Les Filles ne savent pas nager (2000)
Facts
| Directed by | Anne-Sophie Birot |
| Cast | Isild Le Besco, Karen Alyx, Pascale Bussières, Pascal Elso, Marie Rivière and Sandrine Blancke |
| Theatrical Release | October 18, 2000 |
| Buy this item ... | 2 new from $22.87 |
About Les Filles ne savent pas nager
Girls Can't Swim is a bracing trip into the exciting and brutal adolescence of two French girls. Gwen (Isild Le Besco) is dismayed that her best friend Lise (Karen Alyx) can't join her for their usual joint summer vacation. Fed up with her bickering parents--in particular her erratic, hard-drinking father--Gwen seeks solace in the arms of local boys. But what Lise hasn't told Gwen is that she can't come to the coast because her estranged father has just died in a car accident. Though he hasn't been part of her family for many years, his death sends Lise's mother into a nervous breakdown. Lise finally runs away to see Gwen, but they've become so out of synch that the collision of their heightened emotions leads to disaster. Like Life Is Sweet or The Dreamlife of Angels, Girls Can't Swim creates a sad and vivid portrait of an intimate friendship going wrong. --Bret Fetzer Amazon.com
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Another overrated, underachieving, unimpressive French film |
To explain my statement about stereotypical French films, the movies in question consistently consist of stilted arthouse drama with unlikable characters who do not have much use for the concept of understatement or indoor voice, whose lives are always immersed in melodrama, whether or not circumstances warrant it. These films also do not seem to place much value in pacing, and indeed regard a slow and plodding progression as an indication of depth and thought, even if such elements are not evident. Something else that seems troubling about this kind of French film (if not the culture itself) is the seemingly nonchalant attitude about physical coercion in sexual encounters. In more than one interview, Gerard Depardieu has cavalierly waxed nostalgic about participating in gang rapes during his teen years. Correspondingly, this film has more than one occasion of where a teenage girl is assaulted, and in each case the matter is regarded with minor (if any) attention at best.
There is also the inveterately disfunctional interactions between all parties in this film, as is so common. As it turns out, hardly of the characters are particularly likable or sympathetic. The father was conveyed as a marginally sympathetic character at the end, until his encounter with Lise. One thing I will give the French credit for is that they do not feel compelled towards using formulaic, predictable happy endings.
Aside from this, the title has an apt metaphor in the plot that has been mentioned in other reviews. However, I was not very impressed with the film, for the plodding execution and other reasons listed. I didn't think the movie was completely terrible, but I also think it wasn't very strong (barely 2 stars). Additionally, both the film's synopsis and several other sources are guilty of misleading descriptions regarding the so-called erotic/sensual nature of the girls' relationship. If this is why you are renting it, you will be very disappointed. Otherwise, if you are an unremitting Francophile or praiser of foreign films, you will find some excuse to laud this film, if for no other reason than your need to.
April 18, 2007
| One of the better French films I've seen |
charlie67@earthlink.net March 9, 2006
| waste of time |
| Irritating and unorigional |
Le Besco was either shown with an extremely obnoxous smile plastered on her face, or she was smacking her friends or family in a 'hissy fit of rage'. These tantrums always ended with Gwen running off to the sea with all the grace of a three-legged moose. What made LeBesco's performance stand out even more was the fact that everyone else's performances were nearly flawless.
This film was recommended to me after purchasing 'L'Effrontee', a truly marvelous picture. While watching the first 30 minutes of 'Girl's Can't Swim' I could see that I was not the only person who admired 'L'Effontee's' subtle brilliance. Obviously the director and/or screenwriter of 'Girl's Cant' Swim' intended on building upon the other film's message, but as a lark, they subtracted all of its poignance and sensitivity.
I give the film 2 out of 5 because, despite its flaws, it is still superior to the vast majority of 'toejam' that hollywood produces each year. January 14, 2005
| Superficial |
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