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IMDbPro

Sauvage

  • 2018
  • 16
  • 1h 39min
NOTE IMDb
7,1/10
5,9 k
MA NOTE
Félix Maritaud in Sauvage (2018)
Leo trades in love as much as lust, and wanders through his life without rules or restrictions. Through a series of encounters that offer a glimpse into the complicated and visceral world of male sex work, Leo finds himself searching for affection anywhere he can get it --whether it's the unrequited love for his hustler friend Ahd or in the arms of an older, vulnerable client. Will Leo choose his freedom and the dangers that come with it, or the comforts of a stable relationship? After all, in this unpredictable world, who knows where he'll end up?
Lire trailer1:45
2 Videos
95 photos
Drama

Léo a 22 ans et vend son corps dans la rue pour un peu d'argent. Les hommes défilent, tandis que lui reste là, en quête d'amour. Il ignore de quoi demain sera fait. Son coeur bat la chamade.Léo a 22 ans et vend son corps dans la rue pour un peu d'argent. Les hommes défilent, tandis que lui reste là, en quête d'amour. Il ignore de quoi demain sera fait. Son coeur bat la chamade.Léo a 22 ans et vend son corps dans la rue pour un peu d'argent. Les hommes défilent, tandis que lui reste là, en quête d'amour. Il ignore de quoi demain sera fait. Son coeur bat la chamade.

  • Réalisation
    • Camille Vidal-Naquet
  • Scénario
    • Camille Vidal-Naquet
  • Casting principal
    • Félix Maritaud
    • Farid-Eric Bernard
    • Nicolas Dibla
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,1/10
    5,9 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Camille Vidal-Naquet
    • Scénario
      • Camille Vidal-Naquet
    • Casting principal
      • Félix Maritaud
      • Farid-Eric Bernard
      • Nicolas Dibla
    • 28avis d'utilisateurs
    • 57avis des critiques
    • 75Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 10 victoires et 17 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:45
    Official Trailer
    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:43
    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Bande-annonce [OV]
    Trailer 1:43
    Bande-annonce [OV]

    Photos94

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux23

    Modifier
    Félix Maritaud
    Félix Maritaud
    • Léo
    Farid-Eric Bernard
    • Ahd
    • (as Éric Bernard)
    Nicolas Dibla
    • Mihal
    Philippe Ohrel
    • Claude
    Pavle Dragas
    • Garçon de la bande
    Mehdi Boudina
    • Garçon de la bande
    Azir Mustafic
    • Garçon de la bande
    Hassim Mohamed Saleh
    • Garçon de la bande
    Morad Ammar
    • Garçon de la bande
    Noureddine Maamar
    • Garçon de la bande
    • (as Nour-Eddine Maamar)
    Camille Müller
    • Garçon de la bande
    Lou Volchitsa Ravelli
    • Ana (de la bande)
    • (as Lou Ravelli-Avanissian)
    Lionel Riou
    • Le médecin
    Lucas Bléger
    • L'homme handicapé
    Laurent Berecz
    • L'épicier
    Joël Villy
    • Le sugar daddy
    Jean-Pierre Baste
    • Le vieux libraire
    Jean-François-Charles Martin
    • Le pianiste
    • Réalisation
      • Camille Vidal-Naquet
    • Scénario
      • Camille Vidal-Naquet
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs28

    7,15.8K
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    Avis à la une

    10juliandineen

    A masterpiece

    From the opening scenes you get a sense that this is not going to be comfortable viewing.. But who came here for a comfortable time ? The film is crafted with care, love, attention and most importantly respect. The themes are intense, chaotic and thought provoking giving us a real insight into the life of a gay sex worker. Through out the film there are tender even intimate moments admist the depravity we witness, this is due to the brilliant talent Maritaud who plays Leo, he plays Leo with so much empathy, honour and understanding.
    10jromanbaker

    One of the best French films in a long while.

    In another of my reviews I rated 'Theo and Hugo' as a gay film that was as close to perfection as possible. 'Sauvage' is as good, and objectively perhaps better. It also falls into the gay category. Or does it? As a gay man myself, I hate to say that this is a more widely themed film, but homophobia, which still exists as a curse within our society, will limit its appeal by putting it into what is offensively categorised as the 'gay' niche.

