User Reviews (6)

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  • 2018-09-20

    Mylia is a teenager who struggles with peer pressure in high school, and becoming a woman.

    I had the pleasure of seeing this pearl of a film at the FCVQ, and I am so glad I did. Director Geneviève Dullude-De Celles is truly amazing. She already reaches such level of maturity with this film, which is also her feature length debut.

    Her biggest quality as a director is her authenticity and her sensibility. Instantly we feel for Mylia, and her sister. We see her wandering around at school feeling like an outcast, and it's just so relatable and realistic. There is no melodramatic BS.

    Emilie Bierre is brilliant in this, especially considering her age. She manages to never be wooden or fake, and when she's emotional it is unbelievably convincing. She has a bright career in front of her. All the cast is great actually. It's mostly kids, and they show a wide range of emotions.

    The cinematography is very good. A lot of longer take. It's not a flashy film though. It's all about the message and the emotions.

    The film has a lot to say about relationship. We see Mylia trying to fit in at school with people she doesn't like, while giving less time to her sister, who is also having trouble making friends.

    She is introduce to this adult world of party, drinking and sex, where every kid tries as hard as possible to look and act like an adult who's seen it all, but Mylia is still a girl. She is not after these meaningless pleasures. They only make her feel worst, because she isn't a grown woman yet. She is after internal growth. Not external pleasures.

    The director addresses all of these themes with such sensibility and authenticity. It's not forced or in your face. It feels real, tangible, like she just had to make a film about this, and it really shows.

    Writing wise it's phenomenal. Every character has great dialogue that feels realistic and age appropriate. The story is also unpredictable, and never boring. There's always some sort of conflict or interesting interaction going on. Also everything that is introduced comes back in some way or another.

    The only negative was perhaps the character of the dad could've had more screen time. He has like two scenes. He felt pretty unimportant in the end, but the movie wasn't about him anyway.

    Overall this movie blew me away. I did not expected to fall in love with the characters, the setting and the message that much. I can't wait to watch it again, and I'll check out whatever Geneviève Dullude-De Celles does next.

    Rating: 8/10
  • This movie deliver the best come of age story that make you feel so close to the movie characters. A movie that can change your mood 180 degree, I really enjoy it....... WELL DONE
  • I appreciate the persistence in keeping the focus on a single story and the final scene closes with the best possible feeling, for me it was feeling at peace.
  • One of the most beautiful movies I've seen these last few years. There is so much talent in Quebec when it comes to directors. The filmis a sensitive coming of age drama about young people outside the norm. I loved how the story is centered around the idea of being outside the circle and finding yourself at ease with it. Also the tackling of Aboriginal characters was spot on. I was tired of seeing First Nations portrayed as drunks and abusive...Jimmy is such a fresh and authentic character.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Hand held camera follows poor little Mylia around in close-up after close-up so there can be no doubt that she is depressed, glum, lost.

    We get it. Anything else?

    The script is pedestrian. I'm French Canadian and often could not make out the conversations, even the ones added as voice overs in post production, so had to read the subtitles. No acting required. No directing either.

    Just follow poor Mylia around. Parties where kids jump up and down.

    Dark and out of focus. Editing choppy and missing continuity.

    Mom & Dad have no interaction whatever. Little 7-year old sister Camille upstages Mylia throughout. At the family dinner, mom suddenly announces that they're splitting up. The End.
  • gdump18 September 2021
    I don't know where this movie was supposed to be going, but snails would have gotten there faster. I watched 20 minutes of it and absolutely nothing had happened. On top of that, much of it is shot on a hand-held camera in extreme closeup and it was starting to make me nauseous. Maybe there would have been something worth watching coming up, but I wasn't prepared to put up with the horrible camera work to find out.