SPOILER WARNING The following notes give away some of the plot.
As Climax opens to the sound of Gary Numan’s recording of Satie’s Gymnopédies, and an overhead shot of a bloodied, barely dressed woman running screaming through clean white snow fills the screen, one has the perverse feeling of being in a safe pair of hands. It will hardly be a surprise to anyone who knows Gaspar Noé’s oeuvre when the credits run before the film itself (presumably in case we don’t make it through to the end). Nor when the film plummets into a neon-lit interior, shot through with the grotesque horror-porn aesthetic familiar from works such as I Stand Alone (1998) and Enter the Void (2009). With his fifth feature, Noé seems to have completed the transition from French cinema’s enfant terrible to mature auteur in full control of his material. Climax confirms him as one of a few contemporary directors – alongside Michael Haneke, Agnès Varda, perhaps the Dardenne brothers – whose work shows real consistency of vision.
Noé is probably most infamous for the nine-minute rape scene, shot in one unflinching take, in 2002’s Irréversible. Climax, which is based on the supposedly true story of a troupe of 1990s dancers who drank LSD-spiked punch during a post-rehearsal party and succumbed to a collective bad trip, is mostly composed of what appear to be two extremely long takes: the rehearsal itself (a virtuoso musical number) and the gruesome descent into the inferno. In between them comes the party itself, constructed as a series of quick-fire conversations between various pairings of dancers. As was often the case in Noé’s Love (2015), these short scenes are punctuated by sudden, brief fades to black, not-quite-jump-cuts that sometimes return to find the scene exactly as it was and sometimes reveal another, similar scene. It’s a sequence marked by the inattention, excitement and nerviness of the early stages of a party.
All of this is set to a soundtrack of mostly 1990s French electronic dance music, in keeping with the period setting (itself a neat trick for ensuring that there are no mobiles available when chaos falls). Noé is typically attentive to the layering, timbre and overall impact of sound design on the audience. His cast of mostly non-professional actors speak little, but the film’s meaning – so far as there is one – lies beyond language, in pulsing beats, inarticulate sounds: grunts, cries and gibbering screams. It is something of a cliché that the films of what has been dubbed the new European extreme cinema – for which Noé is the poster boy – dare you to look away. There were moments when Climax made me want to rip up the seat covers and stuff them in my ears.
The film isn’t without its antecedents or influences. An early sequence – a precursor to the action proper – opens with a very Haneke-like TV screen embedded amid VHS tapes that include Salò, Suspiria, Possession and Querelle, as well as books by Fritz Lang, Luis Buñuel and Nietzsche. There’s a series of Godardian intertitles offering up nonsensical truisms. And everywhere is the push-pull of the Artaudian Theatre of Cruelty – a practice intended to ‘wake us up. Nerves and heart’, through ‘immediate violent action’ that ‘inspires us with the fiery magnetism of its images and acts upon us like a spiritual therapeutics whose touch can never be forgotten.’ One critic has described Climax as ‘Fame directed by the Marquis de Sade’. Fittingly, the film that Climax most put me in mind of was Peter Brook’s Marat/Sade (1967).
Brook, though, along with fellow artists such as Jean Genet, used brutality as a way of depicting class struggle and human suffering in the midst of changing social structures. It’s unclear what the political stakes are for Noé, though it seems some political allegorising is afoot. France is described, variously, as ‘hell on earth’ and ‘the home of Western culture’. The production credits present ‘A French Film and Proud of It’, while a huge, glittering tricolour forms a backdrop to much of the action. Sofia Boutella (the film’s one professional actor, here playing choreographer Selva) declares the rehearsal a success with a cry of ‘God with us!’ And it is surely no coincidence that the group’s first act of violence claims as its victim Muslim dancer Omar, who falls under suspicion precisely because the rules of his faith have kept him from drinking the spiked booze.
