Film Review
For her first feature, Lola Doillon offers a nuanced portrait of
adolescence that is every bit as authentic and skilfully composed as
those which her father Jacques delivered in the course of his long and
distinguished career. The language may have evolved
somewhat since Doillon père's early coming-of-ages film dramas,
today's teenagers may be less inhibited than previous generations and
the means by which they communicate may be very different, but the
feelings, the desires and the crises remain the same. Even if you
cannot understand a word of what the characters are saying (and the
latest mutation of teen street argot presents a challenge for the most
fluent of French speakers), you know exactly what they are going
through, as the combined onslaught of rampaging hormones and peer
pressure make the acquisition of carnal knowledge objective numero
uno.
Et toi t'es sur qui?
avoids the tacky vulgarity of the American teen comedy which it
superficially resembles and offers a far deeper and more perceptive
analysis of adolescent sexual awakening. Doillon's
light-touch direction and a smattering of well-judged humour do not
obscure the seriousness of the underlying issues,
but these certainly add to the film's appeal.
Lola Doillon excels on both the writing and directing fronts, showing
as much imagination and flair in the latter as she does insight and
compassion in the former. By allowing her cast of predominantly
non-professional actors to improvise and adapt the dialogue to their
own way of speaking, she achieves a keen-edged naturalism which makes
it easy for an audience of any age group to empathise with the
characters. Of her likeable and remarkably talented young actors,
only Christa Theret (playing the sexy but slightly scary Goth Julie)
had any prior acting experience - she had previously appeared in
Costa-Gavras'
Le Couperet (2005). By
contrast, Nicolas Schweri had no thought of starting a career as an
actor and only went for a screen-test after being persuaded to do so
when the casting director spotted him one day in the Paris
Métro.
There may be a lack of experience on the acting front, but there is
certainly no lack of talent and we can expect at least some of the
debutant thesps to get back in front of the camera and possibly forge a
successful acting career. Not only are all of the characters
well-drawn and well-delineated, they are convincingly played and compel
us to take a non-judgemental interest in their chaotic adolescent
lives, even the bed-hopping teen-Casanova Nicolas, who manages to be
both sickeningly cute and deliciously vile in equal
measure. If there is one stand out performance it has to be
that of Lucie Desclozeaux - she conveys most vividly the brutal angst
of adolescence, in particular the difficulty of sifting real feelings
from spurious desires.
Et toi t'es sur qui? is modern
cinema at its best - an authentic slice-of-life that is both profound
and engaging, crafted with intelligence and genuine
feeling. It is an auspicious debut for a young filmmaker
who clearly has no intention of being daunted by her father's
reputation. If this is anything to go by, Lola Doillon will have
no difficulty winning for herself the mantle of
grand auteur and making her mark on
French cinema.
© James Travers 2011
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Film Synopsis
One summer, 15-year-old Elodie and her best friend Julie make up their
minds to sleep with a boy for the first time. Julie, a Goth
nicknamed Batman by her classmates, has no qualms over who she goes to
bed with, but the more sensitive Elodie hankers after the school beau
Kevin, who has absolutely no interest in her. During a work
placement, Julie gives herself to a boy named Vincent, a meaningless
liaison which serves merely to pressurise Elodie into throwing herself
at the nearest available guy. The nearest available guy turns out
to be Nicolas, a cocky Don Juan-type who is well on his way to bedding
the entire female half of his class. Elodie's passionless fumble
with Nicolas serves at least one purpose, to make her aware of her
feelings for Vincent...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.