Climax (2018) Poster

(I) (2018)

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8/10
A Great "Feel-Bad" Movie.
colorthekid18 February 2019
Love it or hate it, this film is technically astonishing and whatever it's trying to do, it's doing it very well. It's almost like they've trapped the true essence of French Extremism, set it on fire, and followed it with a steady cam.

The camera work in this is surreal and its movements, along with the actors' choreography, are surprisingly well coordinated for a "write-as-we-go" film.

Climax will make you feel a lot of things and I don't think you're going to like how most of those things feel, but that's exactly what makes Climax a very well executed horrifying experience.
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8/10
Influenced by ...
kosmasp12 February 2019
This is not an easy watch. And while Climax may suggest this to be very sexual or at least sensual, you might be dissapointed if you're looking for that kind of "satisfaction". The choreography of the dancing is really good, the cinematography is something to behold too. If you don't mind long uninterrupted shots that is of course.

This is about addiction, about people driven to go the extra mile and about people hoarded in a secluded location going "nuts" as some might describe it. And as a different reviewer wrote: this is an experience. It will split a lot of people as it did at the various festivals it played. This is not an ordinary movie, but when has Noe done that? So if you are aware of his body of work, you at least know not to expect something "normal". Now some have stated, that if you had experience with certain drugs, you may understand or "enjoy" this experience more than others. I can't talk to that, not having had that experience. I can say though that this is quite rough to watch. Especially when things spiral downwards ...

Still very enticing and tension filled. Technically almost flawless it will depend what you make of the "story" or rather the excuse of one to get the viewer to go on a ... well "trip"!
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6/10
I am not part of the intended audience
christopher-underwood13 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I find that the brutal and garish style of Gasper Noe has little appeal and I have thus far only watched some excerpts and a couple of early shorts. Understanding that this might have a greater appeal, I gave it a watch. The confrontational beginning with unappealing youths was not a promising start and though the subsequent dance routines were impressive I couldn't help feeling that combined with the thunderous 90s dance music accompaniment this was my idea of hell. An hour later into this plotless extravaganza, those same 'dance' routines are replayed as death throes in an, admittedly very well filmed, modern version of Dante's Inferno. There is considerable directorial skill here but clearly I am not part of the intended audience. My only pleasurable moment, ironically, was when the police arrive to poke about the dead bodies and we have an instrumental version of the Rolling Stones, Angie. A moment of bliss amidst a mass of agonised death wish.
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9/10
A disgusting, morally reprehensible piece of insane genius
Bertaut8 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Climax, the latest film from Argentinian-French provocateur Gaspar Noé, is a disturbing, depraved, disgusting, and debauched piece of absolute insane genius that I thoroughly adored from beginning to end, and which I never, ever, want to see again. Lord of the Flies by way of Heronimus Bosch or Zdzislaw Beksinski, Climax is what you might get if you mashed-up Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma (1975), Mother! (2017), and Step Up (2006); a dance movie that morphs into a horror film, which then attempts to show the audience a literal hell on Earth. With Climax, Noe takes the audience and characters further than ever before. Granted, there's nothing here to rival The Butcher's sickening attack on his pregnant wife from Seul contre tous (1998), or the near-unwatchable rape and fire extinguisher scenes from Irréversible (2002). However, whereas those films feature sudden moments of barbaric violence punctuating (relatively) quotidian narratives, in Climax, the oppressive feeling of dread is unrelenting. So even though the acts of violence are not, in themselves, as extreme as some of those in Noé's back-catalogue, the cumulative effect is far worse. Obviously, this makes the film something of an endurance test, even at only 96 minutes, but this is precisely the point - Noé wants the audience to be utterly exhausted by the end, and he employs numerous confrontational and disorientating techniques to achieve such.

