New Fragrance Review Etat Libre d’Orange Dangerous Complicity- Supercritical Relationships + 10mL Mini Draw

The times are few where my chemistry geek side and my perfume geek side overlap. One of the places has been the existence of the Mane Jungle Essence technology. In a nutshell extremely cold mixtures of liquefied gases, called supercritical fluids, are used to extract a natural substrate at its source. As the fluid warms it reverts to gas and leaves behind the oil with no solvent residue within. Used correctly this should result in cleaner extractions. It is also portable and so can be used right where the plant is growing. I reviewed the first experiment in using this technology which was called Mane Yu. I came away impressed with the technology but felt this first attempt didn’t truly take advantage of it. The Jungle Essence extracts did have a liveliness to them but they didn’t add up to a completely memorable experience for me.

Since then I’ve been looking at the note lists of perfumes looking for the JE attached to the notes to see how this technology would be more broadly applied. When I received the new Etat Libre d’Orange Dangerous Complicity the note list led off with three notes containing the JE initials and I thought this would be a good chance to see this in action. When reading the press materials for Dangerous Complicity I saw that this was a perfume meant to evoke couples who were drawn together but when together they were volatile and dangerous. Think Liz and Dick, Sid and Nancy, Bogart and Bacall, Bonnie and Clyde, or Antony and Cleopatra as examples. This is what happens when passion breeds danger it goes supercritical.

Perfumer Violaine Collas of Mane had access to the Jungle Essence library to choose from and the three notes she chose were rum, ginger, and coconut. These create a pure exotic boozy quality that is recognizable in its shape but with much more clarity and somehow more light in quality, this is especially true of the rum JE. The central note of Dangerous Complicity is osmanthus in all of its gender balancing leather and apricot character. Dangerous Complicity captures all of the turmoil and excitement of a relationship under pressure.

The three Jungle Essence notes at the top of Dangerous Complicity show the process off to great effect. It starts with the rum JE. This note is reminiscent of warming a snifter of five-star rum in my hands and catching whiffs of the rum escaping over the lip. It is full of air and it imparts an ethereal quality to a note that often hangs like a thundercloud over a perfume. Ginger JE smells like a high-performance version of ginger and it roars across the opening moments of Dangerous Complicity like a Formula One racer. Coconut JE adds a bit of exoticism and this smells like a freshly cracked coconut still dewy with the remnants of the milk. The three together get this off to a very nice beginning. The osmanthus takes over in the heart and it is joined by jasmine and ylang-ylang to create the sweet heady floral middle phase. This is where Dangerous Complicity could tilt too much to the floral but Mme Collas accentuates the leathery fruity quality of the osmanthus and that keeps the jasmine and ylang-ylang under control. The base transitions to sandalwood hitched to patchouli and cashmere woods.

Dangerous Complicity has all-day longevity and average sillage.

Mme Collas has shown me that the Jungle Essence technique can create notes which allow for her to create different, yet familiar, combinations within a fragrance. Unlike my experience with Mane Yu this time Dangerous Complicity feels like it comes together very nicely to create an olfactory statement. While I don’t think it is as volatile a coupling as the couples that inspired it there is a pairing of the old and the new and in that there is always a bit of heat to be found.

Disclosure: This review was based on a press ample provided by Etat Libre d’Orange PR.

Thanks to Etat Libre d’Orange we have a 10mL mini of Dangerous Complicity to giveaway. To be eligible leave comment naming your favorite supercritical (tempestuous) couple. We will draw one winner on August 12, 2012 via random.org.

We announce the winners only on site and on our Facebook page, so Like Cafleurebon and use our RSS option…or your dream prize will be just spilled perfume.

-Mark Behnke, Managing Editor

Editor’s note: For a review of the other new Etat Libre d’Orange The Afternoon of a Faun check out my colleague Tama Blough’s review at this link.

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71 comments

  • This is going to be pretty cheesy and typical, but for me it would have to be Romeo and Juliet, although they are fictional. I don’t think anyone could argue that they aren’t the ultimate supercritical couple.

  • Does the early tempestousness of June Carter and Johnny Cash count? Either way, I REALLY hope I get a chance to try this one…wow!

  • I’m going to stick with what I grew up with, so my favourite ‘dangerous’ couple is going to be Justin Timberlake and Britney Spears. It was such a bitter break-up when it eventually happened, and even to this day, I don’t think neither of them have let the whole thing go. They both wrote songs about each other and the interviews and tears went on and on for years.

    Thanks for the draw!

  • I have to go with Taylor/Burton too. They were SO glamorous, so scandalous, so romantic …

    thank you for the draw!

  • Janet in California says:

    Eleanor of Aquitaine and Henry the II.

