It was entered into the 15th Berlin International Film Festival[1] where it received an honorable mention for the FIPRESCI Prize.
[3][4] Keve is a successful film director who lives with his beautiful wife, Ann-Marie, and their daughter, Nina, in the Kåseberga area in Skåne.
As he prepares to shoot a new film, he channels his frustrations into an affair with a married woman.
In June of the same year it was presented in competition at the Berlin Film Festival.
[4] In 1972, The Guardian's Derek Malcolm wrote: "Love 65 now seems to stand uncomfortably between the raw realism of 'Raven's End' and the evocative lyricism of 'Elvira Madigan'".