Les roseaux sauvages
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Les roseaux sauvages | |
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Film poster |
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Directed by | André Téchiné |
Produced by | Georges Benayoun Alain Sarde |
Written by | Olivier Massart Gilles Taurand André Téchiné |
Starring | Élodie Bouchez Gaël Morel Stéphane Rideau Frédéric Gorny Michèle Moretti Jacques Nolot |
Cinematography | Jeanne Lapoirie |
Editing by | Martine Giordano |
Distributed by | Strand Releasing |
Release date(s) | June 1, 1994 |
Running time | 110 min. |
Language | French |
IMDb profile |
Les roseaux sauvages (English title: The Wild Reeds) is a 1994 movie by French director André Téchiné about an unusual ménage à trois between French youths at the height of the Algerian War.
[edit] Plot
François (Gaël Morel) and Maïté (Élodie Bouchez) are good platonic friends who share a love of French nouvelle vague cinema. Maïté is interested in having a sexual relationship with François, but he withdraws from her when she mentions it.
François has developed a crush on Serge (Stéphane Rideau), his handsome and virile but intellectually somewhat limited classmate, after the two have had sex together. Throughout the movie, François tries to get a straight answer from Serge concerning the possible future of their relationship. Serge, however, stays evasive.
Meanwhile, Serge has taken an interest in Maïté, who does not seem to be too happy about it.
Eventually, François tells Maïté about his homosexuality and must learn that Serge wants to become a farmer and needs a wife for housekeeping. After Serge gets the news that his brother was killed in the war, he plans on marrying his brother's widow, Irène.
All these sexual complications play out in front of the context of the Algerian War, with the characters displaying different sympathies for the opponents in that conflict.
The same basic character constellation, albeit with a considerably more burlesque slant, was also used in the 1994 US comedy, Threesome.
After this film, Morel became something of an apprentice to Téchiné, who encouraged him to pursue a career in directing.
Stéphane Rideau went on to play a somewhat similar (and even more gay) character six years later in Sebastien Lifshitz's Presque rien.
At the 1995 César awards, Les Roseaux Sauvages won Best Film, Best Director (André Téchiné), Most Promising Young Actress (Élodie Bouchez) and Best Original Screenplay. There were Most Promising Young Actor nominations for Gaël Morel, Stéphane Rideau and Frédéric Gorny.