    This is a masculine film and it depicts a group of male prostitutes who do not (want to) fall into the gay category. They may protect each other and form fierce ties, but their actual identities are as fluid as water. Leo, our main protagonist is basically gay, and when he loses the love of his life, who is a partner in prostitution, his precarious life unravels towards tragedy. He is romantic and can be gentle, but he is a broken person in a broken society. He did not choose to be broken, but his very nature, faced with the brutality that surrounds him, crushes his health and his inner resources. The ending has overwhelming power, as portrayed by Robert Bresson in 'Mouchette' and 'Au Hasard Balthazar'. This is not about choice, but the inevitability of the pain that society inflicts upon the more sensitive and gentle in our world. Leo's face at the end should move everyone to anger and tears.

    The compassionate and also the more tortured aspects of the sexual world he is in are shown explicitly. Some were sickening and Leo was sickened by them. But, elderly gays are portrayed with more tenderness than younger gays, which is an about turn from other gay films, and for the better!

    I was reminded also of Bunuel and the opening of 'L'Age d'Or'. The scorpions fight in this masculine environment, and the torturer in the car and the young couple with the monstrous sex toy are a disgrace even to the scorpions.

    Last but not least, the film depicts homelessness and the human shame of a society that stands by, watches, and intervenes only when prodded. But like Bresson's gentle donkey Leo lays down his head to (perhaps) finally rest and I repeat, we see one of the most sublime scenes in cinema.
    8justahunch-70549

    "You're made to be loved"

    This is a difficult film to review because it is an extremely difficult film to view. There were scenes when I found myself wincing and occasionally turning my face away from the screen. It's rough, it's raw, it's brutal, it's sad, it's violent and it all seems very authentic. It's the story of a young prostitute who is rather sweet at heart, but is also a lost soul with the need for love who continues to be lost when he finally finds it. The centerpiece of this very, very realistically acted film is Félix Maritaud. It is as bold and brazen a performance as you will ever see. He's beautiful, but ugly at times as he keeps going downhill in a life going in the wrong direction. This harsh film doesn't really have a purpose or a message other than to show you this ugly slice of life. To put it mildly, this is not a film for everyone nor is it a film for those who have a problem with nudity and sex. It cannot even really be classified as entertainment, but it is fascinating if you can handle it. Everyone in this is strong and not a one even seems like they're performing, but it is Mr. Maritaud that makes you care about a character, who despite all, always has an aura of innocence about him. This is the only feature film directed by Camille Vidal-Naquet. It would be interesting to see more of what he can do.
    7Bertaut

    Powerful filmmaking, although the graphic sex scenes and passive protagonist won't be for everyone

    Sauvage is the debut film of writer/director Camille Vidal-Naquet, a former professor of film studies, and takes as its subject the daily grind of a male prostitute. Striking a delicate balance between misery porn and objectively delineating the day-to-day of being a sex worker, the film is undeniably bleak, but it's not what you would define as miserablism. Remaining detached from what it depicts, it adopts a clinically dispassionate approach, one that remains always non-judgemental. Intermixing the degrading reality of selling one's self with unexpected moments of tenderness and warmth, Vidal-Naquet taps into something deeply compelling. Some will be put off by the (very) graphic sex scenes, the passivity of the main character, or the lack of much of a plot. However, for everyone else, although it certainly isn't multiplex fare, there's a hell of a lot to admire here.

    Set in Strasbourg, Sauvage tells the story of Léo (an extraordinarily committed performance from relative newcomer Félix Maritaud), a homeless, drug-addicted male prostitute, whose name, like those of his fellow sex workers, is never spoken in the film. As the film begins, Léo is attending a doctor (Lionel Riou), revealing bruises, a split lip, a nasty cough, and stomach pains. Upon examining him, the doctor appears to begin sexually molesting him. However, all is not as it seems in the scene, which is a genius way to open the movie. The episodic narrative then follows Léo from one sexual encounter to the next, occasionally focusing on his relationship with gay-for-pay prostitute Ahd (Farid-Eric Bernard), with whom he is in love. Wearing perpetually filthy clothes, he drinks from gutters and eats from bins, has a litany of physical ailments, and on two occasions, other characters comment that he smells bad.

