VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,9/10
1226
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaParis, summer 1960. Michel is about to leave for Algeria for military service. He meets Liliane and Juliette, two inseparable friends. Michel goes on vacation to Corsica, where the two girls... Leggi tuttoParis, summer 1960. Michel is about to leave for Algeria for military service. He meets Liliane and Juliette, two inseparable friends. Michel goes on vacation to Corsica, where the two girls decide to join himParis, summer 1960. Michel is about to leave for Algeria for military service. He meets Liliane and Juliette, two inseparable friends. Michel goes on vacation to Corsica, where the two girls decide to join him
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 1 candidatura in totale
David Tonelli
- Horatio
- (as Davide Tonelli)
Annie Markhan
- Juliette
- (voce)
Recensioni in evidenza
Like most of the nouvelle vague works ,"Adieu Philippine" seems dated now.Some people will praise it to the skies ,other will find it a bit boring and tedious.
The first part is the best:the depiction in a quasi documentary way of the TV studios,the meal at the hero's home where his parents and grand-parents are discussing barroom politics ,the stupid commercials -the movie was prophetic for that matter-.The spontaneity of the actors is convincing.
There's a sword of Damocles hanging over the hero's head:in two months ,he will be drafted and will have to fight in Algeria ,French dirty war.That's perhaps the most amazing thing:nobody,neither the future soldier nor his girlfriends or relatives seem to take it seriously.He will go,period.That makes the movie unintentionally a bit reactionary,particularly if we compare it to old wave Autant-Lara's contemporary "tu ne tueras point".
The second part is nouvelle vague flesh on the bone:a very loose plot, and a very loooong ending.Sincerely,I doubt the 2002 audience can relate to such amateurish directing.Some will say the hero wants to make the best of what is left to him :but nothing vibrates and everything seems hollow.
The movie was a flop and did get critical acclaim afterwards.So,my opinion is probably not very orthodox.
The first part is the best:the depiction in a quasi documentary way of the TV studios,the meal at the hero's home where his parents and grand-parents are discussing barroom politics ,the stupid commercials -the movie was prophetic for that matter-.The spontaneity of the actors is convincing.
There's a sword of Damocles hanging over the hero's head:in two months ,he will be drafted and will have to fight in Algeria ,French dirty war.That's perhaps the most amazing thing:nobody,neither the future soldier nor his girlfriends or relatives seem to take it seriously.He will go,period.That makes the movie unintentionally a bit reactionary,particularly if we compare it to old wave Autant-Lara's contemporary "tu ne tueras point".
The second part is nouvelle vague flesh on the bone:a very loose plot, and a very loooong ending.Sincerely,I doubt the 2002 audience can relate to such amateurish directing.Some will say the hero wants to make the best of what is left to him :but nothing vibrates and everything seems hollow.
The movie was a flop and did get critical acclaim afterwards.So,my opinion is probably not very orthodox.
This is indeed "nouvelle vague" in ways many other films of the time claimed to be but really weren't. The "innocent" onlookers on the side look at the camera, the dialog seems improvised to a large degree and the actors/actresses "introduced" were for the main part never heard from again. There's not really much of a plot as there were in many N.V products and at times it feels invented as it was made. The comedy throughout and the joyful music lighten the restrictions (and making it seem more 'nouvelle vague") but there are several elements just below the surface which are in sharp contrast. Two girls who swore fidelity in friendship are torn apart, the young protagonist is off the fight a very unpopular war, the young man who refuses to talk about his experiences fighting in Algeria... The film survives as an historical document of new ideas in French film-making of the time and as such rather severely dates itself. It's easy to understand why it was so popular when it was made but that fact works against it decades later.
