VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,8/10
2500
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Tre mesi prima dei suoi esami finali, l'insegnante part-time Valentine incontra un musicista molto diverso.Tre mesi prima dei suoi esami finali, l'insegnante part-time Valentine incontra un musicista molto diverso.Tre mesi prima dei suoi esami finali, l'insegnante part-time Valentine incontra un musicista molto diverso.
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Recensioni in evidenza
L'Etudiante is a film that centres around the relationship between a student teacher called Valentine (Sophie Marceau) and an ambitious but unsuccessful musician named Ned (Vincent Lindon).
Valentine is an exceptionally dedicated student, who thinks of nothing but passing her exams, which, quite unsurprisingly, has a big effect on her relationship with Ned. Ned is frequently tormented by this fact, and also that his relentless touring does not help the relationship either. The film follows them as they try to overcome these problems and settle into a life together.
Like most French films, L'Etudiante is quite dialogue-heavy. Very little actually happens in the film and most of the scenes are of the main actors talking, whether that be in flats, cafés, restaurants, cars, beds, trains or the streets of Paris. And, as is also true about most French films, it is the quality of the acting that sees this through. Lindon is highly entertaining as Ned. He portrays perfectly the man with great ambitions but not the ruthlessness needed to fulfil them. His down-to-Earthness is the perfect contrast to Marceau's highly-strung Valentine. Marceau gives an excellent performance. We've all known workaholics who put their personal success before everything else. Often we see these people as cold and unemotional but Marceau is the opposite and shows Valentine to be as human as anyone else helping us to understand what is driving her.
Again, as is also often the case in French films, there are a number of constant irritations in the picture.
Often, especially at the beginning, the director seems to just want to look at Marceau. She's very attractive but the constant goddess-like adoration does get a little waring. Fortunately, it calms down a bit by the second half of the film. A common gripe at French films is that the dialogue can get a bit precious at times. This is certainly true of L'Etudiante. When I was a student, I rarely fell out with people because of their opinions on social anthropology, political philosophy or career options. Perhaps Parisian students do. And finally, Marceau does spend quite a few scenes au naturale. This is not an unpleasant sight but,personally, I found it to be a little unnecessary.
L'Etudiante is a good French film for people who don't watch many French films. It won't change your life but it does provide you with an insight into commercial French cinema and will definitely keep you entertained for a couple of hours.
Valentine is an exceptionally dedicated student, who thinks of nothing but passing her exams, which, quite unsurprisingly, has a big effect on her relationship with Ned. Ned is frequently tormented by this fact, and also that his relentless touring does not help the relationship either. The film follows them as they try to overcome these problems and settle into a life together.
Like most French films, L'Etudiante is quite dialogue-heavy. Very little actually happens in the film and most of the scenes are of the main actors talking, whether that be in flats, cafés, restaurants, cars, beds, trains or the streets of Paris. And, as is also true about most French films, it is the quality of the acting that sees this through. Lindon is highly entertaining as Ned. He portrays perfectly the man with great ambitions but not the ruthlessness needed to fulfil them. His down-to-Earthness is the perfect contrast to Marceau's highly-strung Valentine. Marceau gives an excellent performance. We've all known workaholics who put their personal success before everything else. Often we see these people as cold and unemotional but Marceau is the opposite and shows Valentine to be as human as anyone else helping us to understand what is driving her.
Again, as is also often the case in French films, there are a number of constant irritations in the picture.
Often, especially at the beginning, the director seems to just want to look at Marceau. She's very attractive but the constant goddess-like adoration does get a little waring. Fortunately, it calms down a bit by the second half of the film. A common gripe at French films is that the dialogue can get a bit precious at times. This is certainly true of L'Etudiante. When I was a student, I rarely fell out with people because of their opinions on social anthropology, political philosophy or career options. Perhaps Parisian students do. And finally, Marceau does spend quite a few scenes au naturale. This is not an unpleasant sight but,personally, I found it to be a little unnecessary.
L'Etudiante is a good French film for people who don't watch many French films. It won't change your life but it does provide you with an insight into commercial French cinema and will definitely keep you entertained for a couple of hours.
Hello IMDB, I'm again. Of course I've seen this film just as the La Boum 1 & 2. This is very good movie about a student, that how could she (Valentine) check against her private-life and her preparing for the final exams. Ned (Edouard) is a kindly man, who tries to tear Valentine from her exams. Quarrells and reconciliations. Maybe it's a little bit cliché topic, but meanwhile you watch the film, you don't see this, 'cos the casts are excellent. I recommend this film everyone to see once a time; from the children to grandparents. And not at last the music. . . So, Vladimir Cosma has made another great song: "You call it love". This what I wanted to say. Bye.
