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| Index | 11 reviews in total |
26 out of 29 people found the following review useful:
A perceptive, candid and unsentimental look at puberty., 28 December 1999
Author:
Craig Anthony (eyespy233@telstra.com) from Sydney, Australia
This film was made in France in the late 1980s, but it is unimaginable that
it could be made in Hollywood then or now. The US studio mind set sees
adolescence in 'American Pie' terms and the current wave of legislative
hysteria over child porn precludes any thoughtful treatment of how
adolescents deal with their emerging sexuality.
Working outside these constraints in France Catherine Breillat has been
able
to craft a film which is occasionally startlingly frank but never
exploitive. She looks unblinkingly at the unruliness of adolescent sexual
behavior and does not shy away from depicting the protagonist of the title
as part seducer as well as part victim.
Delphine Zentout is sensationally good in depicting a young girl with
rampaging hormones in a hurry to become a woman. She plays her as
unashamedly surly, self absorbed and difficult, without a trace of
cuteness.
This is a film in which every note rings true.
15 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
Transcends the American brat style, 22 March 1999
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Author:
Dennis Littrell (dalittrell@yahoo.com) from SoCal
(Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut
to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it
at Amazon.)
This is a love story off the beaten track clearly in the tradition of
Louis Malle and Francois Truffaut, told without prudishness or
gratuitous violence.
The title refers to a children's dress size that the 14-year-old lead,
Lili, played with snap by Delphine Zentout, is bursting out of. Billed
as a "French Lolita," Zentout is not all that fetching at first glance.
She's a chubbette with light skin and thick black hair and not exactly
pretty. But she has intriguing eyes and a saucy way about her.
Lili is "discovering" her sexuality, but won't let herself be
impregnated. The playboy, played with grace and economy by Jean-Pierre
Leaud, falls in love with her in spite of himself and "tolerates" her
reluctance while being partially satisfied in other ways, one of which
we used to call a "cold f..." They are a believable match because
sexually they are equal: she precocious, he experienced.
Catherine Beillat directs without sentimentality while guiding Zentout
to an interpretation that transcends the American brat style and leads
us to a thoughtful view of feminine sexuality.
9 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Virgin **1/2, 23 February 2006
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Author:
MARIO GAUCI (marrod@melita.com) from Naxxar, Malta
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This earlier film from Breillat is a typically truthful look at a foul-mouthed teenager's quest to lose her virginity; this time, the film's restraint in what it shows is understandable because it is dealing with an under-aged character but the Lolita-esquire aspects of the story (particularly apparent in the girl's love-hate relationship with her older brother's mature friend) are still effectively rendered. The film does not shrink from honing in on what the main character is truly after and ends just a few moments after she succeeds in reaching her goal. It also takes time to show that her parents are helplessly ineffective in containing their reckless daughter and distracting her from her single-minded quest to blossom into a woman before her time.
6 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Worth a look, although Breillat seems limited, 24 December 2005
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Author:
bastard wisher from Hawaii
First off, I've got to say that the DVD of this had quite possibly the worst transfer quality I've ever seen, so undoubtedly this had some kind of effect on my viewing of the film in the long run. But, that said, I thought it was pretty good. I must say though, that Catherine Breillat seems to have a very narrow vision. This really felt in many ways like a warm-up for "Fat Girl!", although I didn't think this was quite as good as that was. It somewhat lacked the extreme dynamics and tension that made that film more riveting. This was actually a bit boring at times, especially toward the beginning. Also, the cinematography was completely unremarkable (again, unlike "Fat Girl!", which used long, uncomfortable single-takes to great effect). And there was really too much pointless talking at times. Still, I wouldn't say that it is a bad film at all, really. It definitely gets better as it goes on. It even began to remind me a little of "Palindromes" at times, especially toward the end. I'd say that Breillat is definitely a good filmmaker, but probably not a great one.
the distractions of puberty, 8 January 2011
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Author:
Michael Neumann from United States
In France a young girl's coming-of-age usually means going topless for the first time on the beach at San Tropez, but the young heroine of Catherine Breillat's semi-autobiographical psycho-drama is no typical teen nymphet, showing more physical and emotional maturity at the tender age of 14 (going on 24) and an instinct for sexual provocation far beyond her actual experience. Lili may look like a sullen, restless, temperamental flirt, but only to men with one thing on their mind, in particular the jaded, aging playboy who pursues her to the bitter end of infatuation. Breillat directs her own script with a cool, clinical detachment, refusing to camouflage the cold mechanics of sex with any bogus soft-focus poetry. But because the film is so confident and impersonal it may be more of a tease than Lili herself, who in the end is only using all the complicated foreplay and frustration to help find a man who might release her from the terrible burden of virginity. C'est la vie.
1 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Stop dribbling on me and go ahead and do it., 17 May 2009
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Author:
lastliberal from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Seeing Hounddog today and the 12-year-old Dakota Fanning, I wanted to
compare it with a French film, specifically a Catherine Breillat film
with a 14-year-old Delphine Zentout in her film debut.