This is for me an almost perfect film. Not because it is quintessential Nouvelle Vague, but because it had an excellent actor in it called Jean-Claude Aimini. It saddens me that such a natural actor could not have continued in other films. I was mesmerised by the ease he had before the camera, and if Belmondo could carry on why not him ? Or is Godard's ' A Bout de Souffle ' the official benchmark of that clique that appeared to change French Cinema ? ' Adieu Phillippine ' came out in 1962, when the waters were still quite high and Rozier showed how natural behaviour, natural gestures and freedom with the camera could wash away even a hint of the studio. But it is through the eyes of the lead actor, Aimini that we follow the film. The Algerian War will drag the character he plays Michel into its horror and I was left wondering at the end, will he be victim or killer in it, or if the fates were kind and he would become neither? The film plays out his last holiday before he is forced down that awful path. He plays around with two young women, and his feelings towards both of them is fascinating to watch. Who loves who and at that age do you really love at all ? Rozier plays with this threesome and unlike the overrated ' Jules et Jim ' I found it truthful because of the actors. There are no great stabs at acting as in the Truffaut film, and there does not need to be because the genius of the film is that it plays like a documentary, and the actors act so well there is none of the ' look here I am performing ' routine. This cannot happen in all film, and that is normal because basically film stands out usually as high drama for most directors, and even Bresson could not escape it. For nearly two hours I watch like a fly on the wall fiction that with a gentle sleight of hand looks like reality, or what we call reality. But Aimini is the focus ( others could challenge this ) and I wanted to see more of him. If he is alive and well and reads this I hope he realises what a pure presence he was. I hesitate to give it a 10 because I found the holiday section needed trimming, but a great film it surely is. Watch out for a glimpse of Jean-Claude Brialy, a pillar of the Nouvelle Vague in Cinema and he had a happy look on his face.
At times, this feels like a documentary, or some kind of home movie where the director said "you guys just do some stuff, I'll keep rolling and we'll tart it up in the edit". At others, it's really quite entertaining (such as the filming of the igloo commercial). However, for me, it was just too episodic and, frankly, went on far too long such that by the end I was just bored. The acting wasn't bad (and in places very good), but it felt like they didn't really have much to work with, and the tone and lighting was all over the place - so I'm not that surprised that I haven't heard of this director before. Of its time, I guess.
This film contains the complexities of youth, friendship, and romance without, it seems, even trying. The Algerian War hardly matters beyond its being a war, one of which from the 20th century into the 21st is happening somewhere. The music, which is as affecting as songbirds in May and more playful, enchants scenes with the engaging energy of the mystery of life. The film is a wonder of filmmaking, a film imbued with an immortal soul that reaches out in friendship. The title: The "Oxford English Dictionary" tells that "philopena" is a game in which when a nut, usually an almond, has two kernels, two people each take one half of it. Then, when next they meet, the first to say "philopena" may demand a forfeit of the other. This is often a friendly romantic game, a form of flirtation. Many online references cite an accompanying greeting with the expression, e.g., "Hello, Philopena" and in French, "Bonjour, Philippine!" Philopena/Philippine is also a name for the game." Rozier's title for his film is "Adieu Philippine." This may be taken as a goodbye to the game of flirtation of Michel with the young women with him and of them to him--the goodbye that concludes the film. But the title is also capable of meaning more metaphorically. Michel is the nut that when opened by the girls is found to contain a "Philippine," or in context, two hearts. When Michal is asked about a love interest, he says that he will wait to see which girl waits for him, or who will greet him, or who in the parlance of the game will play the game, win it, and make a romantic demand of him. "Adieu Philippine" is the story leading up to the goodbye to his divided heart, which each young woman is enthralled to possess and he to have given, or so the sweet longueur of their goodbye demonstrates in Rozier's beautiful film.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizAwards:
- Grand Prix des Rencontres Internationals de Prades 1962.
- Grand Prix de la Fédération Française des Ciné-Clubs 1963.
- Ducat d'Or du Festival de Mannheim 1963
- Prix du Meilleur Premier Film d'Oberhausen 1963.
- ConnessioniEdited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Seul le cinéma (1994)
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- Adieu Philippine
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Girolata, Osani, Corse-du-Sud, Francia(Pachala's film shoot)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 46 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.66 : 1
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