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Un amour de jeunesse

  • 2011
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
5.9K
YOUR RATING
Sebastian Urzendowsky and Lola Créton in Un amour de jeunesse (2011)
A chronicle of the romance between Camille and Sullivan, which begins during their adolescence.
Play trailer1:44
1 Video
9 Photos
DramaRomance

A chronicle of the romance between Camille and Sullivan, which begins during their adolescence and picks up after Sullivan's 8-year absence from exploring the world.A chronicle of the romance between Camille and Sullivan, which begins during their adolescence and picks up after Sullivan's 8-year absence from exploring the world.A chronicle of the romance between Camille and Sullivan, which begins during their adolescence and picks up after Sullivan's 8-year absence from exploring the world.

  • Director
    • Mia Hansen-Løve
  • Writer
    • Mia Hansen-Løve
  • Stars
    • Lola Créton
    • Sebastian Urzendowsky
    • Magne-Håvard Brekke
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    5.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mia Hansen-Løve
    • Writer
      • Mia Hansen-Løve
    • Stars
      • Lola Créton
      • Sebastian Urzendowsky
      • Magne-Håvard Brekke
    • 20User reviews
    • 96Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    U.S. Version
    Trailer 1:44
    U.S. Version

    Photos8

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    Top cast57

    Edit
    Lola Créton
    Lola Créton
    • Camille
    Sebastian Urzendowsky
    Sebastian Urzendowsky
    • Sullivan
    Magne-Håvard Brekke
    Magne-Håvard Brekke
    • Lorenz
    • (as Magne Håvard Brekke)
    Valérie Bonneton
    Valérie Bonneton
    • La mère de Camille
    Serge Renko
    • Le père de Camille
    Özay Fecht
    • La mère de Sullivan
    Max Ricat
    • Le frère de Sullivan
    Louis Dunbar
    • Un ami
    Philippe Paimblanc
    • Le 1er antiquaire
    Patrice Movermann
    • Le 2e antiquaire
    Arnaud Azoulay
    • Le frère de Camille
    Amélie Robin
    • Amie du lycée
    Justine Dhouailly
    • Amie du lycée
    • (as Justin Dhouilly)
    Charlotte Faivre
    • La chef des hôtesses
    François Buot
    • Le prof d'histoire
    Elisabeth Guill
    • La prof d'anglais
    Marie-Hélène Peyrat
    • La prof de français
    Guy-Patrick Sainderichin
    • Le prof d'architecture
    • Director
      • Mia Hansen-Løve
    • Writer
      • Mia Hansen-Løve
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.75.8K
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    Featured reviews

    6SnoopyStyle

    not that dramatic realism

    It's Paris 1999. Camille is 15 and Sullivan is 19 and they're in love. He's dropping out of school to go off to South America without her. After awhile, he stops writing to her and she falls into a suicidal depression. Years later, she's in love with her professor Lorenz. She has an intense relationship with him and then Sullivan returns into her life.

    This is a lot of young love without limits. This is a very french movie. The young leads play their part like any random young lovers. This is semi-realism. I don't particularly like the guy. The fact is that he leaves her behind which puts into question how much he truly loves her. He's callous to her feelings and she's an overwrought young girl. Their original romance is not that dramatic since the movie is just waiting for them to break up. I'm just not particularly in love with their love and it's a passable romance.
    10oOgiandujaOo_and_Eddy_Merckx

    Delightful

    Louis Garrel recently made his first feature film as director, Le Petit Tailleur, in an interview afterwards he admitted that his film was of a Paris that did not exist anymore, where the young went to the theatre to see Kleist. His film, as this one, contains a nostalgia for the New Wave. This is tacitly admitted in Goodbye First Love when Sullivan mentions that he went to a party in the suburbs where kids went to have sex and take drugs, a piece of shrapnel that doesn't fit in the jigsaw of this movie. The young of the developed world live with their eyes burnt out.

    Goodbye First Love tells the story of Camille, in love with Sullivan, and how she copes with losing that love and moving on with her life. There's something pristine about the way that young animals love and lust together, narcotic and somewhat illusory, but on the threshold of paradise; and actually the most astonishing part of the film practically occurs in an Eden. One its successes is the casting of two actors who have an obvious sexual compatibility, which lends credibility to the treatment.

    Mature love comes, but lies in the cradle of shared creativity and mutual respect, which should represent a superannuation of first love; but flesh is not just. For Camille, riding on the pannier rack of Sullivan's bicycle and grasping his body will always be the seed of her crystal.

    Goodbye First Love, by the way, is an incredible aesthetic treat (my favourite part may well have been when the two rake over the ashes of their love, lying together likes ravens in a shattered tower, all a creation of capturing colour carefully). I felt privileged to have watched it, to have been let inside what's a meagerly-camouflaged auto-biography from Mia Hansen-Løve. I may well love and be loved back one day, but it won't be the Hamelin song that Mia has let me see, and I'm grateful to her for this facsimile.
    8howard.schumann

    Paints a striking picture of the impact of first love

    Most of us at one time or another have experienced the sacramental beauty of loving another being. Love, however, defies analysis and often does not fit our pictures. From an outsider's point of view, there are more unlikely couples than likely ones, but those who are not in the lover's shoes may be unable to fully understand their feelings. Camille (Lola Créton), in Mia Hansen-Love's third feature Goodbye First Love, is repeatedly told by parents and friends to forget the young man who claims to love her for eternity, but then leaves abruptly on a trip to "discover himself." That she is unable to let go is not a sign of immaturity or madness, but only of the depth of her love and the betrayal she feels.

