IMDb RATING
7.3/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
9 year old Louis spends his summer in Brittany. He stays with Marcelle and her husband Pelo while his mother gives birth to her second baby. Louis becomes friends with Martine, 10 year old g... Read all9 year old Louis spends his summer in Brittany. He stays with Marcelle and her husband Pelo while his mother gives birth to her second baby. Louis becomes friends with Martine, 10 year old girl next door, and learns about life from her.9 year old Louis spends his summer in Brittany. He stays with Marcelle and her husband Pelo while his mother gives birth to her second baby. Louis becomes friends with Martine, 10 year old girl next door, and learns about life from her.
- Awards
- 8 wins & 4 nominations total
Featured reviews
10drseid
Excellent coming-of-age drama involving a boy who visits the country while his mother has her baby. There he meets his aunt and uncle who are having marital troubles, and a young girl a year older than him who helps him grow up very quickly. Powerful acting, and great script writing and direction make this film a must see for everyone!
Quite simply this is one of the Best French films of the last fifty years. The relatively unknown Jean-Loup Hubert has produced the kind of film that the overrated Godard could not turn out if you gave him a hundred years (to be fair to the semi-Amateur Godard he would probably have no interest in addressing the Human Condition in such a refreshing straightforward fashion). In terms of story it would be difficult to find something more basic - at one end of the spectrum a married couple living in rural Brittany have slowly grown apart since losing a child, at the other end is nine year old Louis, a city boy from Paris sent to spend a summer with the couple so that his mother (an old friend of the wife) may have her second child without the encumbrance of her first. In other words this is our old friend the bildungsroman/coming-of-age/rites-of-passage movie, the one we've seen so many times before but, as I've said before, it's all in the wrist. The tone is set from the first with a wistful, haunting music track leading us into a nineteen fifties French countryside preserved in amber as Christine Pascal (billed only as the mother of Louis) entrusts her son (Antoine Hubert) to the care of her friend Marcelle (Anemone) and her husband Pelo (Richard Bohringer). This is a French film and French film in a rural setting so we meet Marcelle as she is removing the eye of a rabbit with a knife as a prelude to skinning it. It's a great metaphor for the changes Louis will experience in the next few weeks (you don't see this in Paris, kid) and it also prepares us, the audience, for an arguably alien lifestyle embracing outside privys and indoor chamber pots. Writer-director Hubert (he adapted his own autobiographical novel for the screen) bravely cast his own son, Antoine, in the key role of Louis, despite the boy's complete lack of acting experience and the experiment paid off handsomely. Nor can we argue that he found it easy to coax a performance from his own flesh and blood because he has coaxed an even better performance from Vanessa Guedi as Martine, the ten-year-old tomboy who teaches Louis so much in such a short time. Matching the performances of the two children are those of the two principal adults Anemone and Richard Bohringer, both more than deserving of the Cesars they won as respectively Best Actress and Best Actor. I have been aware of this film for several years but have never been able to track it down until now when I finally located the DVD. On the initial viewing I was overwhelmed and I know it is one I will return to again and again. 10/10
Of course, after that stupid American remake <Paradise>, with Griffith and Johnson, this alone probably stunted <Le Grand Chemin> from being more recognized.
When I call this a 'dramady', I mean that the technical classification of this film is "drama", because it centers around a married couple who have fallen out of passion or interest for each other since the death of their (unborn?) son. All events occuring around them; the shy little boy who comes to stay with them, the curious, know-it-all girl-neighbor, and even the pace of the movie maintain realism, so that you believe you are in someone's house watching their lives. I was mostly feeling for the couple and hoping they would mend their icy and resentful feelings toward each other.
What's beautiful about the movie is that all the elements come together for an emotional ending. At that point, I realized the boy in the movie (and all people in life) can inadvertently make a great contribution to other people's lives.
-Sep
When I call this a 'dramady', I mean that the technical classification of this film is "drama", because it centers around a married couple who have fallen out of passion or interest for each other since the death of their (unborn?) son. All events occuring around them; the shy little boy who comes to stay with them, the curious, know-it-all girl-neighbor, and even the pace of the movie maintain realism, so that you believe you are in someone's house watching their lives. I was mostly feeling for the couple and hoping they would mend their icy and resentful feelings toward each other.
What's beautiful about the movie is that all the elements come together for an emotional ending. At that point, I realized the boy in the movie (and all people in life) can inadvertently make a great contribution to other people's lives.
-Sep
This is one of the rare movies that combine all the elements to tell a meaningful story in a light, pleasant, funny, and very touching way. Very French in the best sense. At the end you know how the future will be, how the story will continue, and you are happy.
A really superior film, this story of a 9 year-old boy leaving his mother temporarily to live in a small French town. He becomes educated to the ways of adults with the help of a worldy-wise girl aged 10. Although children are featured, this definitely is an adult movie, not one for small children.
Did you know
- GoofsMartine's mother at one point mentions taking Martine receiving treatment for flat feet, which her doctor claims was caused by Martine running around barefoot. Going barefoot does not cause flat feet, a fact known to doctors at the time.
- Alternate versionsA version used to assist French teaching in British schools was released; all scenes with nudity and a few instances of coarse language were cut.
- ConnectionsRemade as Paradise (1991)
- How long is The Grand Highway?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $760,539
- Runtime
- 1h 44m(104 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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