2015 Bluray Exclusive: Love
The disc’s lack of extras feels like a dare. Its pristine picture quality leaves nowhere to hide. Its audio track is a masterclass in hostile sound design. Love on Blu-ray is the closest you can get to having Gaspar Noé sit on your couch, whisper “sex is sad” in your ear, and then refuse to leave.
Moreover, Noé's humanistic approach eschews facile moralizing or didacticism, presenting his characters as flawed and inherently contradictory beings. Emma and Jacques are neither likable nor unlikable; they simply exist, navigated by frailties, anxieties, and longings. Their relationships, marked by interstices of cruelty, affection, and ambivalence, undermine traditional romantic tropes, subverting expectations of what love ought to look like. Love 2015 Bluray
Love on Blu-ray isn’t for everyone. It’s confrontational, melancholic, and deliberately uncomfortable. But for those who appreciate film as a full-body experience — not just storytelling — this disc is a . Watch it alone. Watch it at night. And don’t skip the closing credits, where Noé hides a final, devastating image. The disc’s lack of extras feels like a dare
Gaspar Noé described Love as a "scream of joy and pain." To hear that scream without compression artifacts, you need the disc. Do not let this title fade into digital limbo. Love on Blu-ray is the closest you can