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{{Short description|2011 film by Mia Hansen-Løve}} |
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{{Infobox film |
{{Infobox film |
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| name = Goodbye First Love |
| name = Goodbye First Love |
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| image = Un amour de jeunesse.jpg |
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| caption = Theatrical release poster |
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| native_name = {{Infobox name module|fr|Un amour de jeunesse}} |
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| image size = |
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| border = |
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| alt = |
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| caption = |
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| director = [[Mia Hansen-Løve]] |
| director = [[Mia Hansen-Løve]] |
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| screenplay = Mia Hansen-Løve |
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| producer = Phillipe Martin<br>[[David Thion]] |
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| starring = {{Plainlist| |
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| cinematography = Stéphane Fontaine |
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* [[Lola Créton]] |
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| editing = Marion Monnier |
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* [[Sebastian Urzendowsky]] |
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| released = {{Film date|2011|7|6|France}} |
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* Magne-Håvard Brekke |
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* [[Valérie Bonneton]] |
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* [[Serge Renko]] |
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* [[Özay Fecht]] |
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}} |
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| cinematography = [[Stéphane Fontaine]] |
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| editing = [[Marion Monnier]] |
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| studio = {{Plainlist| |
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* Les Films Pelléas |
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* Razor Film |
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* [[Arte France Cinéma]] |
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* [[ZDF]]/[[Arte]] |
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* Rhône-Alpes Cinéma |
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* Jouror Productions |
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}} |
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| distributor = {{Plainlist| |
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* [[Les Films du Losange]] (France) |
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* Peripher Filmverleih (Germany) |
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}} |
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| released = {{Film date|df=y|2011|7|6|France|2012|9|27|Germany}} |
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| runtime = 110 minutes |
| runtime = 110 minutes |
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| country = |
| country = {{Plainlist| |
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* France |
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* Germany |
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}} |
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| language = French |
| language = French |
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| budget = €4 million<ref>{{cite web |
| budget = €4 million<ref>{{cite web|url=https://cineuropa.org/en/newsdetail/150047/|title=Mia Hansen-Love shoots ''Un amour de jeunesse''|website=[[Cineuropa]]|last=Lemercier|first=Fabien|date=6 September 2010|access-date=23 August 2023}}</ref> |
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| gross = $64,925<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jpbox-office.com/fichfilm.php?id=12257|title=Un amour de jeunesse|website=JP's Box-Office|language=fr|access-date=22 July 2021}}</ref> |
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| gross = |
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}} |
}} |
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'''''Goodbye First Love''''' ({{ |
'''''Goodbye First Love''''' ({{langx|fr|Un amour de jeunesse}}) is a 2011 [[romantic drama film]] written and directed by [[Mia Hansen-Løve]].<ref>{{cite book|title=International Film Guide 2012|first=Ian Hayden|last=Smith|year=2012|isbn=978-1908215017|page=120}}</ref> It was selected for the main competition section at the 2011 [[Locarno International Film Festival]]. |
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==Plot== |
==Plot== |
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Camille is 15 years old and passionately in love and lust with her boyfriend Sullivan, who is 19. Sullivan is planning a 10-month trip to South America with his friends. He is not taking Camille with him, which makes her feel insecure and resentful. She irritates Sullivan by repeatedly insisting that he does not love her because he is leaving her. Before Sullivan departs, they spend one last idyllic getaway in Camille's mountain home in the Ardèche. Though the vacation starts off happily, Camille grows unhappy when Sullivan is away too long on an errand and leaves her alone. After a brief fight, they reconcile, and Sullivan promises to always love her. |
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Eventually Sullivan leaves for his trip, leaving Camille despondent. Though Camille regularly receives letters from Sullivan, they eventually take on an unhappy tone; eventually Sullivan reveals that he wants to break off their relationship, and he stops writing. A depressed Camille attempts suicide, but survives, and resolves to move on with her life. |
