Charlotte Alexandra, Hiram Keller,
Rita Meiden, Bruno Balp, Shirley Stoler.
Directed by Catherine Breillat in 1975 but withheld from release
for 25 years because Breillat's producer went bankrupt, Une Vraie
Jeune Fille marked the director's feature debut. Like Breillat's
controversial Romance (1999), Fille is concerned with the expression
of female desire, and it takes a characteristically audacious approach
to its subject. Striking close-ups of male and female genitalia,
various bodily fluids, and graphic sexual fantasies make up a significant
portion of the film, which charts the sexual awakening of the teenaged
Alice (Charlotte Alexandra), who is vacationing with her parents
in the country. Bored and restless, Alice spends much of her time
lusting after Jim (Hiram Keller), a local sawmill worker. When not
lusting after him, Alice fills the hours with such pursuits as writing
her name on a mirror with vaginal secretions and wandering the fields
with her underwear around her ankles. And, in true teenaged tradition,
she spends a lot of time writing in her diary. Une Vraie Jeune Fille
was adapted by Breillat from her third novel, 1974's Le soupirail,
which she was commissioned to adapt for the screen by noted producer
Andre Genoves. |