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Mémoires de jeunesse

Original title: Testament of Youth
  • 2014
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 9m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
31K
YOUR RATING
Mémoires de jeunesse (2014)
Based on the memoir by Vera Brittain, a British woman recalls coming of age during World War I.
Play trailer1:56
21 Videos
99+ Photos
Period DramaBiographyDramaHistoryRomanceWar

A British woman recalls coming of age during World War I - a story of young love, the futility of war, and how to make sense of the darkest times.A British woman recalls coming of age during World War I - a story of young love, the futility of war, and how to make sense of the darkest times.A British woman recalls coming of age during World War I - a story of young love, the futility of war, and how to make sense of the darkest times.

  • Director
    • James Kent
  • Writers
    • Juliette Towhidi
    • Vera Brittain
  • Stars
    • Alicia Vikander
    • Kit Harington
    • Taron Egerton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    31K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • James Kent
    • Writers
      • Juliette Towhidi
      • Vera Brittain
    • Stars
      • Alicia Vikander
      • Kit Harington
      • Taron Egerton
    • 94User reviews
    • 125Critic reviews
    • 76Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos21

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:56
    Official Trailer
    International Trailer
    Trailer 2:21
    International Trailer
    International Trailer
    Trailer 2:21
    International Trailer
    Going To The Front
    Clip 0:55
    Going To The Front
    Im Not Getting Married
    Clip 0:35
    Im Not Getting Married
    No More Fear
    Clip 1:28
    No More Fear
    Testament Of Youth: Take The Test
    Clip 2:18
    Testament Of Youth: Take The Test

    Photos129

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    + 123
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    Top cast78

    Edit
    Alicia Vikander
    Alicia Vikander
    • Vera Brittain
    Kit Harington
    Kit Harington
    • Roland Leighton
    Taron Egerton
    Taron Egerton
    • Edward Brittain
    Dominic West
    Dominic West
    • Mr. Brittain
    Colin Morgan
    Colin Morgan
    • Victor Richardson
    Emily Watson
    Emily Watson
    • Mrs. Brittain
    Joanna Scanlan
    Joanna Scanlan
    • Aunt Belle
    Miranda Richardson
    Miranda Richardson
    • Miss Lorimer
    Rachel Redford
    Rachel Redford
    • Exam Candidate
    Nicholas Farrell
    Nicholas Farrell
    • Headmaster
    Daisy Waterstone
    Daisy Waterstone
    • Clare Leighton
    Nicholas Le Prevost
    Nicholas Le Prevost
    • Mr. Leighton
    Anna Chancellor
    Anna Chancellor
    • Mrs. Leighton
    Teresa Churcher
    Teresa Churcher
    • Passenger
    Xavier Atkins
    Xavier Atkins
    • Boy on Bicycle
    Niamh Cusack
    Niamh Cusack
    • Sister Jones
    Laura Elsworthy
    Laura Elsworthy
    • Nurse Scott
    Naomi Everson
    • Nurse Milton
    • Director
      • James Kent
    • Writers
      • Juliette Towhidi
      • Vera Brittain
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews94

    7.231.3K
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    Featured reviews

    7Lejink

    Anthem For Doomed Youth

    I remember being given this book as a set text for an English A-Level examination over 30 years ago and am aware that there was a prestigious BBC production of it also several years back but this is the first dramatisation I've seen of Vera Brittain's novel documenting her own experiences in that golden age of post-Edwardian pre WW1 England when for coming-of-age birthdays you got given a piano from your father. That's if you were a girl of course, her more musically gifted brother conversely gets what she would have wanted, a scholarship at Oxford although on the other hand he is also at the the prime age to be called up for what he and most everyone else (but not their knowing father) believes will be a short, heroic and clean war which of course it turned out not to be (apart from the heroic part).

    Young Vera is headstrong, not only about wanting to make her own way in a man's world (female emancipation was still years away), but later about making her own contribution to the war effort by enrolling as a nurse while her lover, brother and other male friends are fighting in the trenches. Told wholly from her point of view, it's an entertaining if not enthralling watch, beautifully shot and well acted if somehow just lacking some extra pathos to really capture the hellish undertow of the War to end all Wars.