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Time passes, and Sullivan stops writing. Camille enters in a state of depression and ends up at a hospital after trying to kill herself. But she moves on with her life. In 2003 four years have gone by and Camille is an [[architecture]] student. She has moved on with her life, cut her hair, has a job, and slowly begins to fall in love with her professor Lorenz ([[Magne Håvard-Brekke]]). Camille sees in Lorenz a stable man that has his life sorted out and makes her feel secure. She begins to work for Lorenz and also suffers an abortion. After eight years Camille and Sullivan meet again and she finds herself caught in between her university professor whom she has developed tender feelings for and her first love, whom she has never really forgotten. |
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Four years later, Camille staves off her loneliness with work and school, where she is studying architecture. During her studies, she gradually falls in love with her much older professor Lorenz, in whom she sees a stable and secure influence and intellectual match. Four more years pass, and Camille, now with a career and a relationship with Lorenz, encounters Sullivan's mother by chance and reconnects with her old boyfriend. Coincidentally, on the day she meets with Sullivan and realizes that she is still attracted to him, she suffers a miscarriage. |
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==Analysis== |
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When Lorenz leaves on a work trip, Camille and Sullivan begin an affair and confess that they never stopped loving each other. Consequently, her relationship with Lorenz becomes strained, especially when she secretly plans to take a trip to Sullivan's new home in Marseilles soon after Lorenz's return, under the guise of visiting a friend. However, a strike cancels her train. Though she is disappointed, a nonchalant Sullivan texts her saying that he is working anyway, and they can meet another time. Sometime later, Camille visits her mother, who gives her a letter recently sent by Sullivan. Sullivan writes that he dreamt of her while in bed with someone else, and dreamed that she was pregnant with his child. He says that they must break up because they are too early or too late to try being in love again, that he cannot bear the pain of their love, and that he hopes to find her again in the future. Camille is crushed. |
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The film is the young director's fourth film in a series about love, loss, and the passing of time: Après mûre réflexion (2004), "Tout est pardonné (2007), [[La Père de mes enfants]] (2009), and finally, [[Goodbye First Love]] (2011). There are various themes present throughout the film: the first and foremost is this passing of time, in which everything changes and advances, yet everything still stays the same. In many instances of the film we see the date written or represented, marking a change or a milestone in the life of Camille, or simply a reminder that time is passing and life goes on. Camille is able to orient her life and move on after overcoming and intense coming and going of a first love. Yet, her feelings for him are always present, unconsciously and reflected in her work and her writings. The flowing river is a metaphor, a theory of the greek philosopher [[Heraclitus]]: "You will not bathe twice in the same river." This phrase, tied with the ending song and image of the straw hat, makes for nostalgic and thoughtful personal conclusions about theories that in life everything returns, but at the same time everything moves on. |
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Time passes, and Camille restores her relationship with Lorenz. Back at her mountain home in Ardèche, she invites him to the nearby river, and he tells her that he will meet her there shortly. She brings the hat that Sullivan had bought her for their own getaway years before, but unbeknownst to her as she plays in the river, it blows into the water and floats away as the film ends. |
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Although Camille has established and completed some goals in her life, she still hangs on to Sullivan. When he returns, she is just as attached to him as she was at the beginning of the film. This complexity and mixture of emotions of young love and mature adolescent reasoning is what gives dynamism to the film and attracts viewers because of its proximity to human psycology. |
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==Cast== |
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The film is full of small details open and inviting each viewer to personally interpret and perceive them according to their own life experiences and the theories and thoughts that they can extract from them. |
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*[[Lola Créton]] as Camille |
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*[[Sebastian Urzendowsky]] as Sullivan |
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*Magne-Håvard Brekke as Lorenz |
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*[[Valérie Bonneton]] as Camille's mother |
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*[[Serge Renko]] as Camille's father |
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*[[Özay Fecht]] as Sullivan's mother |
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== |
==Production== |
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"Volver a los 17" by [[Violeta Parra]] <br> |
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"Gracias a la vida" by [[Violeta Parra]] |
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"Little Ticks of Time" by [[Matt McGinn]] |
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"Music for a Found Harmonium" by [[The Penguin Café Orchestra]] |
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"Wasps in the Woodpile" by [[Andrew Cronshaw]] |
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"The Water" by [[Johnny Flynn]] and [[Laura Marling]] |
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==Filming |
===Filming=== |
