Mauvais Sang Poster

Mauvais Sang

Release Date: 1986-11-26

Rating: ⭐ 7.1/10 (262 votes)

Genres: Romance, Crime, Drama, Science Fiction

Overview: Two aging crooks are given two weeks to repay a debt to a woman named The American. They recruit their recently deceased partner's son to help them break into a laboratory and steal the vaccine against STBO, a sexually transmitted disease that is sweeping the country. It's spread by having sex without emotional involvement, and most of its victims are teenagers who make love out of curiosity rather than commitment.

Production: Soprofilms, Les Films Plain Chant, FR3 Films Production

Official Website

🎭 Top Cast

Juliette Binoche
Juliette Binoche
as Anna
Denis Lavant
Denis Lavant
as Alex
Michel Piccoli
Michel Piccoli
as Marc
Hans Meyer
Hans Meyer
as Hans
Julie Delpy
Julie Delpy
as Lise
Carroll Brooks
Carroll Brooks
as The American

📝 User Reviews

Walruse
⭐ 8/10
Jan 07, 2018

Mauvais Sang is at core a crime movie, but the crime serves only as a skeleton. The flesh is the passion of unrequited love and the cerebral processing of the same. Lise loves Alex who loves Anna that loves Mark. Mark, on the other hand, is afraid of The American Woman who was once lovers with Alex father and who will kill him unless he pays the debts of himself and his companions within two weeks. In the nerve system is the libido at hold as a strange virus affects untruthful lovers, which is also the device that cuts through the entire body of the movie. Finally on the skin is an abnormal heat wave caused by the vicinity of Haley's Comet. It is a full bodied movie, and as French as it is, the performance uses full body language as well. While there are a few exaggerated moments that may not appeal to all audiences, there are others that make well up for them.

griggs79
⭐ 7/10
Mar 26, 2025

_Mauvais Sang_ made me feel cooler just for watching it—like I’d chain-smoked a Gauloises in a neon-lit alley while reciting poetry to nobody in particular. It’s moody, stylish, and occasionally baffling, but there’s real heart pulsing beneath all that noir-drenched angst. I loved Juliette Binoche smouldering on screen, and Julie Delpy has that effortlessly aloof charm that just works. And Dennis Lavant—my god, the man dances. That scene? Electric. I honestly think it should be a law: Lavant must dance in every film. Not just the ones he’s in—every film. The plot wobbles here and there, but the vibes? Impeccable.

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