    Alicia Vikander is appealing as the vaguely tomboyish, intellectual Vera. In those days, it would appear, the golden youth had to be chaperoned everywhere by a usually imposing maiden aunt figure and make their feelings about each other known by writing and sending poems as the film strives to contrast the idyllic pre-war days of carefree swimming and carousing with the bleakness and destruction of war itself. For me, I didn't feel the contrast quite sharply enough and my abiding memories of the film are of the big family house and the dreaming spires of Oxford rather than the hell of the makeshift military hospitals and muddy and bloody trenches on the front line.

    The best shot for me was when I perhaps detected a tribute to all-time great movie "Gone With The Wind" as Vera goes Scarlett-like amongst the wounded and dying, searching for her wounded brother where the camera ascends into a sweeping dolly shot showing the full extent of the number of the casualties, just like Vincent Fleming's rightly famous take all those years ago.

    The supporting actors are picked from the familiar directory of experienced British character actors, notably Miranda Richardson and Emily Watson, while the young actors in the leads, all of them unfamiliar to me, perform with aplomb.

    There is a great true-life story to be told here and this film does so respectfully and responsibly, if just a little too carefully at times.
    7SnoopyStyle

    Vikander wins me over

    Vera Brittain (Alicia Vikander) wants to go to Oxford but her parents (Dominic West, Emily Watson) wants her to look for a husband. Her brother Edward (Taron Egerton), and friends Victor Richardson (Colin Morgan) and Roland Leighton (Kit Harington) all adore her. Vera falls for Roland and gets accepted to Somerville College, Oxford. As WWI approaches, her guys all volunteer. She convinces her father to let Edward enlist. She defers college and volunteers to be a nurse.

    It has a slow period-piece start. It's got a nice hazy moody feel. Vikander is great but the guys need more exposition. They don't have enough space to show their characters. It's a slow burn and it's all concentrated on Vikander. She wins me over slowly. She has great sadness. It has very poignant moments especially in the later parts.
    rogerdarlington

    A worthy tribute to the fallen and those left behind

    The centenary of the outbreak of what was at the time called The Great War, and came later to be known as The First World War, led to an outpouring of commemorative and cultural events. This explains the timing of "Testament Of Youth" which in fact is based on the famous first instalment of the memoirs of Vera Brittain (1893-1970) which was published as long ago as 1933 and is still in print. It is both a tale of tragic loss as young, idealistic men volunteer for the slaughter fields of France and Belgium and an account of an intelligent young woman's efforts to obtain a university education and make her independent way in the world.

    There is a fine ensemble cast of established and new British actors, but the central role is the subject of a surprise and bold piece of casting as the Swedish actress Alicia Vikander plays the quintessentially British Brittain. However, Vikander gives a luminous performance and she is clearly destined for a very successful career. There is a sense of authenticity in having a female scriptwriter Juliette Towhidi to turn Brittain's memoir into a film and the whole thing is beautifully shot with stunning scenery plus period dress and transport.

    There is a scene in "Testament Of Youth" which borrows directly from an iconic shot in the classic movie "Gone With The Wind": in both works, an overhead camera pulls back as the central female character walks through a field of dead and dying men revealing ever-larger numbers of bodies.
    8The_late_Buddy_Ryan

    Great visuals and Alicia Vikander really lift this adaptation of Vera Brittain's powerful memoir

    Vikander's assured performance really saves this film from being just another solemn costume drama, and it's largely thanks to her that the passion that inspired Vera Brittain's antiwar classic still shows through despite a sometimes rushed and perfunctory screenplay. Kit Harington ("Game of Thrones") is suitably intense as Vera's fiancé, Roland Leighton (didn't recognize John Snow at first in his new guise as beardless nature poet).

    The camera may seem to dwell too much on idyllic country scenes and beautiful vistas at the expense of plot and character, though that does help to heighten the contrast between Vera's privileged but restricted prewar life and the new life of purpose and endless horror that awaits her at a field hospital in France. The camera's used most effectively when the two worlds collide-to illustrate Roland's poem addressed to the corpse of a German soldier found lying in a patch of wildflowers, most of all in the panorama of a boundless field of dead and dying men surrounding the hospital after a "big push" (which echoes the famous crane shot after the Battle of Atlanta in "Gone with the Wind"). I'll let the nitpickers figure out if the Leightons' house on the South Coast really did have a magnificent view of what looks like the White Cliffs of Dover, but the stormy shoreline makes the perfect backdrop for a scene in which Roland returns angry and shellshocked from the front

