The film follows a fictional female political journalist (played by a then-unknown Eastern European actress who would later become a Dorcel icon) who is assigned to follow a charismatic but morally ambiguous presidential candidate during a rural electoral tour. As the bus travels through the French countryside, the journalist’s professional camera becomes secondary to her intimate diary—a video journal documenting the private requests, power dynamics, and sexual bargains that occur after the rallies end.
As the bus moves through Champagne and Bourgogne, Clara interviews locals. Each interview turns into a diary entry. There is the farmer’s wife who offers a lesson in "traditional values" (a now-infamous scene involving hay bales). There is the young campaign manager who betrays his girlfriend for a promotion. And there is the rival journalist—a cold, blonde woman who views sex as a currency.
For fans of Marc Dorcel, this is the Citizen Kane of the catalog—flawed, ambitious, and endlessly debated. For newcomers, it is a doorway into understanding how French erotic cinema, at its best, reflects the national obsession with passion, politics, and performance. MARC DORCEL - Journal Intime De Campagne
It asks difficult questions: Is intimacy the last honest transaction in a world of lies? Can a diary be trusted if the writer is also a participant? And does the camera liberate or imprison?
Introduction: The Enigma of the "Campaign Diary" In the vast, glittering, and often controversial history of European adult cinema, few names carry the weight of Marc Dorcel . Often referred to as the "French Connection" of the industry, the brand synonymous with luxury, glamour, and narrative-driven eroticism has produced hundreds of titles. However, among collectors and connoisseurs, one title generates a unique blend of curiosity, political intrigue, and cinematic audacity: "MARC DORCEL - Journal Intime De Campagne" (translated as "Intimate Campaign Diary" ). The film follows a fictional female political journalist
Journal Intime De Campagne is available uncut on the official Dorcel TV platform (age verification required) and via selected Blu-ray imports on Amazon France.
Released during a peak period of Dorcel’s creative output, this film stands apart. It is not merely a series of explicit encounters; it is a socio-political allegory wrapped in the aesthetic of a handheld diary. This article explores the production, thematic depth, critical reception, and lasting legacy of this cult classic. To understand Journal Intime De Campagne , one must first understand the context of its release. The title is a clever double-entendre. In French, "campagne" means both "campaign" (political) and "countryside/rural area." Marc Dorcel famously exploited this duality. Each interview turns into a diary entry
Whether you study it as a piece of history, a relic of censorship battles, or simply a well-lit curiosity, Journal Intime De Campagne remains an unforgettable entry in the adult film canon. It proves that even in a genre built on fantasy, the most intimate diaries often record the harshest realities. ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5) - A political thriller wearing lingerie. Essential for Dorcel completists and students of euro-cult cinema.