Film Review
After their successful collaboration on
La Boum (1980) and
La
Boum 2 (1982) debutante actress Sophie Marceau and director
Claude Pinoteau conspired to serve up yet another dollop of low calorie
entertainment for dewy eyed adolescents emerging from the minefield of
puberty into the disaster zone known as adulthood. Wetter
than a monsoon-themed weekend in Brittany,
L'Étudiante is about as
lightweight as a film can be without being composed entirely of
hydrogen molecules. Some may be enthralled by its inoffensive yet
nauseating brand of chick lit style romantic naivety; anyone with any
sense and/or self-respect plus some fleeting knowledge of how things
are in the real world should give it a very wide berth.
© James Travers 2007
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Claude Pinoteau film:
Les Palmes de M. Schutz (1997)
Film Synopsis
Valentine and Edouard have nothing in common, and they could hardly be more
different, but as soon as their paths cross during a skiing holiday they
know they are right for each other. She is a gifted and seriously minded
academic who is about to take her final examinations in a few months' time.
He is a musician who lives only for his art and imagines that one day he
will make his name composing film scores. She has a well-developed
political conscience and cares about the state of the world. He, apparently,
does not. Temperamentally, Valentine and Ned (as he prefers to be called)
could not be more ill-suited, but before they know it they are caught up
in the wildest of whirlwind romances.
It is a measure of the intensity of the lovers' feelings for one another
that recriminations are being hurled back and forth before they have even
had time to settle into any kind of stable relationship. Valentine
resents her lover seeing his ex-wife and previous girlfriends. Ned
takes her to task for an affair she once had with one of her teachers.
Gradually, this slew of petty jealousies does its worst and poisons the relationship.
In the end, Valentine has taken more than she can stand and abruptly brings
an end to the affair so that she can concentrate on her studies. Ned
hasn't given up yet, however, and comes up with a characteristically impulsive
way to win her back...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
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Film Credits
- Director: Claude Pinoteau
- Script: Claude Pinoteau,
Danièle Thompson
- Cinematographer: Yves Rodallec
- Music: Vladimir Cosma
- Cast: Sophie Marceau (Valentine Ezquerra),
Vincent Lindon (Ned),
Élisabeth Vitali (Celine),
Jean-Claude Leguay (Charly),
Elena Pompei (Patricia),
Roberto Attias (Philippe),
Brigitte Chamarande (Claire),
Christian Pereira (Serge),
Beppe Chierici (L'appariteur),
Nathalie Mann (Alexandra),
Anne Macina (Laura),
Janine Souchon (La dame au chien),
Hugues Leforestier (Patron du bouchon),
Marc-André Brunet (Victor),
Guillaume Corea (M. Fortune),
Gilles Gaston-Dreyfus (Pierre),
Benoît Gourley (Frédéric),
François Ozon,
Marie-Christine Barrault (Herself),
Jacques Chancel (Himself)
- Country: France / Italy
- Language: French
- Support: Color
- Runtime: 103 min