My Little Loves

My Little Loves (French: Mes Petites Amoureuses from a poem by Arthur Rimbaud) is a French drama film written and directed by Jean Eustache, his second and last feature. It was released in 1974 and stars Martin Loeb as an adolescent boy shunted from a tranquil lifestyle at his grandmother's rural abode to his mother's cramped apartment in the city. Ingrid Caven plays the boy's mother. The film was entered into the 9th Moscow International Film Festival.[1]

My Little Loves
Directed byJean Eustache
Produced byPierre Cottrell
Written byJean Eustache
StarringMartin Loeb
CinematographyNéstor Almendros
Release date
  • 18 December 1974 (1974-12-18)
Running time
123 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

Plot

This film is a study of a boy growing up in France. Daniel lives with his grandmother in Pessac outside the city of Bordeaux, sharing a naïve and happy childhood with his friends. After one year of secondary school, Daniel has to go to the city of Narbonne to live with his mother. She is a seamstress living in a small apartment with her lover José, a married Spanish farm worker. Daniel would like to continue school. However, his mother cannot afford it and sends him instead to work as an apprentice in a moped repair shop. Daniel learns about girls from observing others in the cinema, on the street, and advice from other boys in town. When he visits his grandmother next year, he returns as a much more mature boy than his old friends.

Cast

  • Martin Loeb as Daniel
  • Jacqueline Dufranne as La grand-mère
  • Jacques Romain
  • Ingrid Caven as La mère
  • Marie-Paule Fernandez as Françoise
  • Vincent Testanière
  • Roger Rizzi
  • Anne Stroka
  • Cirque Muller
  • Syndra Kahn
  • Jean-Jacques Bihan

Production

Luc Béraud is assistant director on the movie.

Reception

My Little Loves has an 80% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[2] It is one of Michel Gondry's favorite films.[3]

gollark: No, I mean in general, in higher-level languages.
gollark: You can just... not do that?
gollark: Even if that's true it is *much* harder to get good enough at assembly to work on it easily than it is to get good at python or whatever.
gollark: The assembly version is more complicated and harder to write/understand/maintain.
gollark: What, that if you meddle with a comparison and use a weird/flawed metric your thing looks better? Yes.

References

  1. "9th Moscow International Film Festival (1975)". MIFF. Archived from the original on 2013-01-16. Retrieved 2013-01-06.
  2. "MY LITTLE LOVES (MES PETITES AMOUREUSES) (1974)". RottenTomatoes.com. Retrieved February 4, 2017.
  3. "Michel Gondry's Favorite Films". RottenTomatoes.com. Retrieved February 4, 2017.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.