After the firebomb that was Baise-moi, Virginie Despentes’ adaptation of her controversial novel.
Gloria is 40. With no job, no family, no fixed address, she spends her time boozing in her local bar in Nancy. Frances is 40. A primetime TV presenter living in Paris, she’s married to successful novelist Claude. Behind closed doors, Frances sleeps with women, and Claude with men. In public, they’re the perfect couple.
Back in the 80s, Gloria and Frances met in a psychiatric hospital and ran away together. Back then they loved each other the way you love at 16: intense, wild. Sex, drugs and punk rock. Then life pushed them apart. Frances left Gloria – her first true love, her first broken heart. Now, twenty years later, their paths are about to cross again. –Wild Bunch
Virginie Despentes (born June 13, 1969 Nancy, Meurthe-et-Moselle) is a French writer, novelist and filmmaker.
She settled in Lyon, where she worked multiple odd jobs; including maid, prostitute in “massage parlors” and peep shows, recorded store sales, and a freelance rock journalist and pornographic film critic.
She moved to Paris. Her novel Les Jolies choses, was adapted for the screen in 2001, by Gilles Paquet-Brenner, with Marion Cotillard and Stomy Bugsy in the lead roles. The film was awarded the Michel d’Ornano prize, at the 2001 Deauville Festival.
In 2000, she directed her first film adapted from one of her novels, Baise-moi, working with Coralie Trinh Thi, Raphaela Anderson and Karen Lancaume as the protagonists. Her controversial novel is a contemporary example of the exploitation films genre known as rape and revenge films.
From 2004 to 2005, she tried a form of writing at the intersection of diaries and journalism, a blog post on which she documents… read more