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[[Lola Créton]] was 16 years old when the film was shot. Director [[Mia Hansen-Løve]] said it was a big deal for Lola to play nude scenes. "But what's amazing is that, when the cameras rolled, she was free and sensuous like a cat. It was as if she was discovering her own sexuality before our eyes, but, as soon as the filming stopped, she'd retreat behind sheets, clothes immediately."<ref>{{cite news |last=Solomons |first=Jason |author-link=Jason Solomons |title=Mia Hansen-Løve: the broken heart that made me a film-maker |newspaper=[[The Observer]] |date=29 April 2012 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2012/apr/29/mia-hansen-love-french-director |access-date=13 February 2022}}</ref> |
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===Music=== |
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[[Ardèche]], France |
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*"Volver a los 17" by [[Violeta Parra]] |
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*"Gracias a la vida" by Violeta Parra |
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*"Little Ticks of Time" by [[Matt McGinn (Scottish songwriter)|Matt McGinn]] |
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*"Music for a Found Harmonium" by [[Penguin Cafe Orchestra]] |
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*"Wasps in the Woodpile" by [[Andrew Cronshaw]] |
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*"The Water" by [[Johnny Flynn (musician)|Johnny Flynn]] and [[Laura Marling]] |
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===Filming locations=== |
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[[Copenhagen]], Denmark |
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*[[Ardèche]], France |
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*[[Copenhagen]], Denmark |
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*[[Dessau]], Saxony-Anhalt, Germany |
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*[[Kastrup]], Amager, Denmark (sea baths) |
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*[[Paris]], France |
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*[[Sanatorium d'Aincourt]], Aincourt, Val-d'Oise, France |
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==Critical response== |
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[[Dessau]], Saxony-Anhalt, Germany |
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On the [[review aggregator]] website [[Rotten Tomatoes]], the film holds an approval rating of 83% based on 54 reviews, with an average rating of 7.3/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "''Goodbye First Love'' captures teen ardor with a patiently naturalistic approach, further proving writer-director Mia Hansen-Løve is a major talent to watch."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/un_amour_de_jeunesse|title=Goodbye First Lo|website=[[Rotten Tomatoes]]|access-date=23 August 2023}}</ref> [[Metacritic]] gives the film a score of 80 out of 100 based on 21 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.metacritic.com/movie/goodbye-first-love|title=Goodbye First Love|website=[[Metacritic]]|access-date=22 July 2021}}</ref> |
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Noel Murray of ''[[The A.V. Club]]'' said that "''Goodbye First Love'' sometimes tells when it should show, and in their younger guises, particularly, Créton and Urzendowsky come off as so self-absorbed that they're almost insufferable".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.avclub.com/goodbye-first-love-1798172459|last=Murray|first=Noel|title=Goodbye First Love|website=[[The A.V. Club]]|date=19 April 2012|access-date=22 July 2021}}</ref> |
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[[Kastrup]], Amager, Denmark (sea baths) |
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Jordan Mintzer of ''[[The Hollywood Reporter]]'' wrote that the film is "[a]n airy yet incisive third feature from French auteur Mia Hansen-Love".<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-reviews/goodbye-first-love-amour-de-208454/|last=Mintzer|first=Jordan|title=Goodbye First Love (Un amour de jeunesse): Film Review|magazine=[[The Hollywood Reporter]]|date=7 July 2011|access-date=22 July 2021}}</ref> |
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[[Paris]], France |
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==Awards and nominations== |
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[[Sanatorium d'Aincourt]], Aincourt, Val-d'Oise, France |
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*2011: [[Locarno International Film Festival]]: Special Mention |
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*2011: Gijon Film Festival: Official Selection |
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==Awards== |
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2011: [[Locarno International Film Festival]]: Special Mention. 4 nominations. |
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2011: Gijon Film Festival: Official Selection |
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2011: Toronto International Film Festival (nomination) |
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==Cast== |
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* [[Lola Créton]] as Camille |
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* Sebastian Urzendowsky as Sullivan |
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* Magne-Håvard Brekke as Lorenz |
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* Valérie Bonneton as Camille's mother |
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* Serge Renko as Camille's father |
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* [[Özay Fecht]] as Sullivan's mother |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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<references/> |
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*{{IMDb title|1618447|Goodbye First Love}} |
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Fabien Lemercier (2010-09-06). "Mia Hansen-Love tourne Un amour de jeunesse" (in French). Cineuropa.org. Retrieved 2011-08-26. |
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Smith, Ian Hayden (2012). International Film Guide 2012. p. 120. ISBN 978-1908215017. |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*{{IMDb title |
