Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

La Petite Morte

2003 Canadian film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

La Petite Morte is a 2003[1] Canadian documentary directed by Emmanuelle Schick Garcia about the pornography business in France, centering on the interviews of Raffaela Anderson,[2] John B. Root and others. It won three film festival awards for Best Documentary and one nomination for Best Documentary.[citation needed]

Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...

The title is a reference to "la petite mort", Gallic slang for "the little death", an idiom and euphemism for orgasm.[3]

Remove ads

Background

Shick Garcia stated the purpose of this documentary was to portray a humane look at people involved with the porn industry.[2] She spent seven months researching for the film, including performing interviews, watching films, and reading about the pornography industry.[1]

Interviewees

Interviewees include Raffaëla Anderson, Fred Coppula,[3] Brigitte Lahaie, Clara Morgane, Francis Mischkind, Oceane, and John B. Root. During the interview Anderson talks with Shick Garcia about many subjects revolving around pornography like rape, incest and suicide.[3]

Reception

Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "Both Schick and Anderson have too much contempt for porn, its makers and its audience for their tedious film to have much significance."[4]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads