Today, we live in what psychologist Michael Eigen called "the age of swaddling." We are wrapped in layers of smart fabrics, compression leggings, brand-name hoodies, and the digital skin of social media. We have never been more covered, more surveilled, or more alienated from our own flesh.
Do you have a memory of watching this film, or a question about the locations or figures in it? Let the conversation continue. vivre nu. a la recherche du paradis perdu 1993
That is the question Jean-Michel Carré left hanging in the air in 1993. It still hasn't been answered. While never officially released on mainstream streaming platforms (as of 2024), "Vivre nu" occasionally surfaces on European documentary archives (like INA.fr), and dedicated physical media collectors circulate DVD-R copies. English subtitles exist via fan communities. If you find a copy, treat it as the fragile artifact it is—a whisper from a time when people still believed that taking off your clothes might just save your soul. Today, we live in what psychologist Michael Eigen
"Vivre nu" is a pre-internet prophet. It predicted that as we virtualize our lives, we would crave the real. Not the real of consumerism, but the real of a cold wind on a bare shoulder. The real of standing in a field and remembering that beneath your brand labels, you are a mammal. Carré’s genius is that he does not sell you a fantasy. He shows you the cracks. The lonely woman at the dry fountain. The couples who talk about politics while naked. The children who will one day discover shame from the outside world. Let the conversation continue
The answer arrived in 1993 with a quiet, sun-drenched, and profoundly moving film: (Living Naked: In Search of Paradise Lost). Directed by the late Jean-Michel Carré (known for his socio-political documentaries), this film is not a titillating exposé nor a sensationalist freak-show. It is a philosophical road trip across the landscapes of France and Europe, searching for men, women, and families who had decided to shed not just their clothes, but the entire weight of modern civilization.