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Girls Can't Swim
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Directed by Anne-Sophie Birot
French filmmaker Anne-Sophie Birot makes her writing and directing debut with the coming-of-age drama Les Filles Ne Savent Pas Nager, given the unfortunate English title Girls Can't Swim. Every year, Gwen (Isild Le Besco) meets up with her best friend Lise (Karen Alyx) for a summer on the beach in Brittany. Since Gwen has grown into a reckless teenager and her parents are experiencing financial problems, this year is decidedly different. She develops an interest in sex, starts dating Frédo (Julien Cottereau), and looks for other boys to fool around with. Her dad, Alain (Pascal Elso), sells his boat, her mom, Céline (Pascale Bussières), starts working to support the family, and, worst of all, Lise doesn't come to the beach. Meanwhile, back in the city, Lise finds out her absent father has died, which causes much grief to her mother (Marie Rivière) and older sisters (Yelda Reynaud and Sandrine Blancke). Having never met her father and wanting to escape her family's trauma, she travels by herself to Brittany. Without telling anyone what's bothering her, Lise is pensive and brooding while Gwen is thirsty for adventure, leading to a major fight between the two girls. With Gwen running around on her own and Céline at work, Lise and Alain are left to form an unlikely friendship, which takes a dark turn and leads to a tragic conclusion. Girls Can't Swim premiered at the 2000 Montreal Film Festival. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
Lightweight fun conflicts with harsh reality in the coming-of-age drama Girls Can't Swim. This bittersweet story captures the turbulent friendship between two very different girls in the French beach town of Brittany. With her messy long blonde hair and frantic energy, Gwen (Isild Le Besco) just wants to have a constant stream of summer fun. She is physical with everyone, throwing her limbs around, jumping on motorbikes, and generally thrilled by life. Her adventurous streak is thrown into conflict with the presence of her best friend Lise (Karen Alyx), whom she has been communicating with through personal letters. With bobbed red hair and a deadpan face, the brooding poet Lise is already troubled by her father's recent death and her inability to mourn along with the rest of her family. She is even more disturbed by Gwen's sexual awakening and lack of interest in their friendship; clearly their naïve childhood is over. As Lise grows more intense and friendly with Alain (Pascal Elso), Gwen grows more careless and distant, leading to a strange and terrible conclusion. For all the warm moments between characters in their pajamas, tenderly climbing into bed together and sharing hugs, the sunny beach is still captured as cold, rocky, and windy. After the initial bond between the best friends is honestly built with humane quirks, the final act is a jarring move into serious dramatic territory. The sexual tension between the two girls is evident in several intimate scenes, also some business with a fish tank is probably meant to suggest the budding sexuality lurking underneath their behavior. The major shifts in tone can be difficult to accept, but it ultimately results in an honest, sensitive portrayal of a teenage friendship. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
 

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