Love Strange Love 1982 May 2026

The film’s legacy—and its major point of contention—is its depiction of a child’s sexual initiation at the hands of adult women. While Khouri’s intent is clearly to critique a corrupt, patriarchal system (the absent politician, the commodified women, the disposable boy), the camera’s lingering gaze on the 12-year-old actor is deeply problematic. No matter the artistic framing, you are watching a minor in simulated sexual situations. For many viewers, this will be an insurmountable barrier, rendering the film's themes exploitative regardless of intent.

Vera Fischer as Laura is a revelation. She moves between maternal warmth and predatory hunger with a fragility that is genuinely unnerving. Her performance refuses to let the audience settle on her as either a victim or a villain. She is simply a product of her own cage. The infamous scenes of sensuality are not played for titillation but for discomfort, emphasizing the power imbalance and the boy’s confused, non-verbal reactions. love strange love 1982

An adult man (José Lewgoy) finds himself inexplicably drawn back to a lavish, decaying mansion. As he crosses the threshold, the film plunges into a prolonged flashback. It is 1937, during the Estado Novo dictatorship. He is a 12-year-old boy (Marcelo Ribeiro) sent from an orphanage to live in the opulent but emotionally sterile home of a powerful politician's mistress, Laura (Vera Fischer). There, in a gilded cage of bored, wealthy women, the boy becomes a silent observer—and eventual participant—in a web of adult desires, jealousy, and abuse. The film’s legacy—and its major point of contention—is


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:00 AM.