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Romance
Overlook Pick

Romance

Love is desolate. Romance is temporary. Sex is forever.
55
User Score306 ratings
TMDB 5.516+19991h 39mFrench
DramaRomance

Synopsis

Frustrated by the lack of intimacy in her relationship, a young schoolteacher goes through a series of intimidating and often violent sexual partners.

Director
Catherine BreillatFrom TMDB credits
Studio
CB Films3 production companies
Release
April 14, 1999Released
Box Office
$4MBudget $3M

Top Cast

8 of 24
Caroline Ducey
Caroline Ducey
Marie
Sagamore Stévenin
Sagamore Stévenin
Paul
François Berléand
François Berléand
Robert
Rocco Siffredi
Rocco Siffredi
Paolo
Reza Habouhossein
Man on stairs
Ashley Wanninger
Ashley Wanninger
Ashley
Emma Colberti
Emma Colberti
Charlotte
Fabien de Jomaron
Claude

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
Martin Oaks
Jun 30, 2026

**Sex, power and the mind** Marie is a young schoolteacher mired in a deep emotional crisis caused by the physical rejection of her boyfriend, Paul, who consistently refuses to have sex with her. Desperate to experience desire and validate her own sexual identity, Marie makes the radical decision to separate love from sex; she embarks on a journey of extreme carnal exploration involving casual encounters with strangers, one-night stands, and acts of submission with an older man. This quest forces her to confront the limits of her own body, pleasure, and autonomy within an environment shaped by the male gaze. *Romance* (also known as *Romance X*) breaks completely away from conventional erotic drama, standing instead as a raw, bold philosophical manifesto on female bodily autonomy. Catherine Breillat subverts the rules of commercial erotic cinema by filming sex in a way that provokes discomfort, thereby inviting intellectual reflection. The film’s strength lies in how it places Marie’s desire at the absolute center of the narrative, stripping male characters of their traditional role as conquerors and laying bare their own insecurities and limitations. By explicitly fusing real sex with—perhaps overly—introspective internal monologues, Breillat successfully unites the purely carnal with the psychological. This approach demystifies the traditional romantic ideal imposed by social conventions—the notion that love and sex must always go hand in hand for a woman’s intellectual fulfillment. This entire thesis is anchored by the magnetic, unflinching performance of Caroline Ducey, who commits both her body and her talent to a highly complex role.

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