Sophie Marceau: absolutely gorgeous, genius, and multi-talented. This underrated romantic comedy is definitely a gem. I recommend contemplating the fact that she was 21 years old when she commanded this role. Wow! She dated, copulated, studied, wrote and defended a dissertation and succeeding in dispelling my disbelief. This film is like a Valium. I always rely on "L'etudiante" to cheer me up when the world is literally in the middle of a Pandemic, racial injustice is out of control, and the global economy is sinking. This is truly a joy. The sets, cinematography, casting, writing, and most of the music is amazing.
This was the first french movie i had seen, and seeing it made me feel i had been losing out on a great genre. I instantly fell in love with Sophie, who without a doubt, is easily the hottest thing to come out of France after Brigitte Bardot ;-)
The movie follows the life of a carrer oriented woman who decides to have a "fling" and then the fling slowly turns into something which she is uncomfortable accepting, as it may interfere with her studies.
A beautifully made film, though the track is pretty standard for a June-December romance.
The movie follows the life of a carrer oriented woman who decides to have a "fling" and then the fling slowly turns into something which she is uncomfortable accepting, as it may interfere with her studies.
A beautifully made film, though the track is pretty standard for a June-December romance.
"The Student" is a straightforward romance if there's ever one and a proof that the saying "aim small, miss small" can also apply to the movies.
The film directed by Claude Pinoteau -who had made Sophie Marceau's breakthrough coming-of-age hit "La Boum" ("The Party") 8 years earlier- covers all the required tropes of the hip chick flick but embedded in that so undefinable 80s spirit that aged quite well.
So what do we have? Boy meets girl, girl notices boy, smile-inducing awkwardness during the first exchanges, feelings that don't take too long to get mutual, first date, the night that changes it all, meeting friends and families, then out of sight but not out of mind, jealousy, arguments, misunderstanding, professional mishmash and if there's no standout scene, there's still the ending, and well, that's some last ten minutes that I will remember.
Indeed, you may say "The Student" (referring to Valentine, played by Marceau) might not be a masterpiece of originality, but I challenge you to find another movie that uses an aggregation oral examen as a canvas for a heartfelt love declaration,. Maybe it's because I spent the previous year preparing for two similar career-defining exams, including that one (and failed at both), and so I coud relate to Valentine's struggles to keep her studies on track, to her friend's panic attack and I realized that I was foolish to believe I could succeed in one year what takes year for others.
And that's the trick, I related to the girl and to the boy, Edward, played by Vincent Lindon in his boyish years. I'm not 5% as attractive as he is, but there's something about his composure, his eyes, his smile, that gets him so close to us and so his struggles to reach Valentine, his obsession to get to her, his propensity to swallow his pride, anyway his neediness hit home. The craziest thing is that the stakes are higher for Valentine, she's the one who might sacrifice her professional life for a man she loves. Winning her love is not the cause, the cause is how willing you are to sacrifice a career to keep that love.
Movies like "The Student" seem apt to transcend their banality because they succeeded at handling the two essential things: the casting and the script. With her girlish rosy cheeks, Sophie Marceau is as beautiful as ever without looking like your sensual pin-up and the camera doesn't fall into trap so common in the 80s by over-sexualizing her character, like her previous husband and director Andrzej Zulawski. And on her side there's Edouard a musician preparing a score for a famous film and struggling to find the inspiration, an ordeal that echoes his own problems of communication with Valentine. Making that an obstacle would have been a cliché, but the two are in love and basically the film is about them trying to find the right pace. Both belong to different universes: intellectual upper class and Bohemian lifestyle. But the script never suggest a sort of milieu-driven antagonism, trying to keep a fair balance between the romance novel sappiness and a certain realism.
Setting half the story in the world of show business, Pinoteau emphasize the characters' ordinariness by making them coexist with real life figures like director Elie Chouraki, actress Marie-Christine Barrault and there's even a nod to Vladimir Cosma, the film composer who had an instinct for folksy scores, playful tunes, little schmaltzy ones and what could be typical "slow" hits (romantic songs allowing teenagers to stand close to each other during the famous "boums"). Ultimately the score composed by Edouard is the score of the film and Cosma who signed "La Boum"'s "Dreams are my Reality" strike it again with another 'matchmaker' "You Call it Love".
(even as a 6-year old at that time, I remember going to such parties organized by my cousins and I was looking at teens holding each other tight during these slow moments)
And what's left is the genuine spontaneity of Edouard and the fairy-tale girly quality of Valentine and their desperation to reach other despite conflicting schedules and meeting their friends and families, whatever happen to spice up the relationship isn't original but it leads to a fantastic declaration by Valentine, using her own test subject and talking about a book I happen to have read. The film might have the apparatus of a no-brain romance but I suspect the climax had taken a few sleepless nights to get on the paper. And a nice ending when we don't need to see the outcome but just to realize that sometimes love is that thing that makes us committ silly things.
