L'été de nos quinze ans (1983) Poster

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Abysmal
dbdumonteil16 March 2011
With "L'Ete De Nos Quinze Ans" ,the French cinema of the eighties hits rock bottom;produced by industrialist Marcel Dassault,starring Chanteur Michel Sardou,this abysmal soap opera shows clean (or should I say super clean ) teenagers for whom unemployment ,lack of money or drugs do not exist .Every (desirable) mansion has got its pool ;every birthday party ends with a firework ;Dad runs a restaurant in the posh Deauville town;Dad has a little bullfight in honor of his son's flirt;the girl in question is an opera star's daughter.Everybody's nice and everybody's rich in this story written by Marcel Dassault himself and director Marcel Julian.Take to your heels !
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1/10
L'été de nos quinze ans - The summer of our fifteen years of mediocrity
eightylicious22 February 2022
In the 80s, industrialist Marcel Dassault ruled the movie business in France. He was a powerful producer, being responsible for such hits as the two "La Boum" films, which marked a generation of French teens. His goal was to promote the image of the "ideal" French family through the movies he produced and financed; so it is that everyone in them lives in privileged regions, dresses flawlessly, and speaks to their parents with rudeness that sticks to the level of "You don't understand me", or, even better, thanks to Danièle Thompson, "You don't feed me". It is of no significance that the actors themselves mostly came from the lower classes (Sophie Marceau instantly comes to mind) or just generally didn't have picture-perfect lives. No, for M. Dassault, all a teen film needed was a lame plot, likeable characters, and an ending for which one waits so much as for the train when having twelve cars.

In this film, Alexandre Sterling (Mathieu, Vic's lover in "La Boum") plays a boy who gets the opportunity to relive his great childhood love ten years later - from the title we can guess that he and his girlfriend were fifteen years old when their love was resurrected.

The rest of the story isn't very memorable, but in short, the two lovers' parents are so moved by their children's romance that they let them live it as much as possible by throwing parties in their pool houses. The film was relentlessly promoted in the teen magazines of the time because of the fact that Sterling's father was played by famous singer Michel Sardou. He was mostly known for his songs with controversial lyrics, such as "Être une femme", which was criticized by feminists at the time for mocking the emancipation of women. Regardless of that, Sardou wasn't exactly a talented actor and drove the film nowhere.

The only thing I liked about the film was the music, and when I write this, I mean the theme song. Having the same title as the film and performed by Fabrice Ploquin, it is a nice romantic ballad, typical of what the French 80s had to offer (I'm reminded of "Le géant de papier" by Jean-Jacques Lafon, another mildly depressing song which creates a nostalgic feeling to the listener). It is arranged nicely, with the voices accompanying the singer giving his voice a beautiful echo that pleases the ear. The violins and the piano which are dominant in matters of musical accompaniment create the melody, which is pleasing and dreamy, travelling the listener to this (or maybe a more fun) summer.

The director Marcel Jullian did nothing special here, just letting the actors do whatever they thought good for their scenes. This is what differentiates him from a director like Claude Pinoteau, who excellently used his young actors' potential in "La Boum". Sterling was one of them, and it was because of films like "L'été de nos quinze ans" that his career went downhill.

In conclusion, "L'été de nos quinze ans" is of no interest to the 80s teen movie fan, except if they want to see every film of this genre, or explore the filmography of the unlucky La Boum actors, something which I did, discovering a sea of mediocrity along the way. Maybe when one crosses this sea is when they discover the real work of the lost "La Boum generation". It's not worth it. What you'll find is more pointless films. The sea of mediocrity ultimately leads to some pool houses, beautiful from the outside, with a sign that signals what's to come reading: "PROPERTY OF MARCEL DASSAULT".
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7/10
For those who love all ages of life
fmoable18 January 2022
A review here on IMDB complains that an industrialist has made this film (what normal movie is not made by industrialists?), that the young people in it are super-clean and don't know what unemployment, money shortages or drugs are. As if a movie is bad for those reasons.

Why do reviewers so often want movies to wallow in misery? This movie is the opposite: a happy, funny and enjoyable story with lovely characters only. Can't movies be bright and good? Also, this is a drama comedy, not a teenage angst tragedy.

It's a real story with personality and with a lovely atmosphere. If I had been young and seen it, I would have loved it. I do now, even though I'm old.
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