Set in the winter of 1996, and allegedly based on a real incident in France that year, the film focuses on a dance troupe putting the finishing touches to a performance before embarking on a national tour, to be followed by a series of dates in the US. Apart from the opening shot, and a couple of quick shots towards the end, the entire film is set in the rehearsal space; an isolated and unoccupied hall. Upon finishing rehearsals, the troupe starts to party, as we primarily follow Selva (Sofia Boutella), the group's choreographer. As the night wears on, it becomes apparent that one of their members has spiked the sangria with powerful LSD, with each of the troupe descending into their own personal Hades of paranoia, aggression, and/or uninhibited sexuality.

In lieu of any kind of title card or opening credits, Climax begins with an abstract and non-descript shot of pure white. So visually indeterminate is the image (it could literally be anything) that at the screening I attended, most people (myself included) didn't even realise the film had begun. It is only as a girl staggers into shot from the top of the frame that it becomes apparent we are looking directly downwards onto a snowfield. The girl is in great distress, leaving a trail of blood in her wake. After a moment, she collapses onto the snow, her body convulsing, unable to go any further. The camera then revolves upwards along the vertical-axis through 360 degrees, a shot anyone familiar with Noé's work will immediately recognise. Revealing the bare branches of a few nearby threadbare trees, the movement immediately establishes that we are in an isolated location in the dead of winter. By the time the frame returns to its starting position, the girl's struggles have fashioned a hideously disproportioned and asymmetrical red-tinted snow angel. Theoretically, this could be the cliched opening scene to any generic slasher movie. However, the striking composition and the economy with which the shot conveys so much information serve to betray the fact that this is not the work of an anonymous journeyman for hire, but is instead the meticulously composed opening salvo of an auteur who knows precisely what he's doing.

A moment later, the entire closing credits roll (upwards, obviously), right to the copyright information. With no closing credits at the end, the audience is allowed no transition from the film to reality. As the film ended, the lights immediately popped on, with no music to play us out, no darkened theatre to recompose ourselves. Indeed, to enhance the sense of discombobulation for which Noé is obviously striving, the last 15 minutes or so of the film are literally upside-down. The audience is thus placed in the same position as the characters - the absence of closing credits and the inverted image create a sense of confusion and discomfort, just as the film is depicting the surviving dancers coming out of their drug-induced mania and back to the real world. As he attempts to do throughout the film, Noé places the audience directly into the psychological reality of the characters.

After the opening scene, the film then cuts to a TV screen showing the dancers' audition interviews, which do a terrific job of establishing the differing characters, as do the dialogue scenes after the rehearsal but before the LSD has kicked in. The third scene is the dance number, which is easily the best dance sequence I've ever seen on film. Shot in a continuous 20 minute take, this grants the scene a sense of real-time immediacy and in-camera verisimilitude which one can usually only acquire from a live performance - this isn't something constructed by an editor from a series of individual set-ups, this is something literally happening before our eyes.

Thus ends the first section of the film. The second, and much shorter, section is the dancers engaged in conversation with one another (and, in contrast to the first section, is made up of a multitude of edits eschewing any sense of match-cutting). The third, and longest, section sees them realise the sangria is spiked, attempt to find out who did it, and the chaos that ensues when the drugs take hold. These three sections (dance, conversations, and drugs) roughly correspond to the three books of the Divina Commedia - Paradiso, Purgatorio, and Inferno. However, in the poem, the order is Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso, charting the ascension of the soul from the Inferno of Hades to the Paradiso of heaven. In the film, the movement is in the opposite direction, as the Paradiso of the harmonious and unified perfection in the dance sequence gives way to the calm Purgatorio after the consumption of the LSD, but before it has taken over their reason. Finally, they descend to the Inferno. In charting this allegorical journey, one of the most immediately interesting things is the obvious visual contrast to the dance sequence. Whilst the dance sees the group acting in unison, all of a single mind, the third section of the film shows them fragmented and in disarray, each individual driving towards their own purpose, whether it be paranoia, hedonism, or what they believe they need to do to survive. The harmony of the troupe has given way to the horror of individualised disintegration and psychological collapse.

We then witness a girl's head being set on fire, a pregnant girl being kicked repeatedly in the stomach, a girl slashing her own arm and face, a contortionist contorting to the point where he literally splinters his own bones, a child locked in a room full of cockroaches, a man scratching his chest to the point that it turns into four red bloody streaks, public urination, lesbian rape, incest, and suicide. As the veneer of civilisation is stripped away, the characters devolve before our eyes; some become concerned only with sex, others with violence.

It would certainly be easy to dismiss Climax as thematically empty, arguing that the brilliant camerawork and pumping soundtrack serve only to cover up the vapidity at its core, to argue that the depravity and excess is not in the service of any grand universal point, but simply to show attractive young people tearing one another apart. However, there is some kind of political point buried beneath the carnage; the dance sequence takes place in front of a massive French flag, whilst the credits declare, "A French Film. And proud of it." Perhaps related to this, the troupe is made up of a cross-section of Europeans, and in the explosion of excess hedonism and hysterical mayhem, does this cross-section of ethnicities, genders, and sexual orientations come to represent European multiculturalism tearing itself apart? Is Noé saying that if France continues to accommodate such a diversity of disparate cultures, chaos will ensue?

In relation to this, perhaps tellingly, Omar (Adrien Sissoko), the person who is initially blamed for spiking the sangria, is Muslim. So, is Noé saying that in such a multicultural milieu, with fear of Islam at a high, it's very easy to blame everything on the Islamic "Other". Additionally, Noé depicts the dance scene with such reverence and awe that this kind of social critique, barely straddling the line between patriotism and xenophobia, doesn't seem to sit especially comfortably. Not to mention that Noé himself is an immigrant - he was born in Argentina, moving to France when he was 13.

The fact is, I don't have a clue what Climax is about. Nor do I care. Nor is it important. I take it for what it appears on the surface; an incredibly technically proficient depiction of a contemporary Inferno, as aesthetically impressive as it is morally questionable, as enthralling as it is disturbing, a film of unparalleled barbarism, that also stands as one of the most extraordinary cinematic achievements in recent years. It's a work of genius. Twisted, sick, depraved genius, but genius nonetheless. It disturbed me like no film in at least a decade, and I couldn't get it out of my head for days afterwards. I absolutely loved every single crazy minute of it. And I don't ever wish to see it again.
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7/10
This is a sick movie
maurilad8229 January 2021
The first part of the movie is made by beautiful dancing scenes, the music is spot on. The second part of the movie is a 45 minutes of pure madness. Mind you, this is not a movie for everyone.
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9/10
This is not a movie to watch, this is an experience to have
baba-jo6 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Well, if you are going to watch a gaspar noe movie you should know what you are going to experience; search Gaspar Noe. But this movie will probably be the most popular Noe movie among popular culture or social media or whatever. So, this is a warning for those who haven't watched a noe flm before. This is not a familiar movie for you, do not expect to see a convenient work of art.

Yet, this is an experience for you to must have. Perfect side of "cinema" to create different perspective. Do not care about plot, do not care about subtle messages. Just use your eyes, try not the think about what you see. What you are going to see is an experience through the eyes of a phantom among dancers. Phantom is there, phantom sees what they see, feels what they feel, even drinks what they drink. So, you are going to completely involve in, engage in the movie.

After the movie you may like it or not, you may even hate it. But the "ride" you will have will be a lifetime experience from movies you have watched or will possibly watch.
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7/10
Weak 3.5 // Mostly succeeds as viscera
ccamp896 April 2019
As an exercise in pure viscera, Argentine provocateur Gaspar Noé mostly pleases with Climax. A group of dancers unknowingly drink spiked sangria which slowly warps their afterparty into an LSD-soaked nightmare. With a premise like that, it may be evident that this is a film meant to be experienced rather than thought about. The pleasures of Climax come nearly entirely from its sheer audiovisual power: the ceaselessly pulsating score, the fluid one-shot takes, the lurid colors. It's closer to performance art than what most people would characterize as a "movie" and should be approached with that mindset if you're to enjoy it. However, as enjoyable as its best sequences are, the lack of nearly any thematic depth imbues much of the film with a subtly nagging tediousness. And even when viewed purely from an experiential perspective, it is far from watertight in its pacing and flow. Still, there is a cumulative power in its sound, visuals, and theatrics that's hard to deny.

Weak 3.5/5
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10/10
Not For Everyone
allaman-george5 January 2020
Warning: Spoilers
At last I have to review this film. Let me start by saying that it is the most engrossing film I have ever seen. I saw Noe's "Enter the Void" and I've seen plenty of disturbing films, but none quite as raw as this. I thought I could never watch this again, after the first viewing, but I love the opening dance scene so much (I've watched it at least a dozen times and it never gets old) that recently again I was compelled to watch to the end with my jaw on the floor. It was as insanely gripping as the first time.

I judge films primarily by how well they allow me to suspend disbelief. "Climax" - after the puzzling but still disturbing opening scene before credits - starts a little banal, straight up interviews with dancers, predictable questions, mostly predictable answers, but stay with it because it is integral to how the film develops. Then at about 9m is the amazing dance scene. My son is a break dancer so I love this kind of dance. The dance is quintessentially French - unrefined, raw, sexy, chaotic, dirty, sweaty, unbelievably talented. The whole film has that French feel to it - the women don't give a damn and are all the sexier for it. Only Ebert's review notes that this entire 6 minute dance sequence is shot in one take, no cuts to make it more energetic. It is quite energetic enough. But this is an important distinction. This film was made with uncompromising devotion.

By this time I adore all the dancers, but now we hear them talking to each other privately and revealing shocking attitudes that they usually keep private. There is no filter here and no moral compunction. I start to lose my affection for most of them, but now they are human, not just dancing paragons. I also start to get sucked in and forget I am sitting in darkness watching a film. By the time "something is kicking in" I am completely lost in the film, no trace of disbelief, and I remain rapt until last frame.

I did a lot of acid back in the 60's and had some really bad trips but none this bad because I did not overdose. How do you behave when you are completely disoriented, terrified, and confused? The worst in you sometimes comes out. There are scenes where a character sees another character in severe physical and/or emotional distress but the watcher simply cannot handle it and moves on. Sober, any of them would have stopped to sympathize and help, but not in this hellish dystopia. They have lost all ability to connect cause with effect.

I've been there. A bad trip is as ugly as it gets, and this film portrays it perfectly. I can completely understand if a viewer who has never tripped doesn't get it, but I do, and I think I am Noe's target audience. Still, the educated viewer who can't appreciate the attention to detail about the bad trip can appreciate the detail and love with which this film was shot, and the talent of the dancers.

I felt that most reviews I read missed the point. This is not a film to be analyzed. It is not aimed at the left cortex. Observations about the camera work and acting are helpful but don't address the end effect the film has on the watcher. Bottom line: how did it make you feel? For me - severely disturbed, captivated, grief-filled, horrified, sad. To me that is the mark of a great film.

Other reviewers praise Sofia Boutella, who is amazing, but I think Romain Guillermic steals the show. There are scenes where those eyebrows are positively evil and sexy at the same time. But it is hard to pick a favorite, they are all so remarkable in this film.

Do I recommend it? I don't know. Noe is known for disturbing films and they are not for everybody. I hope you will watch it simply because something crafted this beautifully deserves to be appreciated.
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7/10
Well-made, but utterly pointless
rdoyle292 November 2022
A French dance troupe's party is wrecked when someone spikes their sangria with LSD.

This is a really well-made film. The visual style will be really familiar to anyone who's seen a Gaspar Noé film. Lots of long long long takes and bright colours and twirling, tumbling cameras.

There are two group dance sequences in this film. They are both utterly phenomenal ... the best thing that this film has to offer,

Noé seems to have never taken LSD, or really know much of anything about it.

I don't find this film to be shocking. Noé kind of lacks the courage of his convictions here. There's a lot of hypothetically shocking stuff in this film, but most of it happens off screen. The last part of this film is mostly people writhing and screaming.

This got old for me pretty fast. About the third time we were following someone down the long green hallway while people screamed in the background, I suspected that there wasn't really going to be any point to this.

I was right. At best, this is a really trite version of "Irreversible".

It's still well-made with a phenomenal soundtrack.
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3/10
Was hoping for much more
Silent_Rocco30 November 2018
CLIMAX or how long can you stand watching boring dancers and average at best actors pretend to be on drugs? Zero story, lots of screaming, no surprises. I'd even say this film is pretty tame (for Noé). And it's neither radical nor inventive anymore to simply turn the camera upside down or to show the end credits first. Apart from big respect for some well done one-shot moments, I'm quite disappointed.
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10/10
An Unique Experience
PatricioM1630 September 2019
Before people start screaming about how in Noe's other films some themes are explored better or he handles some techniques the best , this is the first time I've seen one of his films, and it gave me an emotion no other movie (or real life event, for that matter) had ever given me before. Never in my life have I hated so much experiencing something I adored with a passion. And that's Climax. I never want to see it again, and that's surprising, because I never had a problem handling dark themes or gore in films, but this was something else. So anxiety-inducing, so claustrophobic; it made me feel trapped and I enjoyed every second of it. It is a crime this movie did not get at least nominated for best cinematography at the Academy Awards, because the way the camera is handled is superb.
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6/10
experimental French dance party
SnoopyStyle4 February 2021
A group of dancers has a party in an empty school. Things turn bad when their punch gets spiked. I love the energy of the dancers. There is great exuberance and they dance with abandon. It took about fifteen minutes before I realized that the movie isn't cutting. I assumed it for the rest of the movie and then it changed again. I wish they go for broke and do the movie in one take.

It's hard to concentrate on any main character. Sofia Boutella is probably the only noteworthy actor. Some of the others could do more. It's the filming style. They're not allowed to hold the screen and being non-actors, they can't grab it for themselves. Maybe they are better off as an amorphous mob. Again, that would work better as a single take.
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1/10
This is people on acid?
finn30819 May 2019
More like bath salts or flakka. Seems odd everyone's base reaction was violent from taking LSD. Wouldn't some people be happy? Realized? Want to talk about metaphysics?
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9/10
An intense, exhilarating, exciting and terrifying experience.
james-re25 June 2018
I always feel excited and a little bit anxious watching a new film by French director Gaspar Noe. His past films have have included the controversial "Irreversible" known for its unflinching and brutal portrayal of sexual violence, the mind bending and psychedelic trip that is "Enter the Void" and the erotic drama "Love" which features unsimulated sex presented in 3D. Noe is pushing the limits for not only what Is allowed to be shown in a film but also for what the film medium is capabale of. Unconventional narrative structures, mind bending visuals and camera angles you wouldn't even dream of. These are just a few things that can be found in his films.

I am happy to say that Climax may be Noe's tamest film in terms of its sex and violence. And I am very excited to say that it may also be the best film he has made yet. I feel that it's best to know as little as possible about the film before seeing it to have the best possible experience. What I will say though is that the film grips you from the start, and only tightens that grip throughout the running time. The film makes use of one location and one situation and one set of characters to put you in the moment. The excitement and exuberance that you feel during the first dance sequence which is shot entirely in one take will change and evolve throughout the film into sequences that are much more frightening and intense. Go along for the ride though because it is a unique work of filmmaking worth seeing in a cinema and if you hold on tight, you may experience something that is close to an outer body experience.
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7/10
Good movie but not HORROR!
bilaltat25 December 2019
This is a very brutal movie. A very good interpretation of drug usage. Especially, the dancing scenes are hypnotizing cinematography is marvelous and coreographs are really good but i watched this movie as a horror movie but it is not so don't do that if you want to watch.
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8/10
An earnestly disturbing, finely executed second half is worth the wait
I_Ailurophile1 October 2022
I've seen enough movies from A24 to place great trust in any films they're involved in producing or distributing. To date I've seen only a couple of filmmaker Gaspar Noé's other movies; I thought 'Irreversible' was good, if broadly too unremarkable and specifically too sadistic, while I found 'Enter the void' to be dull overindulgence - a good idea for a short film that was erroneously expanded to almost three hours. I'll watch almost anything, however, and I strive to find the value that anyone has to offer, so given an enticing premise for 'Climax,' how could I refuse? It takes awhile for its worth to present itself, but when all is said and done, the profit here as a viewer is well worth the price of admission, and this is easily the best of Noé's films I've seen so far.

It's worth observing that as the picture first begins, the first impression it makes is unfortunately a bad one. Whoever was responsible for designing the subtitles in 'Climax' should reexamine their choice in careers, for the text built into the feature is so ridiculously small that I think only those with eyesight that's far better than average have a real chance of catching every word. In fairness, this stylistic decision may have been deliberate, for ultimately the characters and dialogue are mostly superfluous. This is a movie that is, specifically, very visual in nature, and the details of who characters are or what they're saying to one another don't matter a whole lot. On the other hand, given that these two aspects were accordingly improvised by the largely non-professional cast, given free reign to create as they would, it seems a disservice to them to have so heavily deemphasized the work they put in. I don't necessarily like the choices they made as such, but I admire the approach and the effort all the same, and it's a pity all this was downplayed so much. To speak off the cuff, right away, about the subtitles may superficially seem like nitpicking, but in this instance I feel like it's surprisingly revealing, one way or another.

Put these revelations aside, and there's a great deal to like about 'Climax.' At its best Benoît Debie's cinematography, and Noé's direction from a standpoint of arranging shots and scenes, is utterly brilliant and inspired. The long shots, tracking shots, freely moving cameras, and unconventional angles are all fantastic. I love the art direction, the costume design, the hair and makeup work, and the use of lighting. Not least with an ensemble predominantly comprised of dancers, the artistry and physical prowess the cast demonstrates with their improvised moves is extraordinary - a real treat; would that we'd gotten still more. Moreover, as the course of events takes a turn, the cast demonstrate a marvelous fierceness in their acting that's delicious; Sofia Boutella is the one person here who is at all familiar to me, but as fine an actor as she is, in 'Climax' she's hardly alone. Even the manner in which the credits are displayed are unorthodox, but inventive and enticing in its own right. And it should be said - the music assembled for the soundtrack is fabulous, rich and invigorating, adding tremendously to the somewhat delirious viewing experience.

With all this having been said, there's a decided lack of narrative in the feature, but nor does it especially need any. The premise quite speaks for itself - a dance rehearsal that devolves into a nightmare with the addition of spiked drinks - and all the details that round out the content appear to have been conjured on the spot between Noé and his cast. My commendations to them all, for while the film is split into discrete halves, and the first is troubled from a standpoint of attaining and sustaining viewer engagement, the second half handily compensates for it. As 'Climax' takes a turn, and the characters all experience meltdowns, the resulting portraiture is pointedly unsettling if not altogether disturbing. The cast spiritedly embrace the madness, and those fundamental elements of film-making that already impressed in their own right are likewise employed to ever more imaginative ends, amplifying the genuine sense of horror that arises from the grim tableau. This neatly fits the bill as psychological horror, only, it's atypically unbothered about how the breakdown is depicted.

The greatest fault of Noé's movie is the considerable imbalance. That the full second half of 'Climax' is so good is wonderful; that it is necessary to pick up so much slack from the first half is frustrating. The poorly designed subtitles are especially notable given the wealth of early dialogue and character development that is later dispensed with entirely. The dancers get their time to shine both as non-professional actors and with their chief skill set; would that we'd have gotten more of the latter, and less of those bits which are all but entirely discounted. The first 45 minutes or so come off as a bit of a slog, requiring patience, and not particularly demanding active engagement (or even discouraging it). Again - all congratulations for what is done well here, but the unevenness is a glaring flaw that nonetheless detracts from the whole.

Still, much more so than not, I find myself thoroughly entertained and invested, and the payoff is worthwhile. Where 'Irreversible' and 'Enter the void' both failed to earn my favor in various ways, with 'Climax' Noé unquestionably illustrates the ingenuity as a filmmaker and a storyteller that in my mind at last makes him worthy of his reputation. Hereafter I hope to watch more of his pictures, and I hope he impresses elsewhere in his oeuvre. Even if not, though, this one title already feels like a diamond mined from less than shimmery environs. Characterized by stupendous camerawork, superb contributions from the cast, and a sincerely disquieting prolonged "narrative" peak, 'Climax' is an excellent, absorbing slice of underhanded horror that deserves more recognition.
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7/10
Not bad, but not impressive either
anavu25 November 2018
Pros: Amazing choreography. The opening scene really got me (as did the intro credits roll part). Very good acting, and a creative use of camera. Loved the first act of the movie.

Cons: A story with no conclusion. The "brave" use of camera was kind of overemphasized to the point where it got exhausting. Reveal of who was guilty of pouring LSD in Sangria gave us no satisfaction, no conclusion, and the movie takes such a big curve in the second act, that everything that happened in the first act is utterly meaningless.
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9/10
Not a fun movie, but awe inspiring nonetheless
hannah-mae9110 October 2019
This is the first movie I've ever watched that almost made me physically ill. It's nihilistic, ugly, erotic, and so devoid of humanity I almost screamed partway through the 40+ minute shot just to get some of the feelings out.

At the same time it's a beautiful tour de force with the most visceral dance sequences on film. There are moments of shocking beauty within the chaos. And, most surprisingly of all, it somehow manages to avoid exploitation in any form.

This is my first - and probably last - Noe film. I have purposefully chosen not to watch Noe before now. Noe is who Lars Von Trier wishes he could be: dark, subversive, and shocking to the core without cheap gimmicks or an ego visible in every frame. Noe sees brutality and finds beauty, not just because of but in spite of.

This isn't a fun movie. If you're unsure if you should watch it, don't. And if you do, watch it sober and with something light as an immediate chaser.
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6/10
Gaspard Noé : his best and worst
aydarnicolas20 July 2019
After an incredible 20 minutes opening, Gaspard Noé seems to be himself and put a movie that could be a masterpiece into a boring provocative piece of art. By the half of the movie, you won't discover anything you already seen in Gaspard Noé's movies. Still, the filming of dance and the idea that dance is art language is interesting.
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3/10
I give it 3 stars for the dancing
shannonlong63611 March 2021
The only good thing about this movie was the dancing. Literally, everything else about it is annoying. It's actually really boring. It has no plot and no point. The dialogue is puerile, at best, and you can't possibly empathize with the characters. If this is your first introduction to Noe, you'll likely never feel the need to watch any of his other films.
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9/10
Bonkers
kim_smoltz9 March 2019
"Climax" is less of a film than it is a visceral experience, and that will immediately turn off a good population of moviegoers who will invariable dismiss it as "artsy garbage." If you're one of these people who can't stand films made by "artsy" directors, what are you even doing going to see a Gaspar Noé movie?

But whew. If you appreciate film or dance, you are going to be blown away by this masterpiece. This is "Step Up" on crack cocaine.

A group of young people who subscribe to an underground dance culture meet for a three-day weekend of intense rehearsal. On the final night, during their closing party, someone spikes the sangria, and well....best not to say much more.

The first 45-60 minutes of the film are made up of impeccably choreographed dance sequences that had my eyes glued to the screen like I had just rail-lined a bunch of Ritalin. Some may call this "boring" but I found it to be electrifying and mesmerizing. The music in the film is constant, like you're watching it in a nightclub instead of a theater. Electronic powerhouses such as Thomas Bangalter, Giorgio Moroder, and Aphex Twin contribute to the dazzling soundtrack. After the first dance sequence, which lasts about 10-15 minutes, I wanted to stand up and applaud. Then I forgot that I was in a movie theater.

I especially enjoyed the cast of characters, which reminded me so much of my days doing musical theater in high school. If you've done performing arts in either high school or college, you will appreciate "Climax" on an entirely different level. The awkward politics of being in such a troupe come out in full force -- while everyone is generally nice to one another, rivalries and furious envy exist in the shadows, in addition to cutthroat attitudes and the occasional best friend / power couple dynamic. When things go wrong after the sangria is spiked, these politics are blown up into a larger than life spectacle. It was a neurotic joy to watch unfold.

And boy do things get wild. The key theme once the action begins is pure, unadulterated panic. Gaspar Noé's trademark direction brings us back to the chaotic, irregularly lit sequences seen in "Irreversible." The action is so dense. Some keep dancing. Some commit acts of violence. Some have passionate sex on the dance floor. Your eyes and senses are overwhelmed and you have no idea where to look, until a fast camera pan takes you to a completely different part of the room.

Speaking of which, the cinematography is top notch (although that's a running theme in Noé's repertoire). You've got all kinds of shots here -- dutch angles, long cuts that contribute to the chaos, even slow inversions that make you feel as if you are in a fun house at the Jersey Shore. It's incredibly disorienting, nauseating, and a whole lot of fun.

While watching, I also noticed a lot of similarities to Aronofsky's "Black Swan." If you enjoyed that one, definitely check out "Climax."

The ending of the film seems less complete than it should, but it's really no big deal, and does not spoil or ruin the rest of the film.

This is one roller coaster I'd happily ride again, and I'd say it is destined to become a midnight cult classic. Keep on dancing.
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6/10
Not Much Story, But Those Visuals...
annablair-1919123 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Climax locks a bunch of young dancers in a school at night, drugs them with spiked sangria, and watches them slowly lose their minds. That's pretty much all one can say without giving away the hallucinatory horrors that await anyone who decides to watch this movie.

At first, the film was so sexualized that it seemed to be building into some gigantic group orgy or something. Much to my surprise, it goes the complete opposite direction and goes into full-on nightmarish horror land where people are locked outside in the freezing snow, women are forced to miscarry, fights break out, children are electrocuted, and people's hair catches on fire.

The real star of the film is the cinematography. Bathed in colored lights, Climax is told within a series of just a few seemingly unbroken shots, giving the film a dreamlike and claustrophobic feeling. The work here is truly a marvel.

Climax is more endurance test and experience than your usual film and it's certainly one I won't forget. I don't know if I have any great desire to watch it again anytime soon, but it'll stick with me I'm sure.
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1/10
So pretentious it made me write a review after soooo long
noizy29014 May 2019
So I get the premise because I've seen many of of Noe but this was just was too pretentious and trying to neglect character building with the justification of artistry... Dancers aka bad actors(so much overacting here) taking acid and freaking out in a bad trip....Oh and quirky lighting and rotating camera angles that's all. Supposedly an experience rather than a movie but believe me Noe and sooo many others have done so much better at delivering an experience rather than some dark lighting and the classic upside down camera... It would've been better if he just gave some E or acid to the actors and just observe and tape the reactions. Concluding, an pretentious avant garde art experience (whoever has had a fair share of art and experimental cinema will know that it doesn't deserve that title) that doesn't even deliver at least that experience while failing in all the rest. And do some research on drugs next time
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10/10
Horror art at its best
pjtrekker10 July 2019
Don't listen to the negative reviews. Poole who didn't like it don't understand psychology or art. This is one of the best if not the best psychologically disturbing movies I've ever seen. It is a visual feast. The long tracking shots have never been done like this before. It's a complete descent into madness. I can't wait to wAtch it again.
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6/10
It's about the behavior of these people. It's not about a story.
xxxxxdarkmoon22 April 2020
A party with a lot of dancing people (because it is a dancing group) alcohol and drug abuse cliches. That's pretty much the story of the film. I have to admit, the 2nd time I watched it, it was better. I think, this movie is not about the story, which is predictable, this movie is more about observing these people, and how they behave. And this is done pretty well. Therefore it deserves a 6-star rating but not higher.
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