The dancers themselves are a mixed bag racially and sexually. Controversial gay icon Kiddy Smile plays DJ ‘Daddy’ as a kind of benevolent uncle figure. The dancing itself – a stunning, contortionist version of voguing – is developed out of France’s multiracial, polysexual ballroom scene. Nina McNeely’s choreography glories in the athleticism of these black, brown, white and yellow bodies, clad in PVC, net, sequins and lurex. But at the same time it casts them as creepy, creaturely and aggressively sexual, even before the drugs take hold. What does it mean when one character lipsticks a swastika on another’s forehead? Of course, the film offers no answers. Climax is neither as graphic nor as shocking as Noé’s earlier work (in fact, despite the incest, infanticide and immolation, its final 30 minutes are, well, a little anticlimactic). Still, Noé remains the eternal provocateur, one whose flaws put other directors’ successes to shame. Not everyone will like what he does here, but there’s no denying that he does it very well.
Catherine Wheatley, Sight & Sound, October 2018
Strasbourg 1518
Depicting a real-life dance epidemic, this short film is a wonderful micro-demonstration of director Jonathan Glazer’s (and frequent collaborator Mica Levi’s) ability to create intense and nauseating atmospheres.
STRASBOURG 1518
Devised & Directed by: Jonathan Glazer
Production Company: Academy Films
For: BBC Films, BBC Arts
Commissioned by: Artangel, Sadler’s Wells
Music: Mica Levi
UK 2020
10 mins
Digital
CLIMAX
Director: Gaspar Noé
Production Companies: Rectangle Productions, Wild Bunch
In co-production with: Les Cinémas de la Zone, Eskwad, KNM, ARTE France Cinéma, Artémis Productions
With the support of: Centre National de la Cinématographie et de l’Image animée, Sacem
In co-production with: VOO, Be tv, Shelter Prod
In association with: Taxshelter.be, Ing
With the participation of: Cineventure 3
Produced by: Edouard Weil, Vincent Maraval, Brahim Chioua
Screenplay: Gaspar Noé
Director of Photography: Benoît Debie
Editing: Denis Bedlow, Gaspar Noé
Art Director: Jean Rabasse
Costumes: Fred Cambier
Sound: Ken Yasumoto
Choreographer: Nina McNeely
Cast
Sofia Boutella (Selva)
Romain Guillermic (David)
Souheila Yacoub (Lou)
Kiddy Smile (Daddy)
Claude Gajan Maull (Emmanuelle)
Giselle Palmer (Gazelle)
Taylor Kastle (Taylor)
Thea Carla Schøtt (Psyche)
Sharleen Temple (Ivana)
Lea Vlamos (Lea)
Adrien Sissoko (Omar)
Vince Galliot Cumant (Tito)
France 2018
96 mins
DISCOMFORT MOVIES
Eraserhead
Mon 1 Jul 20:40 (+ extended intro to the season by curator Kimberley Sheehan); Sun 14 Jul 17:50; Sat 27 Jul 20:50
The Lost Weekend
Sat 6 Jul 15:10; Sun 21 Jul 17:45; Mon 29 Jul 20:40
Requiem for a Dream
Sat 6 Jul 20:45; Fri 19 Jul 18:20
A Woman under the Influence
Sun 7 Jul 19:30; Sun 28 Jul 17:20
Bug
Mon 8 Jul 18:15; Thu 25 Jul 20:50
They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?
Tue 9 Jul 18:10; Mon 22 Jul 20:35
Threads
Thu 11 Jul 18:15; Sun 21 Jul 15:15
Possession
Mon 15 Jul 18:00
Funny Games
Mon 15 Jul 20:45; Sat 27 Jul 14:15
Climax + Strasbourg 1518
Tue 16 Jul 18:10; Sun 28 Jul 20:20
Crash + Titane
Sat 20 Jul 18:15, 18:30
Audition Ôdishon
Wed 24 Jul 20:45; Wed 31 Jul 18:15
Skinamarink
Sun 28 Jul 14:20; Wed 31 Jul 20:45
Relaxed Screening: Eraserhead + intro and discussion
Mon 29 Jul 18:10
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Programme notes and credits compiled by Sight and Sound and the BFI Documentation Unit
Notes may be edited or abridged
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