40.988 US$
      • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
        • 8482 US$
        • 1 dic 2013
      • Recaudación en todo el mundo
        • 70.105 US$
      Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

      Especificaciones técnicas

      Editar
      • Duración
        1 hora 56 minutos
      • Color
        • Color
      • Mezcla de sonido
        • Mono
      • Relación de aspecto
        • 1.66 : 1

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