She is unhappy with her parents and bored and determined to lose her
virginity.
She first runs into a middle aged man (Etienne Chicot) who is living
his second childhood with his convertible. She dumps him quickly and
seeks adventure elsewhere.
She next hits on a celebrity (Jean-Pierre Léaud). I found it hard to
believe that he would have a deep conversation with a 14-year-old, but
he did. Of course, she was not old enough to appreciate the advice.
She goes back to the middle aged playboy and strings him along all
night. He comes off as a letch, but ends up just looking pathetic.
They get together again the next day, and this time he has her naked,
but it goes nowhere and he gives up. But, she is determined to rid
herself of her virginity, so she finds a boy her age and does it just
to not be a virgin any longer. It was like washing her hair.
8 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
Fascinating coming of age film, 13 November 2000
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Author:
John Taylor (jdtaylor@btinternet.com) from Bedfordshire, England
36 Fillette or "Virgin" which is the English title, is a film set in France which portrays a couple of days in the life of a 14 year old girl who trying to explore her sexuality for the first time. She meets a play boy who at first she teases and does not want to make love to which enfuriates him but as the film goes on the guy starts to have second thoughts and the tables are turned. While this film is engrossing , and maybe only for voyeuristic reasons ,it does have the problem that most French films do, which is far to much diologue. The acting is a plus point. 6 out of 10.
7 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
Evenings of Cabiria, 11 July 2003
Author:
tedg (tedg@FilmsFolded.com) from Virginia Beach
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Spoilers herein.
In the late seventies, actress/writer Breillat made a film ("Young Girl")
about the nearly
suicidal angst of female sexual discovery/fantasy. It is worth watching for
the raw
honesty, but it misses being a whole film. Five years later, she wrote a
Fellini film, not a
good one. It was during the period where he felt his only true film was
"Nights of
Cabiria." And five years after that, she produced this synthesis of
"Cabiria" and
"Young Girl."
It is still not a complete film. Breillat's of the distinctly French school
who thinks all the
creative work of a film is in thinking it up, in finding that wrinkle in
human emotions in
which to ramble.
I recommend that you stick to the originals rather than spending time with
this
unsuccessful experiment.
Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 4: Has some interesting elements.
3 out of 13 people found the following review useful:
Fractured and incoherent, 6 July 2006
Author:
bruce-129 from Bay Area, CA, USA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
I rented "36 Fillette" on DVD. There was little in the way of
explanation or translation. The opening screen and title were not even
translated, and the picture was fuzzy like a home movie or something,
perhaps purposefully since this was a small family on vacation at the
beach.
The mother father, and their 14 year old daughter, and 16 year old son
rent a trailer at the beach for the summer.
The son and daughter are cooped up like chickens and squabbling
constantly, so immediately both get on your nerves, but mostly the
daughter ... something is just bothering her.
Well, I guess it turns out to be raging hormones. The title someone
said in the American version was "Virgin" and the main goal of this
movie seems to be to get this awful girl laid.
"Lily" does not read, and makes fun of those who do, though she
professed to want to be a writer when she grows up. She disobeys her
parents and bothers her brother constantly, the reason is that she has
raging hormones I suppose.
The movie seems to cover a day or two, and involves Lily going to a
disco with her brother and then dumping him there alone while she goes
off with an "aging playboy" as someone referred to him.
She seems to tease and play games with everyone until they are tired of
it, and at the end she does succeed at fooling a young man into
deflowering her, and then curses at him and goes off on her own ... a
theme in the movie, I walk alone being a song that is played several
times.
What this movie is about or is trying to say I have really no idea.
Perhaps how hard women have it in life, or how hard men have it in life
... could be either. It was hard to watch all of this girls squirming
and tantrums.
One thing is that she was well cast as physically she was a beautiful
Venus type of girl, full-figured and completely un-self-conscious and a
force of nature which nothing can control. But she does not seem to be
any better at the end of the movie or have undergone anything but a
small tear of the hymen in this movie, hardly a dramatic
transformation.
I gave the movie a 4 for its attempt at real life and the guts to show
what it did in the way it did, but I could not recommend it, nor would
I want to see it again, or would I see it if I knew it was going to be
so blah.
0 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
Size 36 (France), 7 October 2006
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Author:
Sherazade from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The title of the film refers to size 36 (girls), the biggest size for dresses sold to young girls in France before they have to start wearing young women clothing. And that's precisely the size of dress our heroine is wearing when we meet her. She is supposed to be in the care of her older brother, but his own sick aspirations get in the way of him being a good role model to her. So one night, our heroine goes to hangout at a hotel's bar where she meets a much older guy who happens to be some sort of a local celebrity. They quickly become friends and it becomes clear sooner than later that he is interested in more that just her brightness and peculiar nature but also what she looks like underneath her clothes. And our dear heroine, an unabashed little girl eager to become the sort of women her brother knocks up and around, attempts to meet him half way but then wants to reconsider at the point of no-return. Apart from the fact that the film is hopelessly dated, it's really really out there and shamelessly unapologetic but hey! it's French what else can you expect?
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