    The 17-year-old Créton (Something in the Air) is stunning both in her appearance and her ability as an actress. There is never a moment when it feels that she is just playing a role rather than being herself. Hansen-Love, herself only thirty one, paints a striking picture of the impact of first love. When Camille meets and falls for the bland 19-year-old Sullivan (Sebastian Urzendowsky) at the age of fifteen, her first involvement is both joyous and heartbreaking. To Camille, Sullivan is her world and she is obsessed with him. Overly dramatic, she threatens that if he leaves her, she will "jump into Seine." He responds by saying that "If you cut your hair, I'll kill you," presumably sparing her the trouble of jumping into the Seine. Sullivan's relationship with Camille, though tender, lacks commitment.

    For him, it feels as if love is a good idea but not something he feels in his bones and the chemistry between the two is missing in subtlety and depth. On vacation in the idyllic Ardèche region of Southern France, Sullivan dumps on her, relating his plans to drop out of school and backpack through South America for ten months with friends. Obviously, the "friends" part of it does not include Camille. When he is on his trip, she follows his journey via his letters and pushes pins into a map to mark his whereabouts. Though he promises to begin again where they left off, he soon writes to her that he wants to be free. Camille takes it hard, very hard and as time melts away, she is no closer to acceptance than the day she received the news.

    Hansen-Love does not give us much information as to the passage of time, but we know that years have passed during which Camille has gone to school to study architecture and has begun to build a new life with Lorenz (Magne Håvard Brekke), a considerably older professor of Architecture. Growing in maturity, she has become a young professional, having apparently moved on from Sullivan, that is, until he comes back into her life, seemingly unchanged both physically and emotionally. Goodbye First Love can be meandering without much happening in the way of narrative and the jumpiness of the editing can be frustrating.

    Hansen-Love rarely stays with one scene (especially the love-making scenes) long enough for us to feel any deepening involvement, yet the film succeeds in capturing the extreme mood swings of adolescence with sensitivity and we can relate to the emotional pain a breakup can cause when people's feelings are treated in a cavalier fashion. What also works is the eclectic soundtrack that features Patrick Street, Violeta Parra, Matt McGinn, Johnny Flynn and Laura Marling, music that adds another dimension to the film. While it is not a "message film," what comes through for me in Goodbye First Love is the Buddhist idea that the origin of suffering is attachment to things that are impermanent such as desire and passion. Nirvana, however, is not always comprehensible for those who are fifteen years old.
    7paulscofield68

    Early Hansen-Love

    I enjoyed this French drama. Hansen-Love seems very influenced by French New Wave filmmakers, such as Rohmer. The English title is poor since it gives away a plot line. The French title in English is A Love of Youth, or more freely A Teen Romance. It does manage to capture that interesting relationship, however it goes into other directions as well. For those who like indie/ art-house French dramas, Hansen-Love's work is well worth looking into.
    6adamscastlevania2

    A plodding yet decent romantic drama

    (57%) If you close your eyes and imagine a modestly budgeted French film centred around the love and loss of Parisian girl, then this is almost certainly what you'd have in mind. In a very similar form to that of 2013's Blue is the warmest colour, this takes the more realistic route to express itself. So expect lots of scenes in which hardly anything happens, a purposefully plodding pace, and characters that live and breathe more in reality of everyday life rather than the pages of a piece of fiction. The performances are subdued, and the script is penned back keeping everything in the realms of normality which does have its engrossing elements, but it also could make this an unbearable watch for some. After Boyhood went above and beyond to have its lead actor at the same age as the character, while this on the other hand has the issue of Lola Creton looking a bit too old to be 15 at the start of the film, and a bit too young looking to be high-rising architect by the second half. Boyhood really has spoilt us. The relationship at the heart of the film is undoubtedly idyllic, sometimes a little too idyllic, but unlike the better Blue is the warmest colour this isn't as painful to watch when things start to go rough. Fans of realistic romantic drama should give this a look, but those who like explosions and fistfights need not apply.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Lola Créton was 16 years old when the film was shot. Director Mia Hansen-Løve said it was a big deal for Lola to play nude scenes. "But what's amazing is that, when the cameras rolled, she was free and sensuous like a cat. It was as if she was discovering her own sexuality before our eyes, but, as soon as the filming stopped, she'd retreat behind sheets, clothes immediately."
    • Goofs
      At around 16 minutes Sullivan is at the travel agency and he buys a flight ticket to Caracas departing from Paris Roissy (Charles de Gaulle airport) with TAP Air Portugal. This portuguese airline company does not fly from this airport but always from Orly. Even in 1999 when the movie story happens.
    • Quotes

      Camille: Let's go pick our room.

      Sullivan: Not bad. Perfect.

      Camille: It's the kids' room. Why not take one that's more spacious?

      Sullivan: To avoid searching for you in the bed.

    • Connections
      Featured in MsMojo: Top 10 Movies About Young Love (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      Volver a los 17
      (Violeta Parra)

      Interpréter par Violeta Parra

      © Warner Chappell de Argentina

      Avec l'autorisation de Warner Music France

      (P)1966 IRT

      Avec l'aimable authorisation de Warner Chappell Music France

      A Warner Music Group Company

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Goodbye First Love?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 6, 2011 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Germany
    • Languages
      • French
      • German
      • Danish
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Goodbye First Love
    • Filming locations
      • Ardèche, France
    • Production companies
      • Les Films Pelléas
      • Razor Film Produktion GmbH
      • Arte France Cinéma
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • €3,600,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $95,000
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $21,077
      • Apr 22, 2012
    • Gross worldwide
      • $514,913
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 50m(110 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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