I don't think the film's conclusion is that love is beyond having a professional dream, it's precisely because Valentine did the exam after all that the film aged well. Any other ending would have been manipulation. Valentine was capable to do crazy things in the name of love, except negating herself. And her dream to be a teacher was part of herself. The title says it all, she's "The student".
The film directed by Claude Pinoteau -who had made Sophie Marceau's breakthrough coming-of-age hit "La Boum" ("The Party") 8 years earlier- covers all the required tropes of the hip chick flick but embedded in that so undefinable 80s spirit that aged quite well.
So what do we have? Boy meets girl, girl notices boy, smile-inducing awkwardness during the first exchanges, feelings that don't take too long to get mutual, first date, the night that changes it all, meeting friends and families, then out of sight but not out of mind, jealousy, arguments, misunderstanding, professional mishmash and if there's no standout scene, there's still the ending, and well, that's some last ten minutes that I will remember.
Indeed, you may say "The Student" (referring to Valentine, played by Marceau) might not be a masterpiece of originality, but I challenge you to find another movie that uses an aggregation oral examen as a canvas for a heartfelt love declaration,. Maybe it's because I spent the previous year preparing for two similar career-defining exams, including that one (and failed at both), and so I coud relate to Valentine's struggles to keep her studies on track, to her friend's panic attack and I realized that I was foolish to believe I could succeed in one year what takes year for others.
And that's the trick, I related to the girl and to the boy, Edward, played by Vincent Lindon in his boyish years. I'm not 5% as attractive as he is, but there's something about his composure, his eyes, his smile, that gets him so close to us and so his struggles to reach Valentine, his obsession to get to her, his propensity to swallow his pride, anyway his neediness hit home. The craziest thing is that the stakes are higher for Valentine, she's the one who might sacrifice her professional life for a man she loves. Winning her love is not the cause, the cause is how willing you are to sacrifice a career to keep that love.
Movies like "The Student" seem apt to transcend their banality because they succeeded at handling the two essential things: the casting and the script. With her girlish rosy cheeks, Sophie Marceau is as beautiful as ever without looking like your sensual pin-up and the camera doesn't fall into trap so common in the 80s by over-sexualizing her character, like her previous husband and director Andrzej Zulawski. And on her side there's Edouard a musician preparing a score for a famous film and struggling to find the inspiration, an ordeal that echoes his own problems of communication with Valentine. Making that an obstacle would have been a cliché, but the two are in love and basically the film is about them trying to find the right pace. Both belong to different universes: intellectual upper class and Bohemian lifestyle. But the script never suggest a sort of milieu-driven antagonism, trying to keep a fair balance between the romance novel sappiness and a certain realism.
Setting half the story in the world of show business, Pinoteau emphasize the characters' ordinariness by making them coexist with real life figures like director Elie Chouraki, actress Marie-Christine Barrault and there's even a nod to Vladimir Cosma, the film composer who had an instinct for folksy scores, playful tunes, little schmaltzy ones and what could be typical "slow" hits (romantic songs allowing teenagers to stand close to each other during the famous "boums"). Ultimately the score composed by Edouard is the score of the film and Cosma who signed "La Boum"'s "Dreams are my Reality" strike it again with another 'matchmaker' "You Call it Love".
(even as a 6-year old at that time, I remember going to such parties organized by my cousins and I was looking at teens holding each other tight during these slow moments)
And what's left is the genuine spontaneity of Edouard and the fairy-tale girly quality of Valentine and their desperation to reach other despite conflicting schedules and meeting their friends and families, whatever happen to spice up the relationship isn't original but it leads to a fantastic declaration by Valentine, using her own test subject and talking about a book I happen to have read. The film might have the apparatus of a no-brain romance but I suspect the climax had taken a few sleepless nights to get on the paper. And a nice ending when we don't need to see the outcome but just to realize that sometimes love is that thing that makes us committ silly things.
I don't think the film's conclusion is that love is beyond having a professional dream, it's precisely because Valentine did the exam after all that the film aged well. Any other ending would have been manipulation. Valentine was capable to do crazy things in the name of love, except negating herself. And her dream to be a teacher was part of herself. The title says it all, she's "The student".
Lo sapevi?
- QuizReuniting the creative team with actress Sophie Marceau, is often seen as a quasi-sequel or spiritual successor to Il tempo delle mele (1980) and Il tempo delle mele 2 (1982).
- ConnessioniFeatured in Che ora è? (1989)
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- How long is The Student?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 44 minuti
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.66 : 1
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By what name was Il tempo delle mele 3 (1988) officially released in India in English?
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