* {{IMDb title}} |
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* {{AlloCiné title}} |
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*{{Rotten Tomatoes|goodbye_first_love|Goodbye First Love}} |
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*[http://www.filmaffinity.com/es/film747719.html film affinity] |
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{{Mia Hansen-Løve}} |
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[[Category:2011 films]] |
[[Category:2011 films]] |
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[[Category:2011 romantic drama films]] |
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[[Category:2010s coming-of-age drama films]] |
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[[Category:2010s French films]] |
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[[Category:2010s French-language films]] |
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[[Category:2010s German films]] |
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[[Category:Arte France Cinéma films]] |
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[[Category:Coming-of-age romance films]] |
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[[Category:Films about architecture]] |
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[[Category:Films directed by Mia Hansen-Løve]] |
[[Category:Films directed by Mia Hansen-Løve]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Films produced by David Thion]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Films set in 1999]] |
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[[Category:Films set in the 2000s]] |
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[[Category:Films set in Paris]] |
[[Category:Films set in Paris]] |
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[[Category:French coming-of-age drama films]] |
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{{2010s-France-film-stub}} |
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[[Category:French romantic drama films]] |
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[[Category:French-language German films]] |
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[[fr:Un amour de jeunesse]] |
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[[Category:German coming-of-age drama films]] |
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[[it:Un amore di gioventù]] |
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[[Category:German romantic drama films]] |
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[[vi:Dang dở tình đầu]] |
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[[Category:Films about juvenile sexuality]] |
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[[Category:Les Films du Losange films]] |
Latest revision as of 22:25, 21 December 2024
Goodbye First Love | |
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French | Un amour de jeunesse |
Directed by | Mia Hansen-Løve |
Screenplay by | Mia Hansen-Løve |
Produced by | Phillipe Martin David Thion |
Starring |
|
Cinematography | Stéphane Fontaine |
Edited by | Marion Monnier |
Production companies |
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Distributed by |
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Release dates |
|
Running time | 110 minutes |
Countries |
|
Language | French |
Budget | €4 million[1] |
Box office | $64,925[2] |
Goodbye First Love (French: Un amour de jeunesse) is a 2011 romantic drama film written and directed by Mia Hansen-Løve.[3] It was selected for the main competition section at the 2011 Locarno International Film Festival.
Plot
[edit]Camille is 15 years old and passionately in love and lust with her boyfriend Sullivan, who is 19. Sullivan is planning a 10-month trip to South America with his friends. He is not taking Camille with him, which makes her feel insecure and resentful. She irritates Sullivan by repeatedly insisting that he does not love her because he is leaving her. Before Sullivan departs, they spend one last idyllic getaway in Camille's mountain home in the Ardèche. Though the vacation starts off happily, Camille grows unhappy when Sullivan is away too long on an errand and leaves her alone. After a brief fight, they reconcile, and Sullivan promises to always love her.
Eventually Sullivan leaves for his trip, leaving Camille despondent. Though Camille regularly receives letters from Sullivan, they eventually take on an unhappy tone; eventually Sullivan reveals that he wants to break off their relationship, and he stops writing. A depressed Camille attempts suicide, but survives, and resolves to move on with her life.
Four years later, Camille staves off her loneliness with work and school, where she is studying architecture. During her studies, she gradually falls in love with her much older professor Lorenz, in whom she sees a stable and secure influence and intellectual match. Four more years pass, and Camille, now with a career and a relationship with Lorenz, encounters Sullivan's mother by chance and reconnects with her old boyfriend. Coincidentally, on the day she meets with Sullivan and realizes that she is still attracted to him, she suffers a miscarriage.
When Lorenz leaves on a work trip, Camille and Sullivan begin an affair and confess that they never stopped loving each other. Consequently, her relationship with Lorenz becomes strained, especially when she secretly plans to take a trip to Sullivan's new home in Marseilles soon after Lorenz's return, under the guise of visiting a friend. However, a strike cancels her train. Though she is disappointed, a nonchalant Sullivan texts her saying that he is working anyway, and they can meet another time. Sometime later, Camille visits her mother, who gives her a letter recently sent by Sullivan. Sullivan writes that he dreamt of her while in bed with someone else, and dreamed that she was pregnant with his child. He says that they must break up because they are too early or too late to try being in love again, that he cannot bear the pain of their love, and that he hopes to find her again in the future. Camille is crushed.
