Avril (2006) Poster

(2006)

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8/10
The novice's story
guy-bellinger22 June 2006
A very offbeat exciting film debut for Gerald Hustache-Mathieu.With "Avril", his first full-length film, the fledgling movie-maker has opted for a story set in and out of a convent, with a young nun as its central character, which is going against the flow, particularly in the France of 2006,not a particularly religious country. Which also makes viewing this U.F.O. an intriguing and rewarding experience.

Hustache-Mathieu (what a name!) must first be congratulated on his miraculous soft touch. One of the themes being that of a young nun awakening to "secular" life, one could have feared some smutty details, which luckily never happens. For, although Avril gradually discovers her body and ends up bathing in the nude, vulgarity is never on the agenda. Likewise, although Pierre, a traveling hardware merchant, develops a crush on her and the two young men they meet and mix with are gay, nothing dirty is ever shown. The writer-director respects his characters and his empathy is communicative. We feel good with these three-dimensional characters and we would like them to exist in real life to prolong the pleasure of their company.

Also pleasant is the skilfully devised plot. The director has a knack for doling out surprises throughout the story and we never know in advance where he is leading us.At the beginning, "Avril" tells the tale of a novice about to take her vows, then it changes to Avril discovering her twin brother and his lover in the company of Pierre in a holiday atmosphere. The final chapter throws light on all the mysteries (Who is Avril's biological mother? Why wasn't Avril told before that she had a brother?) only to tip into violence and more mystery.

This stimulating narration is enhanced by topnotch acting: Sophie Quinton, impeccably going through all the stages of the evolution of her character from awkward naive nun to full-fledged woman, leads the cast. But all the others are wonderful as well, from Miou-Miou as a distressed sister to Geneviève Casile as the demented Mother Superior, from Nicolas Duvauchelle, adding delicacy to good looks, to Richaud Valls, both hilarious and engaging.

All in all an original first film by a gifted new French movie-maker, avoiding to fall into the traps too many of his colleagues eagerly fall into: arty self-absorption or prime time vulgarity.
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8/10
O, Brother, Where WERE You
writers_reign28 June 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This is yet another charmer albeit offbeat from France. Young Sophie Quinton has lived virtually all her life in a convent where, with the exception of Miou-Miou all the nuns are of pensionable age. Avril (Quinton) is still a novice and the main thrust of the movie takes place outside the convent during a sort of pre-final vows sabbatical in which for the first time in her life she experiences secular life. Along the way she discovers that 1) she has a twin brother and 2) he's gay and if that weren't enough she falls in with a young man who accompanies here more or less throughout the entire sabbatical and hardly surprisingly begins to fall for her as a person. I'm glad to say that the film does the Catholic church no favors and limns a portrait of a Mother Superior so unhinged and violent (she thinks nothing of throwing temper tantrums in chapel and even less of stabbing Avril) that an apter description would be Mother INferior. Sophie Quinton is a revelation as Avril hitting all the right notes on both her exterior and interior journey and I recommend this one without reservation.
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8/10
Sum-total of our experiences - in film and otherwise
dragora11616 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers
This is a lovely film that borrows a little from everything and everywhere. It borrows from other films, directors, characters, other eras, and even music. We have seen a little bit of this story in other places, these same characters played by other actors, directed by other directors. I like the fact that you cannot pinpoint the era in which the story takes place. It is for this very same reason that I enjoyed this version of this story. We have seen all the different permutations, and for once, I like the fact that there is no moralising, no long, drawn-out monologue, or proselytising. It was said of Billy Wilder that he gave as much importance to what wasn't written on the page. It holds true here.

We glimpse the non-judgmental nature of an innocent who knows nothing of sex and sexual love, therefore she isn't shocked by two men sleeping in the same bed. We witness the Mother Superior's fervent faith that this is her calling, to raise a child in perfect purity. We see that this child is the one chance for the Sisters to know the love of a daughter. We find love in humankind, sibling or other, that exists. We observe the evolution of how a simple, though some may argue necessary, lie can unravel and destroy. And we see what real, true, pure unadulterated love can mend, and help flourish.

It touched my cynical-yet-idealistic heart.
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10/10
Extraordinary, Fills the World With Light
film_ophile15 July 2007
Just returned from seeing this as part of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts' tremendous yearly French Film Festival. Again, I feel so lucky to live in Boston. This was , for me, one of those rare films that really got me. It imbued me with a feeling much like that that I experienced while seeing Kurosawa's 'Dersu Uzala.'The completely believable lead actress, a novice nun raised in a convent from birth, is so filled with the glow of selfless love, that that glow spread to all around her in the film, and then out to me in the audience.

