Reviews


JOSHUA TANZER
Offoffoff.com
MARCH 10, 2004

Welcome to Ecole Normale Sup�rieure, so named, as Paul tells his girlfriend Agn�s, "because I'm normal and you're superior."
You might question both of those assessments after seeing the movie. There's not a normal, unforced performance and the script is frequently inferior. The school where the movie is set doesn't seem very superior either.

It's a place where the uniformly Aryan, clean-cut, suit-and-tie wearing students are welcomed to the school with high-minded rhetoric by the dean, who promptly disappears for the rest of the film. Despite some evidence of classes having been attended and papers having been written, there's little of an education-related nature going on to justify our characters' frequent dropping of names like Foucault and Chateaubriand. Universit� Pseudointellectuelle would be a more appropriate name.

"Grande Ecole" barely has enough focus to be about anything in particular, but if it has one message, perhaps that message is this: Lust is good. Pretty much everyone in the movie is sleeping or thinking of sleeping with everybody else - gender, class, race, jealousy and pre-existing relationships be damned. And that's fine. "Hetero, homo, that's all over," one of them says. Maybe he's right.
At the center of the story is Paul, a new student who's doubly uneasy because he's very country and very femme-looking. Dropped into this elite institution that's barely distinguishable from a homoerotic Hitler Youth camp, he struggles to fit in with his more acceptably bourgeois classmates, befriends a French-Arab laborer, and tries to suppress his evident desire for his handsome, patrician roommate Louis-Arnaud. Sensing Paul's turmoil, Agn�s challenges him to see which of them can sleep with Louis-Arnaud first.

The filmmakers want us to care about so many different issues - sexuality, social class, racism, human rights, education and the dignity of labor - that it says too little about any of them. It lacks the human depth of a good character study or ensemble drama and risks reducing its issues to abstractions. And it never really takes on what looks like its most obvious subject - the school's elitism.

But here are a few good things about "Grande Ecole" that keep it from being a total drag: Lots of pretty good eroticism, unapologetic and sex-positive. Equal-opportunity nudity - in fact, biased a bit toward the men for a change - and equal-opportunity sexuality, gay and straight. A very passionate makeout scene, which is (inexplicably but impressively) filmed in a hall of mirrors whose infinite reflections of the male-male couple, cranks the intensity way up.

It's an unlikely comparison, but an observation about the last "Star Wars" movie comes to mind here: Every time someone in "Attack of the Clones" opened his mouth you wanted to tell him to shut up and go back to fighting. "Grande Ecole" is the same, if you substitute a different f-word for "fighting." Its intellectual pretensions are transparent; its portrayal of immigrant culture is superficial; its characters are either smug or dopey; but at least it doesn't lack passion. It's just disappointing whenever the characters feel the need to put their clothes back on
GRANDE �COLE
2003 - France - 110 min. - Feature, Color
Director -Robert Salis
Genre/Type -Drama, Ensemble Film, Gay & Lesbian Films, Psychological Drama, Erotic Drama
Flags -Adult Situations, Strong Sexual Content
Keywords -class [social], race/ethnicity, private-school, sexuality, power-struggle
Themes -Love Triangles, Sexual Awakening, Questioning Sexuality, Twentysomething Life, Class Differences
Tones -Passionate, Urbane, Sensual, Intimate
Produced by -Eden Films / France 2 Cinema / Ognon Pictures
Released by -Wellspring Media
Video Distributor -Ventura Distribution
Street Date -Nov 9, 2004
Languages -French
Subtitles -English
Screen Formats -Letterbox for 16x9 TVs
Sound -DDDD2
Aspect Ratio -1.85:1 (DVD)
Studio -Wellspring
DVD Sides -1



Cast

Elodie Navarre -- Emeline
Gr�gori Baquet -- Paul
Arthur Jugnot -- Chouquet
Jocelyn Quivrin -- Louis-Arnault
Alice Taglioni -- Agnes
Salim Kechiouche -- M�cir


Plot Synopsis


Sex, class, and race collide at a French private school in Robert Salis' Grande �cole. The privileged upper-class Paul (Gregori Baquet) is a student at the school who, although already involved with a girlfriend, becomes attracted to both a new roommate and a lower-class Arab school employee. - Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
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