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Conte d'été

  • 1996
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 53m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Amanda Langlet, Aurelia Nolin, and Gwenaëlle Simon in Conte d'été (1996)
Gaspard, a recent university graduate, arrives at the seaside in Bretagne for three weeks' vacation before starting a new job. He's hoping his sort-of girlfriend, the fickle Léna, will join him there; but as the days pass, he welcomes the interest of Margot, a student of ethnology working as a waitress for the summer. Things start to get complicated when the spoken-for Margot encourages Gaspard to have a summer romance with her friend, Solène, and he complies. When Léna turns up, and scheduling complications abound, Gaspard will have to make a choice...
Play trailer1:49
1 Video
52 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

As a reserved young graduate vacations in a seaside town, he hopes his girlfriend will join him. But he ends up bonding with a local young woman whose female friend is also smitten with him.As a reserved young graduate vacations in a seaside town, he hopes his girlfriend will join him. But he ends up bonding with a local young woman whose female friend is also smitten with him.As a reserved young graduate vacations in a seaside town, he hopes his girlfriend will join him. But he ends up bonding with a local young woman whose female friend is also smitten with him.

  • Director
    • Éric Rohmer
  • Writer
    • Éric Rohmer
  • Stars
    • Melvil Poupaud
    • Amanda Langlet
    • Gwenaëlle Simon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Éric Rohmer
    • Writer
      • Éric Rohmer
    • Stars
      • Melvil Poupaud
      • Amanda Langlet
      • Gwenaëlle Simon
    • 42User reviews
    • 60Critic reviews
    • 91Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:49
    Official Trailer

    Photos52

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    Top cast9

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    Melvil Poupaud
    Melvil Poupaud
    • Gaspard
    Amanda Langlet
    Amanda Langlet
    • Margot
    Gwenaëlle Simon
    • Solène
    Aurelia Nolin
    • Léna
    Aimé Lefèvre
    • Le terre-neuvas
    Alain Guellaff
    • L'oncle Alan
    Evelyne Lahana
    • La tante Maiwen
    Yves Guérin
    • L'accordéoniste
    Franck Cabot-David
    • Le cousin
    • (as Franck Cabot)
    • Director
      • Éric Rohmer
    • Writer
      • Éric Rohmer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews42

    7.611.1K
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    Featured reviews

    10grubertm

    Evocative exercise in applied psychology - highly recommended

    Usually this movie is categorized as either a love story, comedy or drama. IMO it is all and none of these- for the simple reason that the plot does not really matter. What has impressed me about this movie is the realistic way the characters are portrayed. If in a Hollywood movie a character has merely two motivations acting on him this is already interpreted as a "highly complex personality". So the common movie shows characters with a 1D psyche which contradicts the many facets of Self and the elusive, fuzzy nature of personality that one usually has or experiences. On the other hand there are movies which emphasize the highly artistic side by stuffing in all kinds of metaphors, analogies, images, etc. While this might make for an interesting intellectual puzzle- to me itïs just dull because this avoids the medium's strength of portraying intense situations. Just like a book written in Latin: it can be fun deciphering it- but it certainly does not make a good read. With these extremes out of the way- back to _Conte d'ete_. It's presented in a diary-like way with the protagonist either on his own or in company of one of the girls he is in love with. There are a few group scenes but thankfully they are rare and the main focus is on dialogues between the different personalities. All of the characters appear convinced of having a static self at the time of speaking. Yet throughout the movie one can see quite rapid changes going on which, just as in real life are not completely directed at a specific goal (IMO linear character development only takes place in bad short stories). So while each character remains mostly unaware about his/her individual changes they are made obvious by the characters describing each other. The dialogues are extremely lifelike- with all the mechanisms of exaggerating, rationalizing, white lies, etc.

    What makes this movie a piece of art instead of just a diary film adaption is the timelessness with which it is presented. The images and characters are somewhat blurred or softened (_not_ in a visual sense!) as a fading memory might be. There are dates inserted every few minutes giving the plot a duration of about two weeks. Had this not been done it would be hard to tell whether the time span covered is 3 days or 3 years. Despite having an elaborate personality the characters at the same time remain general (archetypical, if you will) and personally I find it very easy to identify friends with these characters- which IMO is intended.

    To sum it up, I see this movie as an evocative exercise in applied psychology reflecting or focusing life towards the audience. While there are some recurring commentaries the film is for the most part free of moral judgement.

    There are two points of negative critic: - the otherwise excellent acting (which does not look like acting) is limited by the somewhat uninspired gestures of the main actor (Melvil Poupaud). - the Deus Ex Machina ending which is used to finish an otherwise endless story
    9Andy-296

    Perhaps the best of Rohmer's seasons films

    One of Rohmer's best. Gaspard (Melvil Poupaud) takes a month long vacation to a beach in Normandy, waiting for his more or less official girlfriend, the somewhat snotty Lena (Aurelia Nolin), to come. While waiting for her, he befriends the waitress and aspiring anthropologist Margot (Rohmer regular Amanda Langlet). Eventually, a relationship between the two develops, which seems to consists almost exclusively of long talks in the beach. But this is not all, since he soon also meets the somewhat promiscuous (but "principled") Solene (Gwaenelle Simon) in a disco. When Lena finally arrives to the resort, more than halfway into the movie, he finally finds himself in the position of having to choose one of the three. Rohmer would want us to think that Margot would be the best choice, and is difficult to disagree, since she's so charming and so willing to listen to him and even put up with him. It's amazing how Rohmer (who was in his late 70s when he directed this) is able to portray realistically how young people talk and interact. The final decision by Gaspard was a bit of a disappointment, but it was probably the more realistic possibility.
    10aileigc

    An excellent reflection on the value of friendship compared to that of light romances

    I'd say this film is an essay, regarding shyness, relations with the opposite sex, friendship and love. Being only based on the dialogues between different people, it's full of substance, and will definitely ask the viewer to think on the matter. I liked it so much because the people were real, the problem was real. Lots of people suffer problems of integration and self-achievement next to others and these have been thoroughly dealt with in the film.

    Its main problems are how much is worth a summer romance next to a sincere friendship, and the importance of knowing exactly one's feelings and purposes (do I love her, or do I not ? Am I merely trying to have fun?).

    In the end, we are faced with a line addressed to the main character that we can take for ourselves: "it was your own choice, think about it".

    That's the main message: the director presents a problem, the dialogues delve deeply in several of its aspects but the conclusion of why things turned out as they did is left to us. In short, the viewer will certainly learn something from it, and that can even lead to deeper self-reflections on one's personal life. A valuable film, and an interesting lesson. Especially good for young people afraid of not finding that special one.
    burneyfan

    A fortnight by the sea in charming company.

    Gaspard, played by Melvil Poupaud, is a song writer, a good-looking but

    dull young man, a gauche loner with a flat voice and an inexpressive

    face who comes to this delightful holiday island of Dinard off the

    Brittany coast to await the arrival of his `sort-of' girl friend, who

    demonstrates how much she loves him by keeping him waiting for two

    weeks. During those two weeks, however, he finds two other girl friends

    • or rather they find him. It must be his good-looks, it can't be


    anything else. First he is picked up in a restaurant by Margot, a

    waitress, who turns out not to be a waitress but an Ethnologist, just

    helping out her aunt who owns the restaurant. Obviously such a bright

    and intelligent girl could not be merely working-class!

    Amanda Langlet, who plays Margot and who appeared ten years earlier in

    Rohmer's `Pauline at the Beach.' is clearly the star of this film. Much

    of the enjoyment of the film is derived from being in the company of

    this vivacious girl and being allowed to eavesdrop on her talk with

    Gaspard about love and relationships as they roam in the bright sunlight

    around this lovely French sea-side resort and the countryside beyond.

    She is such a very warm and sympathetic listener that it is difficult to

    understand why he doesn't fall in love with her. Why she doesn't fall in

    love with him is easier to understand. (you ask yourself; is this man a

    very good actor or a very bad one?) He makes a couple of inept attempts

    to move the relationship forward but is repulsed; she wants only

    friendship - and you feel he is lucky to get that - while she awaits the

    return of her Anthropologist boy-friend who is away in South America.

    Gaspard's dullness is made obvious when she takes him to hear an old

    sailor sing sea-shanties; her face so eager and enrapt as she listens

    intently; his face, alongside, so lifeless.

    She encourages him to take up with Solene, played by Gwenaelle Simon in

    her first film, a friend of her's who they meet at a dance, but when he

    does, she is jealous, jealous of their friendship she says but secretly

    hurt that he now thinks of her as only a friend.

    His relationship with Solene seems idyllic at first, they seem

    marvelously happy and well suited to each other. He is accepted warmly

    into her family, they all go sailing together and have a merry

    sing-a-long to one of his songs. But then, sadly, her true nature shows;

    she becomes aggressive and demanding, insisting that he take her to the

    island of Quessant or their relationship is at an end. And now Lena, his

    `sort-of' girl friend, played by Aurelia Nolin, appears and insists that

    he take her instead. He must now choose.

    Rohmer's films are never plot-dependent; he prefers to dwell on the

    characters, to bring us into a close, intimate relation with them, while

    they reveal themselves in talk. And when the characters are as

    attractive as Margot
    8raymond-15

    It's like eavesdropping on real life characters!

    Rarely do we see such perfection in the direction of a film. Erich Rohmer gets all the details right - every movement, every gesture, all the uncertainties of growing up and falling in and out of love. I can see no flaws. I have to ask myself: Am I watching a group of actors? I seem to be watching a slice of real life with real people trying to cope with life's romantic problems. There's very little to the story. Gaspard, a young mathematics graduate comes to a beautiful island beach resort in Brittany, there to meet up with his girl friend Leon. When she doesn't turn up at the appointed time, he spends his days with two girls he meets on the island. The format of the film is much like a personal diary with the day to day events moving the story to its inevitable conclusion. Each of the three girls interrogate Gaspard about his attitudes to love, friendship and women in general. One feels that the indecisive Gaspard is more at home with his maths. and his guitar than with women. The strength of the film lies in the natural dialogue. It seems so familiar to us as we have all encountered similar experiences and thoughts in our youth. Eric Rohmer has a keen eye as he reveals all the hopes and disappointments of people searching for love. The photographer captures the idyllic beauty of this lovely resort, so bright and sunny. You can almost smell the sea air! It's a very gentle film and handled with a delicate touch, but one wonders in the end whether it may have been a little more enjoyable if a little more excitement could have been injected into the story.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This is, perhaps, the film in which Rohmer - notoriously silent about his private life - came closest to autobiography, filling the story with discrete traces and allusions to his own past. "Of all the films I've made, I think this is the most personal vehicle. Everything that is in this film is true. They are either things that I experienced in my youth or things that I noticed. [...] I have carried with me the story of this film, which was in part inspired by events that occurred during my adolescence, for a long time."
      • Antoine de Baecque & Noël Herpe, "Éric Rohmer: A Biography" (New York: Columbia University Press, 2016), p. 458.
    • Quotes

      Solene: Friendship's serious. Maybe more than love.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Movie Show: Episode dated 16 April 1997 (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Fille de corsaire
      Performed by Sebastien Erms

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 5, 1996 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • A Summer's Tale
    • Filming locations
      • Rue de la Malouine, Dinard, Ille-et-Vilaine, France(Solene's cousins house)
    • Production companies
      • Canal+
      • La Sept Cinéma
      • Les Films du Losange
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $198,126
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $12,863
      • Jun 22, 2014
    • Gross worldwide
      • $198,706
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 53 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital

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    Amanda Langlet, Aurelia Nolin, and Gwenaëlle Simon in Conte d'été (1996)
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