The screenplay is perfect, with a naturalness in allowing the characters to just be and look and feel. Editing is super; every shot and scene is meaningful. Dialogue too is natural, unrushed, unpretentious. The lead character grows before you over a 2 week period in a completely believable way, as she awakens to the greater world beyond the convent.I also loved all the male characters with their goodness.Very refreshing, given the portrayal of men in much of cinema today.The camaraderie and love they all shared with Avril was most heartening and I felt really fortunate to have been part of it.

I am so looking forward to this new director's next work.
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Offbeat, wonderful!
sandover24 January 2011
Warning: Spoilers
April is the cruelest month the poet says? Wrong. He should check out this film. April is the month of our faith, brotherly dunes, low-keyed dudes and a wonderful, wonderful nun coated in heartfelt charm. Sophie Quinton is a find. Since our director employs her for some films in the row she becomes something more than a muse. She rightfully tunes the muse theme into offbeat religiosity.

A nun just before christening has to pass through meditative isolation, but an elder nun announces to her that when she was found at the nunnery's threshold she was not alone; she was with a brother, whom she sets out to find. And she does, with the aid of the wonderful male case of Duvauchelle. This is a road movie by the sea and we see it broadly moving.

Such endearing, off-key sensibility in a film it is some time I have not encountered, and I am pleased by the discovery of it. So many themes wonderfully approached: faith with social life, hesitation before the symbolic life in the name of God, how God's names change into love, perception, color, sympathy and the difference between it and empathy, the senses and the sensations, the discovery and the revelation which coincides with the discovery and revelation of love. One is surely tempted to become rhapsodic.

Apart from Sophie Quinton's incarnation, if I may say so, what really bound for me the film together was that it opted for some reanimation of faith in truly contemporary, even avant-guard mode, and this is something that still exists, even if rarely, and exemplifying it into true french tradition. In movie terms, it combines Bresson's spiritual clarity with early Almodovar's irreverent coalitions. From Marguerite Navarre's "Heptameron" to Duras, and that always pervading sense of the troubadours, the film also restores into faith also Yves Klein's abstract, color-specific leap.

Mouchette and Rosette are proud of you, Sophie.

Watch how the church blank fresco restores it all, imbibing us. A miracle for breakfast.
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3/10
If Miou-Miou can't save it...
bob99813 May 2009
... then why bother seeing it, I say. This is an often-risible, hardly believable story of a novice who takes two weeks off to find her twin brother and herself in the Camargue (lovely shots of the beaches). I did not believe this story for one minute, although the actors are appealing, especially the broad-faced Sophie Quinton and slim, athletic Clément Sibony, who plays her brother.

I suppose the French tradition of careful reconstruction of political, social or spiritual themes is now lost forever. I kept thinking wistfully of La Réligieuse, Thérèse, La Faute de l'Abbé Mouret, Le Journal d'un curé de campagne and any other film that crossed my mind as Avril unfolded before my disbelieving eyes. The last fifteen minutes were called absurd by some commenters, but I never found any solid ground in the picture. That Mother Superior was straight out of Bunuel.
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Mother superior jumped the gun.
dbdumonteil4 April 2010
Speaking of modernity ,the starting point of the movie takes us back to the old melodramas of the nineteenth century ;some French may remember "Les Deux Orphelines " by Adolphe D'Ennery (aka "Orphans of the storm" ).Of course the treatment is different since the two fraternal twins (they can't be identical can they?) meet in the first quarter .Such a story is hardly believable,as an user has already pointed out:how can a girl ,who was "carefully" taught,educated in a nunnery ,surrounded by holy women, adapt herself so easily to the "modern" world she discovers?I'm sure she was never told gays existed .Was she even told that she could marry instead of becoming a nun?That her brother can sleep with another man doesn't shock her at all : people are going to say it is the natural tolerance of the clueless girl;perhaps so.Clement Sibony (who was a good Daniel in "Les Thibault" miniseries ) gives a down-to-earth portrayal,which is quite fine,cause I feared that the scenes on the beach could lead the movie into Neo Nouvelle Vague territory Eric Rohmer style,but the quartet is nice and has something of the odd pairings of John Huston (as a "Heaven knows mister Allison " for twenty-somethings).

A question:WHEN does it takes place? The young man in love with Avril says he loves late fifties/early sixties music -Orbison,Presley,Holly- and he plays an Annette Funicello -who ,however,was rather unknown in France - song in his car.Later we see the boys teach Avril Christophe's big hit "Aline" (1965,but which was re-issued in the eighties with success );and twin brother uses a slot-in record player ,which is typically early eighties.Even for a French ,it's difficult to pinpoint the era.

Miou-Miou cast as a nun is something rather curious and is worth the price of admission.But Genevieve Casile 's part of the mother superior is too underwritten to be credible "She wanted you to be a saint" is not enough to explain her behavior.
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