When Night Is Falling -1995- Official

For younger viewers discovering it today, what shocks is not the sex—which is remarkably chaste by modern standards—but the joy . There is no homophobic violence, no deathbed goodbye, no obligatory apology. There is only the terrifying, glorious business of two women choosing each other against the weight of a world that says no.

What follows is not a coming-out story. Camille knows what she feels. The drama is not discovery but surrender —to desire, to the body, and to the terrifying freedom of falling in love. Rozema, who wrote, directed, and edited the film, had already announced herself as a singular voice with I’ve Heard the Mermaids Singing (1987). With When Night Is Falling , she pushes further into the dreamlike. The film is drenched in metaphor: water as rebirth, fire as passion, ice as repression. Cinematographer Douglas Koch bathes the screen in deep blues and warm ambers, turning Toronto into a city of perpetual twilight—a liminal space where rules loosen. when night is falling -1995-

The film’s climax is not a tragedy, not a sacrifice, not a suicide. It is a choice. Camille strips off her academic robes, abandons a competition speech on “Order and Meaning,” and runs to the circus—literally joining Petra’s troupe. The final image: Camille, suspended on a trapeze, reaching for Petra’s hand. Fall or fly? The film leaves us hanging, smiling, in the purest kind of suspense. In the three decades since When Night Is Falling ’s release, LGBTQ+ cinema has flourished— Carol (2015), Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2019), The Half of It (2020). Yet Rozema’s film remains distinct. It refuses miserabilism. It refuses to explain lesbian desire to a straight audience. It trusts its images, its silences, its bodies. For younger viewers discovering it today, what shocks