Black Moon (1975) 🎯 Ad-Free
: Critics have interpreted the film as a tale of adolescent transformation, with snakes appearing throughout to symbolize the shedding of skin as Lily moves from childhood toward womanhood.
Upon its release, Black Moon was a "challenging anomaly" that deeply divided critics.
Often described as an apocalyptic reimagining of Alice in Wonderland , the film trades traditional narrative logic for "magical logic". Black Moon (1975)
: Lily encounters an elderly woman (Therese Giehse in her final film role) and a pair of unusually close siblings played by Joe Dallesandro and Alexandra Stewart. Themes and Interpretations
: Lily arrives at Le Coual , a bucolic estate in Quercy, France, which functions as a surreal, dystopian sanctuary away from the warring factions of men and women. : Critics have interpreted the film as a
Directed by Louis Malle, is a surrealist, avant-garde fantasy that serves as a cinematic daydream. Shot by renowned cinematographer Sven Nykvist, the film follows Lily (played by Cathryn Harrison) as she flees a global conflict—a literal "war of the sexes"—and finds refuge in a remote country estate. A Dystopian "Alice in Wonderland"
: Famous critic Pauline Kael dismissed it as "deadly" and "witless," arguing that Malle was too "sane" a director to successfully execute such a "crazy" film. : Lily encounters an elderly woman (Therese Giehse
: The estate is populated by bizarre inhabitants, including talking animals, oversized engorged beasts, and a "stubby unicorn".