Other Name -dorcel- -2024- - By Any

Critics within the adult industry praised the film’s pacing, though some mainstream reviewers (in outlets like Le Monde and Variety , who have begun covering high-end erotica) noted that the film’s middle third sags slightly under the weight of its own philosophical ambitions. One recurring critique: the final act, where the masks are removed and the couple must reconcile their fantasy with reality, feels rushed. The film offers a neat, romantic resolution—a newlywed-like re-commitment—that some viewers felt betrayed the darker, more ambiguous questions the first two acts raised.

The film’s narrative centers on two primary protagonists: (played by a striking newcomer, credited as Alix Castel ), a sharp, observant literature professor in her late 30s, and Raphael ( Raphael Lafont ), a charismatic but emotionally guarded gallery owner. They have been married for a decade. The marriage, outwardly perfect, is internally sterile—a museum of curated affection rather than a living, breathing passion. By Any Other Name -DORCEL- -2024-

By Any Other Name is ultimately a film about the fragility of long-term desire. Its thesis is quietly radical: that we may need fictions—masks, aliases, roles—to access the most authentic parts of ourselves. The rose, regardless of its name, does indeed smell sweet. But the film adds a crucial corollary: sometimes, to smell the rose anew, we must pretend we have never seen it before. Critics within the adult industry praised the film’s

Unlike a standard gonzo production, By Any Other Name is a slow-burn psychodrama wrapped in the opulent trappings of bourgeois decadence. It is not merely about sex; it is about the architecture of desire—the unspoken rules, the power of a glance, and the eventual, inevitable collapse of restraint. The film’s narrative centers on two primary protagonists:

By Any Other Name (Dorcel, 2024): A Rose of Desire in a Garden of Power Director: Luca De Sade (as credited) Studio: Dorcel (Marc Dorcel)