BBC HomeExplore the BBC
This page has been archived and is no longer updated. Find out more about page archiving.

28 October 2014
GloucestershireGloucestershire

BBC Homepage
»BBC Local
Gloucestershire
Things to do
People & Places
Nature
History
Religion & Ethics
Arts and Culture
BBC Introducing
TV & Radio

Sites near Gloucestershire

Bristol
Coventry
South East Wales
Hereford & Worcs
Oxford
Wiltshire

Related BBC Sites

England

Contact Us

15 Girls Can't Swim (Les Filles ne savent pas nager) (2003)

updated 14th April 2003
reviewer's rating
Three Stars
Reviewed by Jamie Russell


Director
Anne Sophie-Birot
Writers
Anne-Sophie Birot
Christophe Honoré
Stars
Isild Le Besco
Karen Alyx
Pascale Bussières
Pascal Elso
Marie Riviére
Length
101 minutes
Distributor
Millivres Multimedia
Cinema
18th April 2003
Country
France
Genres
Comedy
Drama


Set in one of the many villages that line the Brittany coast, "Girls Can't Swim" is an evocative tale of adolescent love and longing that takes place amidst the sand dunes and crashing waves of Northern France.

Fifteen-year-old Gwen (Isild Le Besco) is obsessed with just two things: sleeping with as many of the local boys as she can get her hands on, and counting down the days until the return of her best friend Lise (Karen Alyx). But when Lise arrives, Gwen discovers that her two obsessions are mutually exclusive.

Causing quite a stir at London's Lesbian and Gay Film Festival in 2001, "Girls Can't Swim" has retained its "lesbian movie" tag even though, as many of the festival's audience members complained, it isn't really a gay film. Following Gwen and Lise's intense relationship, it's chock full of sweaty couplings, but all of them are heterosexual, leaving the repressed love of Lise for her friend largely unspoken.

Sexual politics aside, what makes "Girls Can't Swim" so involving is debut filmmaker Anne Sophie-Birot's nicely observed script, which treats its adolescent heroines with a wonderful amount of compassion.

Picking up on teenage petulance - there's a wry moment as Lise's all-girl family sit around watching figure skating on television wistfully recounting how they'd once wanted to be ice skaters to her infuriated annoyance - Sophie-Birot proves more interested in the welter of teenage emotions that her protagonists are experiencing and the effect it has on their long-suffering families.

Escaping to the beaches in the middle of the night, both girls discover that the family playground of their youth has transformed into a darker, adolescent stomping ground where all kinds of desires simmer to the surface. It's the kind of water where only women, not girls, can swim without fear of being hurt.

In French with subtitles.

Find out more about "Girls Can't Swim (Les Filles ne savent pas nager)" at
Movie Review Query Engine
The Internet Movie Database


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external websites


music
bullet
Latest news & reviews
bullet
Comedy nights
bullet
Festivals guide
bullet
On stage in Cheltenham
bullet
On stage in Gloucester
bullet
On stage in Stroud
bullet
On stage in Tewkesbury
bullet
On stage in the Cotswolds
bullet
On stage in the Forest
bullet
Get YOUR event listed
bullet
FREE nights out on us!
bullet
News & reviews
bullet
Latest releases
bullet
County cinema listings
bullet
Gloucs in the movies
bullet
The Harry Potter file
bullet
Tolkien's Forest
bullet
The Review Archive
bullet
News & reviews
bullet
Gig guide
bullet
Venues
bullet
Local talent: get listed!
bullet
News & reviews
bullet
Club nights
bullet
Venues
bullet
Tourist attractions
bullet
Ghostly Gloucestershire
bullet
Royal Gloucestershire
bullet
Gardens to visit
CONTACT US

BBC Gloucestershire
London Road
Gloucester
GL1 1SW

Telephone (website only):
+44 (0)1452 308585

e-mail:
gloucestershire@bbc.co.uk





About the BBC | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy