
Mes nuits sont plus belles que vos jours (1989)
AKA: My Nights Are More Beautiful Than Your Days
Director: Andrzej Zulawski
Genre: Drama, Psychological Drama, Postmodern
Runtime: 110 min
Country: France
Language: French
Subs: Unavailable atm
Color: Color
imdb: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0097872/
Another weird story made by Andrzej Zulawski and my love forever---Sophie Marceau.

This one should be never released in mule till now

The film tells a love story between an ill man, psychologically affected, who is intended to die very soon, and a young and unhappy woman, who plays a clairvoyant in a show. Both are haunted by their past. His illness affects his memory, and in order to remember as many words as possible, he becomes a compulsive talker. She needed an accomplice and a confidant...
Lucas, a computer genius facing an unnamed terminal illness that causes him to lose his memory, meets Blanche, a young woman who seems unable to break free of her vicious environment. The two plunge into a brief but intense affair, understanding that their days together are numbered. This a strangely poetic and powerful film that celebrates love's victory over death and suggests that sentiment has some currency even in a pragmatic world. — Yuri German
The title is taken from the best-selling romantic novel by Rapha雔e Billetdoux (published in English as Night Without Day in 1987) about the three nights spent by a chance couple in a hotel by the sea. However, except the names of the protagonists and the basic plot line, the film doesn't follow the source too closely. The novelist had her name removed from the credits since she felt that the director took too many liberties with her work. Indeed, Andrzej Zulawski is prone to extremes, and there are enough of them in this film: the nymphomaniac mother, homosexual husband, and a ragged bunch of drug addicts, lesbians and other colorful characters yelling at each other in a cloud of cocaine. It seems like they were transposed here from Zulawski's previous picture, L'Amour Braque, and they look strangely out of place in this lyrical and almost meditative film built on a play of words, glances, and faint gestures. It's Jacques Dutronc's outstanding performance that holds the picture together. This role marked his triumphant return after virtually abandoning cinema in the mid-'80s. His character is like a contemporary version of Dostoyevsky's Prince Myshkin, the last romantic hero lost in the labyrinth of the modern world where Blanche becomes his Ariadne with a saving thread. There is some affinity between the doomed protagonist and the director himself — who stubbornly makes highly personal art films in the era of special effects-laden blockbusters. — Yuri German
A film-amoureus never to forget.
This movie has a sad entrance, a sad climax and a sad end, but between it is crazy, it is postmodern-french, it is fabulous and Sophie Marceau is growing bigger here. Sometimes remembered at P. Greenaway, I would see parallels to Damage/Fatale (1992): an interesting erotic drama with some sad moments and good actors especially actresses. Find out, who plays better, J. Binoche (Damage) or S. Marceau here !
Subtítulos en español
Specs:
702.74mb, DIVX5.0, 903kbit/s, 704x480, 29.97fps, MP3, 56kbit/s, 2(stereo), 22.050khz.
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