Young & Beautiful

April 27th, 2014







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Young & Beautiful

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Plot
After losing her virginity, Isabelle takes up a secret life as a call girl, meeting her clients for hotel-room trysts. Throughout, she remains curiously aloof, showing little interest in the encounters themselves or the money she makes.

Release Year: 2013

Rating: 6.9/10 (7,615 voted)

Critic's Score: 68/100

Director: François Ozon

Stars: Marine Vacth, Géraldine Pailhas, Frédéric Pierrot

Storyline
Isabelle is on summer holidays with her family in the in the south of France. She decides to lose her virginity to a German boy called Felix, but the experience leaves her cold. By autumn she is exploring her sexuality further by working as a prostitute under the name Lea and meeting an older man called George, and various other clients. During one encounter with George he dies from a heart attack, Isabelle leaves the scene, and quits prostitution. The police eventually track her down and reveal her secret life to her mother.

Cast:
Marine Vacth - Isabelle
Géraldine Pailhas - Sylvie
Frédéric Pierrot - Patrick
Fantin Ravat - Victor
Johan Leysen - Georges
Charlotte Rampling - Alice
Nathalie Richard - Véro
Djedje Apali - Peter
Lucas Prisor - Felix
Laurent Delbecque - Alex
Jeanne Ruff - Claire
Carole Franck - La policière
Olivier Desautel - Le policier
Serge Hefez - Le psychiatre
Akéla Sari - Mouna



Details

Official Website: Official site [France] | Official site [Japan]

Country: France

Language: French, German

Release Date: 25 April 2014

Filming Locations: Le Pradet, Var, France

Technical Specs

Runtime:



User Review

Author:

Rating: 9/10

Having lived a relatively sheltered life, a young 17 year old girl, Isabelle (Marine Vacth), begins to explore her sexuality in rather a risqué fashion. We meet Isabelle on holiday on the eve of her 17th birthday. While on vacation, she meets a German boy and has an underwhelming first sexual experience. We meet her again in the Autumn to learn she is now leading a double life, moonlighting as a high class escort while still living under her mother's roof and attending school.

Of course there are some very ugly situations and in some hard to watch scenes, we see Isabelle near accepting the degrading attitude of some of her clients as if it is all her self worth, but then we also get to see her striking up a tender relationship of a different kind, with a much older man and later witness a conceited smile as she turns on her phone to a plethora of messages. Why does she do this to herself? Is it a form of self-harm or a narcissism? Is it an addiction, spurred from a desire to be loved without outwardly feeling capable of loving? Does she do it for the danger, the fear, the excitement, or is the money a factor also? Is it part due to having an estranged father? Does she enjoy it because it endows her with power over men and draws jealousy and insecurity from women? Or is she simply feeling starved of experience and hungers exploration?

All these questions are certainly posed or at least hinted at, but don't expect clear explanations or moral conclusions. No, the movie explores these themes without outrightly condemning or condoning her actions. Yes, Isabelle does draw herself into difficulty through her actions, but the discourse of this movie is not one of the obvious cause and effect we have come to know from mainstream cinema. There is no deus et machina to extricate an easy exit or satisfactory fix or lesson well learnt or crime punished. There are only the awkward moments that life throws at us in unexpected ways and uncomfortable truths that may never be satisfactorily reconciled. In other words, we are looking through a window into but a moment within this young lady's life --the passing of a year, the exploration of her sexuality-- and the fascinating aspect of this movie is that we see her live out the extraordinary in quite an ordinary way.





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