Grande École (film)

Grande École (2004) is a French drama film, directed by Robert Salis. The movie is about education, class, race and homosexuality.[4] Adapted from a stage play by Jean-Marie Besset.[1]

Grande école
Directed byRobert Salis
Produced byHumbert Balsan
Written byRobert Salis,
Jean-Marie Besset
Based onJean-Marie besset's play The Best of Schools[1][2]
Starring
Distributed byPyramide (France)
Release date
4 February 2004
Running time
110 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
Box office$310.000[3]

It was an early example of casting Arab men as gays compared to 'straight' white men in French films,[5] Salim Kechiouche as 'Mecir'.[2]

Plot

Paul is an upper-class young man who is about to start at a grande école, one of the system of mostly public colleges to which students are admitted based on a highly competitive process and whose graduates often gain prestigious employment. He has chosen to live with two new roommates instead of his girlfriend Agnès.

As a result, with his studies, he has little time to see her. Agnès perceives cracks in their relationship when she suspects Paul's attraction to one of his new roommates, the aristocratic Louis-Arnault. Paul denies any homosexual attraction, but Agnès decides to make a bet with him: whichever of them beds Louis-Arnault first, wins. If she does, Paul must stop exploring his sexuality; if he does, she will leave him.

Before the bet plays out, Paul meets Mécir, a young Arab worker, who becomes besotted with him. With Mécir, Paul goes on a journey of discovery that changes many of his ideas about class, cultural differences and sexuality.

Cast

Reception

It got IFFR Audience award at the Rotterdam Film Festival.[6]

Grande École has received mixed reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes 3 reviews are listed, 2 positive, 1 negative.[7]

Nick Jones from eyeforfilm.co on 5 February 2006, stated "rather than focusing on the central, emotional aspect of the story - Paul coming to terms with his sexuality - Salis tries to cover other issues in too much detail" and "you are left feeling short-changed by a script that conveniently ignores certain issues and abandons characters for its own means".[8]

Pierre Murat from telerama.fr said "Robert Salis films rather well desire, first unconscious and then assumed", but "he films the pleasure less well" and "the actors do not lack courage, especially Jocelyn Quivrin".[9]

Barry Forshaw in 2015 called it "powerful and moving drama" and "an passionate and erotic film".[1]

It is mentioned in Vitamin Q book by Jim Brogan in 2014, "beautiful, naked men, particularly in the showers of a local water polo club".[10]

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References

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