    The basic storyline-Vera's service in France and her romance with Roland Leighton-is skillfully dramatized and very moving; her struggle with the conventions of Georgian family life is somewhat less involving, one exception being an ironic episode in which she's summoned back from the front to deal with a family "crisis," only to find that her mother's gotten sick and has fallen behind with the housework

    The much-praised '79 series with Cheryl Campbell only seems to be available on VHS and Region 2 DVD; I wouldn't hesitate in recommending this gorgeous and affecting new version as an alternative.
    10mubinavisram

    Heartbreaking Portrayal of Love and Loss During War

    I first read "Testament of Youth" during university and was captivated by the emotionally moving real-life story of love and loss during war. The memoir spurred me on to read more about Vera Brittain, particularly during the World War I period that is the setting of "Testament of Youth." Having read her diary "Chronicle of Youth" and "Letters from a Lost Generation" long before watching this film, I had formed a strong attachment to Vera Brittain almost as if she was a personal friend. Reading her words, it is very easy for anyone, particularly a young, studious person to relate to her and the blossoming romance she describes between herself and her first love, Roland Leighton.

    As such, I had extremely high expectations for this film, and was skeptical that Alicia Vikander and Kit Harington would be "my" Vera and Roland--I had such a fixed idea of them in my head. Fortunately Alicia and Kit's performances met my expectations. They had wonderful chemistry and the relationship as portrayed captured the essence of Vera and Roland: the intelligent, witty banter, sweet/innocent flirtatiousness, passion and angst. This relationship is at the heart of the memoir and is the driving force for much of what occurs during and after its commencement, so it was very important for this relationship to be portrayed accurately and to be emotionally moving for the audience, which it certainly was for me.

    Supporting characters played by Taron Egerton (Edward) and Colin Morgan (Victor) were also wonderfully portrayed, which was a relief as the relationships with her brother and friend are extremely important in the memoir as well, and just as emotionally moving as the romance between Vera and Roland. As far as the other aspects of the film are concerned, the stirring scenes at the hospital where Vera volunteers as a nurse are gripping and faithfully portray the tumultuous wartime experiences that Vera describes in her memoir.

    The highlight for me was the poetry of Roland which is interwoven during key moments in the film. This is a lovely element to the story that I found very touching and it provides a beautiful, emotional backdrop for key scenes.

    I really hope this film spurs those who haven't read the memoir/have never heard of Vera Brittain to go on and read "Testament of Youth." The book certainly lingered in my mind for quite some time after I had first read it, and the film likewise recaptured those feelings for me.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Saoirse Ronan was originally cast as Vera Brittain but she dropped out due to scheduling conflicts. Alicia Vikander replaced her.
    • Goofs
      As Roland and Vera meet in late 1914 before he leaves for France, Aunt Belle notices that Roland is sick and she talks about how influenza is ripping through the troops and it's in all the newspapers "Spanish Influenza they call it." The earliest known case of what would only later be called the Spanish flu was in March of 1918--and reports of the plague were zealously suppressed in the press of the belligerent nations for fear that it damaged morale. The only reason the disease, which actually was first documented in Kansas, was named "Spanish Flu", was because Spain was neutral in the war and the Spanish papers were free to report cases, giving the wrong impression elsewhere that Spain was hit first and harder by the disease.
    • Quotes

      Roland Leighton: Down the long white road we walked together. Down between the grey hills and the heather. You seemed all brown and soft, just like linnet. Your errant hair had shadowed sunbeams in it. And there shone all April in your eyes.

    • Crazy credits
      During the opening credits, World War I guns can be heard in the background.
    • Connections
      Featured in Film '72: Episode #44.1 (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      Silver Threads Among the Gold
      Written by H.P. Danks & Eben E. Rexford

      Performed by John McCormack

      Source: Library and Archives

      Canada/Silver Threads Among the Gold

      1922/AMICUS 31399658

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 23, 2015 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Denmark
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • BBC Films
      • BBC Films 2 (United Kingdom)
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Testament of Youth
    • Filming locations
      • Keighley Railway Station, Station Bridge, Keighley, Bradford, West Yorkshire, England, UK(railway station scenes)
    • Production companies
      • BBC Film
      • BFI Film Fund
      • Heyday Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,822,250
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $53,000
      • Jun 7, 2015
    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,851,758
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 9 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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