    In preparation for making the film, Vidal-Naquet joined an outreach charity as a way to meet young male prostitutes. Intending to go on only a few runs over the course of a couple of weeks, he ended up spending three years visiting the men, all the while refining the script to make it as true to life as possible (all of Léo's sexual encounters in the film come from stories told by the actual sex workers).

    The film reveals nothing about Léo's background - where he comes from, how he became a prostitute, where are his family - and many of the choices he makes prompt more questions than answers, with much of what he does tied to his notions of personal freedom. Even his final choice, which is undeniably selfish and ill-advised, is consistent with the psychology of the character as seen up to that point. He isn't especially interested in a life away from drugs and prostitution, and so he takes the violence, degradations, and humiliations, because every now and then he meets someone who provides him with a degree of transitory happiness.

    Léo doesn't share in the detachment, coldness, or bitterness of his fellow prostitutes, with all of them finding it bizarre that he's willing to kiss clients. However, the important point is that Léo doesn't kiss on-demand, he does so only when it feels right. This in and of itself illustrates how different he is from the others, and how selling himself is not exclusively monetary - he is searching for genuine affection, and he seems incapable of establishing the same boundaries between himself and his clients as the other sex workers live by. He gives much more of himself than them, in the hopes of establishing a genuine human connection with someone. Indeed, Ahd says at one point, "it's like you enjoy being a wh-re", which he doesn't actually deny.

    His fellow prostitutes are healthier, cleaner, more financially independent, more aware of the dangers of their occupation, never allowing emotions to become involved. But Léo is far more tender than any of them, and for all the harshness of his life, there is something Emersonian about him. Indeed, for much of the film, he has a pseudo-transcendentalist soul - he is relatively free of the norms of society and its institutions; he is at peace in and with nature; he lives very much in the moment; he has almost no materialist needs whatsoever; he trusts completely in his own instincts, he never lets go of his hope of finding love. This is why a scene involving a female doctor (Marie Seux) is so important; treating him with respect and empathy, when she attempts to examine him, he hugs her, and they hold each other for a moment, in an embrace that has nothing to do with sexuality and everything to do with kindness and emotional support.

    Obviously, for a film of this nature to be in any way realistic, it must depict sexuality, and Vidal-Naquet doesn't hold back on that front. At the screening I attended, five people walked out within the first half-hour, by which time there had already been three graphic sex scenes (including a threesome with two prostitutes and a disabled man in a wheelchair). What's interesting about these scenes, however, is that they never lose their potency, irrespective of how many we see. I think the reason for this is how Vidal-Naquet presents them; far from filming them in a voyeuristic way or as titillation, they are instead presented dispassionately as something that happens to people in this line of work, as normal for Léo as taking drugs or sleeping rough - it's simply a part of his life.

    Cinematographer Jacques Girault employs a pseudo-documentarian cinéma vérité aesthetic; the entire film is shot handheld, with an occasional loss of focus, frequent awkward compositions, and even losing the subject momentarily in the frame before picking him up again. This has the effect of neither depicting sexuality as something perverted and dirty, nor valorising it as the most important part of a relationship. By presenting it as simply a part of Léo's life, Vidal-Naquet normalises it. He certainly doesn't gloss over the problems of this kind of life, or the sexual perversions one may encounter, but he doesn't present sex work as, in and of itself, fundamentally immoral. Instead, he depicts both sides of the coin; from non-sexual intimacy with an elderly bookseller (Jean-Pierre Baste) who simply wants someone to read to him to a demeaning threesome with a couple (Nicolas Fernandez and Nicolas Chalumeau) who have Léo stand naked in front of them as they discuss how bad he smells, before roughly using a sex toy that would make even the ladies of LegalPorno winch. Indeed, Vidal-Naquet gets his point across about the highs and lows of sex work with a very simple edit - the film cuts from Léo lying peacefully in bed with the bookseller to giving a rough blowjob to a client in a car parked in an alley.

