Climax movie review & film summary (2019)
Jessica Hardy
Updated on March 08, 2026
But it's alive and well in “Climax," the latest from French cinema's bad boy, Gaspar Noé. The first dance sequence in “Climax" is so electrifying it took me a while to realize it plays out in one long take. Apparently based on a true story, "Climax" takes place in 1996, when a dance troupe holes up in a community center on the eve of an American tour. Most of the kids in the troupe have never been outside of France (as they admit in their taped audition interviews). They're talented club kids, a diverse multicultural group, wrenched out of the ordinary because what they can do is so extraordinary.
In the first dance sequence, with house music throbbing so loud it obliterates thought, the dancers prowl in their own zones, but there's an organizing principle to their movements as a group. Together, they're a writhing multi-tentacled beast. One after the other, each dancer comes to the front to flaunt their specialty: voguing, contortion, krumping. It's exuberant chaos, but chaos contained in a form where everyone can shine. For the majority of the first dance, Noé keeps his camera stationary, with occasional almost imperceptible zooms in (cinematography by the gifted Benoît Debie). Eventually, and suddenly, the camera moves forward and then way up, until we're pinned on the ceiling, looking down on the dancers, calling to mind Busby Berkeley's overhead shots of kaleidoscope formations. We get to know each dancer without dialogue, we can distinguish each one (the voguing brunette, the contortionist kid in a track suit, the undulating sexy blonde). The sequence is hypnotic, their collective high is so pure.
That high turns dark, and with Noé dark is really dark. The troupe mills around in the common room and Noé drops in on conversations. You put together who's who, the power struggles, the drugs, the sex people are having or want to have. One dancer says, out of nowhere, "I don't dig the vibe in this group" and as the sequence moves on you can see what she is talking about. Everyone drinks from a punch bowl of sangria, and Noé's camera swirls among them, floating, or crawling along the floor, sometimes turning upside down. These drifting, swirling moves are one of his signatures as a filmmaker, pushed to its most extreme in 2009's "Enter the Void", but it’s way "out there" in "Climax" too. Soon, it's obvious that someone has spiked the sangria with acid. Horror dawns, then fury, and then all hell breaks loose. What was once collective energy fragments, and they turn on each other, wracked by hallucinations and paranoia. The second half of "Climax" is an unholy mix of Lord of the Flies and an Agatha Christie novel. The group morphs into a vigilante mob, determined to sniff out "whodunit," pointing fingers at those who didn't partake, throwing a Muslim dancer out into the blizzard, locking the door behind him.