FOUR-STAR FILM : ‘Savage Nights’
- Share via
Cyril Collard’s 1992 film caused far more of a sensation in France than in the United States, but even so it is a startling, hard-driving autobiographical account of a bisexual Paris filmmaker (Collard, left) following his HIV-positive test result. His response is to live faster, engaging in group sex and simultaneous affairs with a man (Carlos Lopez, right) and a 17-year-old (Romaine Bohringer, in a radiant feature debut) with whom he even agrees to have unprotected sex. Collard, sensibly, doesn’t remotely try to get us to like him, but he does create a compelling, unsparing account of a life unraveling. “Savage Nights” won four Cesars just 72 hours after Collard’s death from AIDS. (Cinemax Wednesday at 8 p.m.)
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.