Wild Camp
Wild Camp
| 13 October 2005 (USA)
Wild Camp Trailers

A tranquil campground in rural France is the backdrop for this erotic sizzler between beautiful teenager Camille and down on his luck ex con, Blaise. Fresh out of prison, Blaise accepts a job as sailing instructor at the camp. Haunted by violent nightmares and reminded daily of his estranged wife and children, Blaise tries mightily to resist Camille’s charms. But the girl’s spontaneity and nubile sexuality awaken Blaise’s own repressed capacity for life.

Reviews
Stoutor It's not great by any means, but it's a pretty good movie that didn't leave me filled with regret for investing time in it.
Fairaher The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Roy Hart If you're interested in the topic at hand, you should just watch it and judge yourself because the reviews have gone very biased by people that didn't even watch it and just hate (or love) the creator. I liked it, it was well written, narrated, and directed and it was about a topic that interests me.
Ginger Very good movie overall, highly recommended. Most of the negative reviews don't have any merit and are all pollitically based. Give this movie a chance at least, and it might give you a different perspective.
Ronald Feichtmeir I humbly write my first review here on IMDb. I like this film. I'm not sure if the tone of the film, which I find slightly comical, and slightly mocking, transitions well into the darker last act.Denis Lavant is wonderful in this. He's got this pockmarked straight-faced look on his face, like he's going to play it cool, but wanders himself into worry without expecting anyone to notice. There's something harmless and good about him. He's got the physicality and body frame of a 15 year old acrobat, (and something of that spirit too) and like in his other films he expresses so much idiosyncratic personality through physicality.Islid Le Besco is radiant and beautiful. In her quieter moments, because of how she's shot I suppose, she looks like some 17th century painting of a young woman, a sad classical beauty if you will, transformed from a pouty teenager. (See A Tout de Suite for an even finer performance.) I think that's partly what's going on in this film. She likes being looked at. She wants to be immortalized. And he knows that everybody looks at him with disdain. What a lovable schlub.What an odd and interesting pairing of Le Besco (who's taller and sexy and much younger) with Lavant who acts like a furrowed Buster Keaton. There's interest and energy in seeing Lavant stick up for Le Besco in a rather steely noble way, (she's delighted,) and take her sailing, with a crew of student sailors humorously watching their flirtation as if it's elevated on a stage.I like the setting, a lake resort for camping families. It's colorful, with colorful extras peeking around corners, and warmer in palette, more in the sense of a summer idle than a lurid thriller. There are small details of environment I like: a perfect late evening cloudbank on the distant horizon, or Islid Le Besco being fetching and half nude next to ominous green waves as Lavant, treelike, looks on. I suppose its sincere, (or slightly funny) if a little shop worn, and an excuse for archetype and fantasy.The story ultimately follows perhaps the requisite of its genre. There could have been a more interesting, if mundane, development of the story into its final 30 minutes, and yet it still works for me since I'm interested in the actors, and I circle around them, and so does the film with a modicum of energy and style. In its final camera take I reflect that I'm glad Lavant and Le Besco make movies. I'm better off for it.
lazarillo This is a pretty stereotypical French movie in a lot of ways. It takes place entirely in a holiday camp (the French always seem to be on vacation in their movies). It also involves a middle-age man having a torrid affair with a sexy teenage girl. They call these May-December affairs in the English-speaking world, but with the French it might be more April-December (or maybe late March) as the characters, and sometimes the actresses as well, often seem to be a little shy of eighteen.To his credit, Dennis Lavant does not look to be in December of his years (early October maybe) and, unlike with some French films, it's not completely inconceivable that a bored teenage girl camping with here parents could fall for him, and even leave her more age-appropriate boyfriend. Of course, his character is also a paroled convict, married with children, and working at the camp for his brother-in-law. Pretty much everyone objects to the affair--the brother-in-law, the girl's parents, her friends, the other camp employees--but the two simply cannot resist each other. It's good old French amour fou, but it turns out to eventually be a VERY extreme case of it, and the film eventually becomes more than a little implausible.Lavant is the more famous actor here, but mention should also be made of his co-star, Isilde LeBesco. Yes, she is kind of ordinary looking in the face. Yes, she's not terribly convincing as a 17-year-old. But she has one of the most incredible natural bodies I've ever seen and she ALWAYS shows it off in every movie she's in. Besides, she's certainly not a bad actress, and being from a more permissive country with no Hollywood reputation to protect, she takes on some interesting, if not always successful (or particularly believable)roles. She's one of a long line of French actresses, who are simply more sexy and uninhibited on the screen than the vast majority of their Hollywood peers. This is easily the worst movie of hers I've seen, but she and Dennis Lavant do manage to rise above the ho-hum material to make it marginally worthwhile.
madcardinal The photo on the DVD case may lead you to believe "Camping Sauvage" is an erotic masterpiece. Unfortunately, it falls far short of that. First, Isilde Le Besco looks too old to authentically portray a nubile nymph, and her acting in this film is uninspired at best. Also, there's the mystifying question of why she's attracted to the nearly anorexic, homely ex-con - simply because he's in close proximity? That's not a very compelling motivation. I don't remember seeing a news story about all French women suddenly developing persistent problems with their vision, so we're left with an inexplicable attraction. Second, the tone and atmosphere of this movie are so arid emotionally and spiritually, the viewer simply has no reason to care about the characters or their actions. It's like you're watching a bunch of insects performing a random dance in an utterly meaningless, godless universe. Well my question is, why should I care? The three stars are for the attempt to make a frank and forthright film about this provocative subject matter.
Alex Caulfield I went to see this for Denis Lavant's face. He's up there with Kinski in my book in terms of a poetic cinematic visage. Anything he's in is worth watching based on this virtue alone.Good directors know how to work with this and can make the movie be very rewarding. But unfortunately, there is nothing special here. The focus is on the character and the story. So we have a series of medium shots all throughout. This is a sad shame. He seems to know this. He locks his jaw with less vigor, and there is no pursing of the lips.Notice the way he looks when in jeans. Lavant is the only 40-something man who can pull this off. I believe it's a posture problem. He has the frame of a 15 year old, but his mannerisms are those of an adult. Carax worked with this by making him wear those tattered baggy pants.Lavant apart, this is a very good example of how not to make a movie. It lacks form. It might as well have remained the newspaper clipping it was inspired by. In fact, it seems like they took the journalistic approach: factual and logical. Not cinema.Also, they quote his limp from _Lovers On the Bridge_ here, for the finale. Cheap shot. But it made me very happy.