Film Review
For her debut feature, actress-turned director Hélène
Zimmer draws on her own experiences to deliver a frank and brutal
account of adolescence in which three feisty schoolgirls negotiate the
first stage of the painful journey from childhood to adulthood.
À 14 ans (a.k.a.
Being 14) is far from being the
usual sentimental coming-of-age piece. Its characters communicate
mainly by spitting crude obscenities into each others' faces and the
emotions depicted on screen are blisteringly raw and unadorned.
The film owes its biting realism partly to Zimmer's brave decision to
employ a mix of professional and non-professional actors, although this
is at times undermined by the director's fairly uninspired
mise-en-scène and a script in which clichés are
more abundant than character depth. The result is a film
that is refreshingly direct but it lacks the charm and insight
of similar brutally honest coming-of-age dramas such as
Claude Miller's
L'Effrontée (1985) and
Delphine Coulin's
17 filles (2011).
Of the three leads, only Galatéa Bellugi has any prior acting
experience (she previously appeared in Philippe de Pierpont's 2011 film
Elle ne pleure pas, elle chante),
so it is hardly surprising that hers is the more nuanced
and credible performance, although her co-stars Athalia Routier and
Najaa Bensaid show promise and bring a powerful emotional resonance to
a few scenes. All three actresses deserve credit for evoking so
authentically the insecurities, euphoria, heartache and general
confusion of those incredibly tough early teen years, although the film
as a whole struggles to engage the audience because of its off-puttingly
strident tone which implies that all teenagers are gobby, sex-mad rebels
whose vocabulary is limited to a dozen or so high-strength swear words. Sad to
say, the film does at times feel that it was written by a fourteen year
old, but it does leave a lasting impression.
© James Travers 2015
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Film Synopsis
Sarah, Jade and Louise are three friends who, at the not so tender age of
14, seem to be in too great a hurry to grow up - just like all girls of their
age. These three are now in their final year before going on to high
school, but they are far more interested in boys that in studying for
their crucial end of year exams. The upheavals of adolescence are not
helped by the problems they have at home, and their habit of speaking their
mind all of the time inevitably brings them into conflict with parents and
teachers alike. The girls fall out with each other when it is discovered
that Jade has been sleeping with Reza, a boy that Sarah has taken a fancy
to. When Jade is given the cold shoulder by her supposed friends, her
teenage upsets become even harder to bear...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.