    In terms of problems, as already stated, many will find the graphic sex scenes too much. Another issue is that Léo is an extremely passive character; he doesn't so much drive the plot as the plot depicts things that happen to him. Coupled with this, he doesn't have much of an arc, and at the end, he isn't overly different from the man we met at the beginning. With him being in every scene, almost every shot, the other prostitutes are very thinly sketched (even Ahd), but this is by design. On the other hand, the depiction of Claude (Philippe Ohrel), a magnanimous and kindly middle-aged man who takes a liking to Léo and immediately opens his home to him, is open to criticism; in a film founded on realism, he is something of a deus ex-machina, arriving in Léo's life just as he reaches his lowest point.

    On paper, Sauvage should be a textbook case of misery porn, following as it does a homeless drug-addicted male prostitute and his often demeaning sexual encounters. However, Vidal-Naquet's non-judgemental depiction of Léo's occupation and milieu allows the more optimistic elements of his personality to rise to the surface, even in the face of seemingly endless degradations. It's certainly not an easy watch, but amidst the depravity, Vidal-Naquet finds moments of tenderness, moments which mean everything to Léo. Uninterested in titillation, the film depicts sexual activity as something that happens, without judgement or commentary. And by so doing, it avoids, for the most part, the clichés so inherent to films dealing with prostitution. Neither condemning Léo's lifestyle nor valorising it, no matter how demeaning or brutal it becomes, he always seems to find a way to keep going. That may be interpreted as tragic, but that's not the way Léo looks at himself, nor is it the way Vidal-Naquet wants us to look at him.
    9johannes2000-1

    Harsh but honest and very strong movie.

    This is an excellent movie. Probably the topic isn't everyones cup of tea, and it sure isn't a comfortable and pleasant watch. But what you do get, is a very realistic, honest and unadorned account of the daily struggle to survive of a young male street-prostitute in a big city (Paris?). No romanticizing here, it's all bleak, harsh and hopeless. What makes it extra touching, is the fact that the main character isn't just driven by opportunistic motives, but desperately longs for love and affection, which he sadly enough projects on the wrong guy.

    Actor Felix Maritaud gives a very strong and convincing performance, very brave too, since director Camille Vidal-Naquet doesn't hold back in realism, with a fair amount of graphic sex. This is clearly not aimed to tittilate any erotic senses with the viewer, if anything it's mostly akward and sad to watch, but it adds to the authenticity of this movie. Hiding or masking the sex would have felt like fake.

    Another strong aspect of the movie is the fact that it doesn't moralize. We never hear how the main character came to do what he does or what his background is, so no justifications or freudian explanations like a troubled youth or anything. It's clear that he doesn't see anything wrong in what he does or why he should change his way of life, however pathetic and hard it may be. The choice he makes in the end of the movie is in line with this, although for us it's hard, if not almost impossible to understand.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      First feature film written and directed by Camille Vidal-Naquet.
    • Gaffes
      The right arm of Léo's jacket is not torn in the nighttime scene on the highway (at around 52 mins) although it is torn in the previous scene in the doctor's office and then again in the next scene in which it appears, when he repairs it with the stolen staple gun.
    • Citations

      La femme médecin: Shall we try something to get you off the drugs for a while?

      Léo: But... Why?

      La femme médecin: What do you mean, why?

      Léo: To do what?

      La femme médecin: Hold on a second. It's not either crack or nothing.

      Léo: It is.

      La femme médecin: You don't want to change?

      Léo: Why would I?

    • Bandes originales
      Trapped on the Moon
      Written by Jean-Christophe Couderc & Benoit Raymond

      Performed by Vox Low

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Sauvage/Wild?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 29 août 2018 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
    • Site officiel
      • Official Site (Namibia)
    • Langue
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Sauvage/Wild
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Strasbourg, Bas-Rhin, France
    • Sociétés de production
      • Les Films de la Croisade
      • La Voie Lactée
      • Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée (CNC)
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 61 604 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 7 440 $US
      • 14 avr. 2019
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 317 536 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 39 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.66 : 1

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