    Dangerous Complicity sounds interesting. Rum and coconut have been my favorite drink this summer!

  • Sounds like a must try perfume Thanks for explaining the mane technology it’s fascinating
    I think Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love were a really dangereous couple
    For glamor Ava Gardner and frank Sinatra
    In the perfume world Coco Chanel and the nazi baron Hans Gunther von Dincklage was the very definition of dangerous complicity

  • Oooh, my favourite tempestous couple is definitely Diego Rivera and Frida Khalo. The glamor, the artistry, the egos, the passion! Oh my!

    Thanks for the draw.

  • The Mane Jungle Essence is very interesting, thanks for explaining it. Hmm.. a supercritical couple, how about the F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, they were a hot mess.

  • Scarlett and Rhett although they are fictional
    In real life Zelda and f Scott Fitzgerald
    Great review … This is now a must try
    Love how your chemistry and perfume geekdom
    came together

  • My favorite tempestuous couple is John Lennon and Yoko Ono. She broke up the Beatles (it was said)!

  • Since tempestuous in real life can be pretty messy, my favourite tempestuous couple are Beatrice and Benedick from Much Ado About Nothing. Close second, Amanda and Elyot from Private Lives.

  • I’ll go with Frida Khalo and Diego Rivera ( loved the Trotski episode, too)
    thanks for the draw

  • marcopietro says:

    Verlaine and Rimbaud. The fragrance sounds fascinating, like its packaging. Thanks for the draw.

  • Mickey Knox and Mallory Knox from Natural Born Killers. A great movie! Need to see it one more time now that I read this article.

    Thanks for the giveaway!

  • Sara Boorman says:

    Bonnie Parker & Clyde Barrow (or fictionally Jimmy & Alison Porter in “look back in anger”)…I love the name of this fragrance!

  • Bonnie and Clyde! Perfectly described in Gainsbourg’s song…
    I find this perfume really interesting and love the reference to Iggy & the Stooges in the press copy.

  • j lo and puff daddy.

    This fragrance sounds really good. The review makes it even more tempting.

  • Oh, let me see…probably Heathcliff and Catherine of Wuthering Heights fame! Thank you for the draw.

  • Love Etat Libre d’ Orange!! I’d say Paris of Troy and Helen is my favorite dangerous couple!

  • Ava Gardner & Frank Sinatra…super chemistry but could not live together. My mom was in show business (ballroom duo) at that time and she witnessed a fight between those two at a night club she was performing at …combustible!!!

  • I don’t think anyone can compare to Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton…they were so much larger than life…

    Thanks for the drawing.

  • Oh my gosh, I love that someone wrote Eleanor of Aquitaine and Henry II! I’ll vote for them too! Thank you for the draw!

  • Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love were the first ones who sprang to mind when reading about these other volatile couples…Marilyn Monroe and Joe DiMaggio were also pretty tempestuous! I don’t really have a favorite because in real life I hate all the drama. But I love drama in perfume! thanks for the draw and the review!

  • I have been intrigued by this latest release. Tempestuous couples. – there are so many. Frank Sinatra and Ava Gardner would be my fave as they exuded glamour. These more modern couples are just bad headlines – Dennis Rodman and Madonna, Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries, Charlie Sheen and anyone.

  • Great article – my choice is two fictional characters, from the 1996 film “Bound” – Corky and Violet. I think their relationship exemplified Dangerous Complicity.

  • From the world of fiction: Scarlett and Rhett.
    From the real world I would name two couples: Liz Taylor & Richard Burton and Marilyn Monroe & Joe DiMaggio.

  • Elphaba and Fiyero, from the book Wicked!
    Their love was really tempestuous and it started bad things.

  • My favorite tempentous couple would have to be Taylor and Burton: the diamonds, the booze, the repeated marriages. This sounds like another winner for Etat Libre d’Orange. I am glad this house is finally being judged on the quality of its perfumes (as it should be) instead of the names and ad copy of their products.

    Perhaps the fact that many bloggers refused to review this brand’s fragrances when they were launched because they felt insulted or offended says more about the age and background of the perfume blogosphere than about Etat Libre d’Orange. Though I haven’t seen them release a fragrance with a provocative name in a while. Perhaps they changed their marketing strategy?

  • I like a few EDLO fragrances especially Fat Electrician ,rien and rossy de Palma . Dangerous Complicity sounds like it could be a perfume I would enjoy
    Katherine Hepburn and spencer Tracy come to mind in real life and on the big screen

  • The Schumanns, Robert and Clara. Tempestuous indeed, and a lot of beautiful music as a result… but much sadness…

    Another one I adore: Bob Dylan + Joan Baez (ducks, runs). Their live recordings together are a hoot!