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Water Drops on Burning Rocks

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Water Drops on Burning Rocks

In 1970s Germany, Leopold, a 50-year-old businessman, picks up and seduces 20-year old Franz, who swiftly moves into his bachelor pad. Their cozy relationship soon sours as Leopold turns cranky and argumentative. When Franz's buxom blond girlfriend surfaces, and then Leopold's elegant and enigmatic ex, things get funnier, steamier and a lot more complicated.

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Release : 2000
Rating : 6.7
Studio : Fidélité Productions,  Les Films Alain Sarde,  Studio Images 6, 
Crew : Production Design,  Set Decoration, 
Cast : Bernard Giraudeau Malik Zidi Ludivine Sagnier Anna Thomson
Genre : Drama Comedy Romance

Cast List

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Reviews

VeteranLight
2018/08/30

I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.

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Senteur
2018/08/30

As somebody who had not heard any of this before, it became a curious phenomenon to sit and watch a film and slowly have the realities begin to click into place.

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Zlatica
2018/08/30

One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.

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Dana
2018/08/30

An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.

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valis1949
2009/02/13

WATER DROPS ON BURNING ROCKS is a scathing satire on the serendipity of Desire. Ozon filters his observations through the prism of Time and Sexual Genre. Act I begins with two inappropriately aged men who grapple with an almost laughable seduction. Later, there are references to their earlier lives, and projections to their future. By the end of the play, Women are introduced. Sexual identity takes a backseat to the object of their collective longings and passions. Not a single frame of the film leaves the confines of this trendy 70s bachelor pad, and the costumes are a real trip. And, the short dance number near the middle of the film is worth the price of admission. If you like a dialog driven film which examines the unpredictable nature of Eros, this might be the film for you.

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netwallah
2006/06/03

Ozon made this film from an early play by Fassbinder. It's an intense and claustrophobic love story—the whole thing happens inside an apartment—in Germany in the 1970s. Ozon divides it into acts, the first of which shows Léopold (Bernard Giraudeau), a handsome and assertive businessman in his 50s, talking to a young man, Franz (Malik Zidi). The conversation becomes a seduction, and they go to bed, enacting a dream Franz had, an enactment that recurs several times, with variations. Then they've been lovers for months, and though the affection and attraction persists, there's a destructive element in Léopold that shows up as restless discontent and mean-spirited bickering. Nothing Franz does is right, and though he wants to leave he is still in love. While Léopold is away on a business trip Franz's old girlfriend Anna (Ludivine Sagnier) shows up, and she brings some sunlight into the dark rooms of the flat, with her beauty, her optimism, her loving plans for a future with Franz, her joy in lovemaking—as well as the fact that she opens the curtains. Franz almost stops moping, but then Léopold returns. The movie almost descends into farce as Anna finds Léopold attractive, and then Léopold's former girlfriend Vera (Anna Thomson) arrives. When Léopold proposes a menage à quatre, the girls run giggling to the bedroom, but lags behind, telling Léopold, "You don't need me." He answers, "But you need me." As Léopold and Anna have some vigorous sex, Vera steals away, feeling superfluous, and she sits beside Franz on the floor and tells him her story. Nothing, not even a sex change, was enough to maintain Léopold's desire, and though he abandoned her and treated cruelly then and now, she says "I'm his creature." Franz, too, is his creature, and he's dying—he's taken poison. Weirdly, he calls his mother and has a brief, matter-of-fact conversation letting her know what's happening, and then he dies. Léopold seems just as unperturbed, and goes back to bed with the weeping Anna. Vera tries to open the apartment window but it's stuck. We see her standing, head down, weeping, her hands pressed against the glass as if trying to escape a trap.Although much of it is dark, the colours and photography are impressive, as is the acting of all four characters. Giraudeau delivers a fine mixture of sleekness, power, affection, and selfishness, while Zidi's part is also a mixture—of a kind of neo-existentialist disaffection (he likes to say things don't mean much to him), innocence, and injured affection. Thomson is surprisingly powerful in her one big scene, when Vera tells Franz her story. Sagnier is quite wonderful, very young-looking, fresh, with that husky voice and that gorgeous body Ozon loves to film. While there's no graphic representation of sex acts here, there's a lot of sex, mostly as it begins but also one or two brief scenes in the process.Over all, the movie appears to be a story of the heartlessness and destruction at the core of some relationships, or at the core of some people it is dangerous to love at the same time that it is impossible not to love them. Very sad.

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gradyharp
2005/08/25

François Ozon has flair and style ('Swimming Pool', 'Under the Sand', '8 Women', etc) and in scripting Rainer Fassbinder's 1970s play 'Gouttes d'eau sur pierres brûlantes' for the screen he has created an edgy, fun, and poignant examination of the lives of four people at their intersection.Act I (for that is the way the film is laid out in homage to Fassbinder's play): 50-year-old Léopold (Bernard Giraudeau) is entertaining 19-year-old Franz (Malik Zidi), who he has picked up in a bar, with sharp repartees about his past loves and is sparred by Franz relating his current affair with the young and beautiful Anna (Ludivine Sagnier). The conversation gradually gets around to seduction and both Léopold and Franz happily reenact each other's physical fantasies. Act II: some months later and Franz has moved in with Léopold becoming the devoted housewife in lederhosen to Léopold's increasingly cranky self. They argue, threaten, but eventually succumb to the safety of the boudoir to settle differences. Act III: Léopold's ex lover Vera (Anna Levine) arrives at the door to find Léopold in a new life and departs brokenhearted. Anna likewise arrives during one of Léopold's absences and for two days Franz and Anna try to recapture their previous affair. Upon Léopold's return, Anna finds Léopold appealing and behaves seductively. Vera arrives, reports that she is a transsexual now in a female form, and Léopold is delighted with the idea of a ménage a quarte. But it is Franz who has found his true life and love and how he deals with the proposed turn of events forms the rather surprising end to this film.Each of the four actors is excellent and Ozon paces them well. There are some really fine moments, as when Franz reclines in his bath quoting Heine's poem 'Lorelei' revealing how far more penetrating the changes in his vision of his life really have become, when Ozon improves on Fassbinder. Not a great movie but a bit of the different that spices movie viewing. Grady Harp

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flowerboy
2005/07/13

From the very first act, when this creepy 50 year old is doing circles around this boy he's picked, leisurely seducing him, I was hooked to the movie. The next act, when the boy's turned into his slave, groaned in recognition of a situation that's all so real and all too horrible. I just preyed the director wouldn't show the boy being physically beaten. The entry of the girlfriend, after which the two of them make a plan to escape brought a release in tension for a fraction of a second, but I knew it was too good to be true and doubted whether our boy would really manage to escape. The orgy is scene is all too real too, with the young girl thrilled at the bizarre situation she's in and dying for some adventure. I think it was all quite real and I identified with every situation, though I wish I didn't because it just goes to show how evil I am myself!

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