Time passes, and Camille restores her relationship with Lorenz. Back at her mountain home in Ardèche, she invites him to the nearby river, and he tells her that he will meet her there shortly. She brings the hat that Sullivan had bought her for their own getaway years before, but unbeknownst to her as she plays in the river, it blows into the water and floats away as the film ends.
Cast
[edit]- Lola Créton as Camille
- Sebastian Urzendowsky as Sullivan
- Magne-Håvard Brekke as Lorenz
- Valérie Bonneton as Camille's mother
- Serge Renko as Camille's father
- Özay Fecht as Sullivan's mother
Production
[edit]Filming
[edit]Lola Créton was 16 years old when the film was shot. Director Mia Hansen-Løve said it was a big deal for Lola to play nude scenes. "But what's amazing is that, when the cameras rolled, she was free and sensuous like a cat. It was as if she was discovering her own sexuality before our eyes, but, as soon as the filming stopped, she'd retreat behind sheets, clothes immediately."[4]
Music
[edit]- "Volver a los 17" by Violeta Parra
- "Gracias a la vida" by Violeta Parra
- "Little Ticks of Time" by Matt McGinn
- "Music for a Found Harmonium" by Penguin Cafe Orchestra
- "Wasps in the Woodpile" by Andrew Cronshaw
- "The Water" by Johnny Flynn and Laura Marling
Filming locations
[edit]- Ardèche, France
- Copenhagen, Denmark
- Dessau, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany
- Kastrup, Amager, Denmark (sea baths)
- Paris, France
- Sanatorium d'Aincourt, Aincourt, Val-d'Oise, France
Critical response
[edit]On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 83% based on 54 reviews, with an average rating of 7.3/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Goodbye First Love captures teen ardor with a patiently naturalistic approach, further proving writer-director Mia Hansen-Løve is a major talent to watch."[5] Metacritic gives the film a score of 80 out of 100 based on 21 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[6]
Noel Murray of The A.V. Club said that "Goodbye First Love sometimes tells when it should show, and in their younger guises, particularly, Créton and Urzendowsky come off as so self-absorbed that they're almost insufferable".[7]
Jordan Mintzer of The Hollywood Reporter wrote that the film is "[a]n airy yet incisive third feature from French auteur Mia Hansen-Love".[8]
Awards and nominations
[edit]- 2011: Locarno International Film Festival: Special Mention
- 2011: Gijon Film Festival: Official Selection
References
[edit]- ^ Lemercier, Fabien (6 September 2010). "Mia Hansen-Love shoots Un amour de jeunesse". Cineuropa. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
- ^ "Un amour de jeunesse". JP's Box-Office (in French). Retrieved 22 July 2021.
- ^ Smith, Ian Hayden (2012). International Film Guide 2012. p. 120. ISBN 978-1908215017.
- ^ Solomons, Jason (29 April 2012). "Mia Hansen-Løve: the broken heart that made me a film-maker". The Observer. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ "Goodbye First Lo". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
- ^ "Goodbye First Love". Metacritic. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
- ^ Murray, Noel (19 April 2012). "Goodbye First Love". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
- ^ Mintzer, Jordan (7 July 2011). "Goodbye First Love (Un amour de jeunesse): Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
External links
[edit]- Goodbye First Love at IMDb
- Goodbye First Love at AlloCiné (in French)
- 2011 films
- 2011 romantic drama films
- 2010s coming-of-age drama films
- 2010s French films
- 2010s French-language films
- 2010s German films
- Arte France Cinéma films
- Coming-of-age romance films
- Films about architecture
- Films directed by Mia Hansen-Løve
- Films produced by David Thion
- Films set in 1999
- Films set in the 2000s
- Films set in Paris
- French coming-of-age drama films
- French romantic drama films
- French-language German films
- German coming-of-age drama films
- German romantic drama films
- Films about juvenile sexuality
- Les Films du Losange films