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To Our Loves

Original title: À nos amours
  • 1983
  • R
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
7.6K
YOUR RATING
Sandrine Bonnaire in To Our Loves (1983)
An erratic young woman's family desperately tries to prevent her increasingly erotic ways.
Play trailer1:25
1 Video
65 Photos
Coming-of-AgePeriod DramaDramaRomance

An erratic young woman's family desperately tries to prevent her increasingly erotic ways.An erratic young woman's family desperately tries to prevent her increasingly erotic ways.An erratic young woman's family desperately tries to prevent her increasingly erotic ways.

  • Director
    • Maurice Pialat
  • Writers
    • Arlette Langmann
    • Maurice Pialat
  • Stars
    • Sandrine Bonnaire
    • Maurice Pialat
    • Christophe Odent
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    7.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Maurice Pialat
    • Writers
      • Arlette Langmann
      • Maurice Pialat
    • Stars
      • Sandrine Bonnaire
      • Maurice Pialat
      • Christophe Odent
    • 28User reviews
    • 48Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 1:25
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    Photos65

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    Top cast30

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    Sandrine Bonnaire
    Sandrine Bonnaire
    • Suzanne
    Maurice Pialat
    Maurice Pialat
    • Le père
    Christophe Odent
    Christophe Odent
    • Michel
    Dominique Besnehard
    Dominique Besnehard
    • Robert
    Cyril Collard
    Cyril Collard
    • Jean-Pierre
    Jacques Fieschi
    Jacques Fieschi
    • Le beau-frère
    Valérie Schlumberger
    • Marie-France
    Evelyne Ker
    Evelyne Ker
    • La mère
    Pierre Novion
    • Adrien
    Tsilka Theodorou
    • Fanny
    Cyr Boitard
    Cyr Boitard
    • Luc
    Anne-Marie Nivelle
    • Mère Jean-Pierre
    Anne-Sophie Maillé
    Anne-Sophie Maillé
    • Anne
    Pierre-Loup Rajot
    • Bernard
    Jean-Paul Camail
    • Angelo
    Maïté Maillé
    • Martine
    Isabelle Prade
    • Solange
    Caroline Cibot
    • Charline
    • Director
      • Maurice Pialat
    • Writers
      • Arlette Langmann
      • Maurice Pialat
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    7.17.6K
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    Featured reviews

    7tomgillespie2002

    Pialat juggles detachment and intimacy to intriguing effect

    15-year old Suzanne (Sandrine Bonnaire) is a precocious child, living with her mother, her career-driven brother, and her sometimes overbearing father (played by Maurice Pialat). She has recently split from her boyfriend and is intent on moving from man to man in search of sexual pleasures and guardianship. When her father splits from her mother and moves out, home life becomes unbearable as her mother and brother disapprove of her lifestyle. She is most comfortable in the arms of a man, be it one of her seducers or her father. Men seems to flock to her, as she is pretty, charming and is happy to accommodate her admirers.

    This is the second film that I've seen directed by French master Maurice Pialat, the other being the excellent L'Enfance Nue. They are both similar films in terms of themes and execution, and tell the familiar coming-of-age story from an original perspective. Whereas the former was a sledgehammer portrayal of a young juvenile causing havoc amongst the various foster homes he was placed, where redemption never seems possible, A Nos Amours' Suzanne is a more sympathetic lead character, and her journey is portrayed in a more subtle manner. While it would be shocking to hear of a 15 year old girl bedding a number of men, Pialat is more focused on what drives her to act this way.

    She is not a tease, and she doesn't flaunt her body to anyone who will look. Instead, she seems to simply enjoy the comfort of a man. When the father moves away, her home life falls apart and her bed-mates increase. Perhaps Pialat is trying to portray the impact an absent father can have on a child, or that all women need comforting every once in a while. Or maybe this is an individual character study, with no overriding message. What it most definitely is, though, is a wonderfully acted (especially from the young Bonnaire), intelligent, and intriguing film that has Pialat's usual cold detachment alongside a certain intimacy with the lead character.

    www.the-wrath-of-blog.blogspot.com
    6Rodrigo_Amaro

    A little misplaced

    A perfect example which illustrates why being truth to life sometimes doesn't often equal great movies. Maurice Pialat wasn't completely truthful in its depiction of youth's shallowness but he isn't completely off mark, just a few objectionable things that look bizarre, too exploitative or unbelievable. But that's life sometimes. "À Nos Amours" ("To Our Loves") focus is a teenage girl (Sandrine Bonnaire) and the way she conducts her sexual relationships, first with a boyfriend, the good hearted Luc (Cyr Boitard), and later evolves to sometimes mindless, sometimes affectionate casual encounters with other guys. Almost fine if it wasn't for her family bothering with this, and a somewhat unpredictable disintegration when her father (Pialat) decides to leave the family. What spirals after that is an emotional roller-coaster with the infatuated girl being a victim of constant reprehension and beatings from her older brother, now head of the family, and the mother who seems to be rotting away into madness, not knowing how to cope with everything happening around her. And there's plenty of time for her dedicate some time with her lovers, miserable for not getting the love she deserves.

    One goes through this with plenty of expectations and interest but one walks out with plenty of reservations and little gain. C'mon, this was made in 1980's and you're telling me that even back then, in such a bourgeoisie family, allegedly cultured, they treat the typical adolescent behavior in that horrid way? With punches, yells and stuff? I would expect this in a poorer background. Everything's so over-the-top, so forced, very off-putting. The movie seems to suggest that there's something going on between father and daughter and also between brother and sister, just suggest some incestuous relations but never goes into that deep.

    What Pialat captured with some excellency was youth's boredom, trying everything to escape from the usual routine of schools, classmates, and dealing with parents; youth's incapacity to love or find love, or using such as something to pass the time, not knowing what love truly means, going from one relationship to another, desperate to find something new that may cure them from their boredom and apathy towards life. This is clearly evidenced in the scene where the girl has an one night stand with an English sailor. She had her fun, experienced something great but she doesn't show much after the fact, a little worried because she cheated on her boyfriend. It isn't a first rate portrayal, obviously, but it's far more realistic than the other topics already mentioned (the family matters). The movie strangely went absurd towards the ending, giving unexplainable solutions and the strange return of the father.

    I enjoyed this movie, enjoyed its good pace, it makes you interested with the very few it has to share. A little saddening that it wasn't all that much of a good film as a Cesar Award winner should be. Bonnaire, in one of her earliest roles, has plenty of qualities despite the relative lack of expression her character has, constantly down, sad, beaten. Far from being the great French cinema but beautiful to look at. 6/10
    10bob998

    Greatest French film of last thirty years

    Let me get it off my chest now: I'm very disappointed in the lack of notice given Pialat's films. Why am I only the fifth person to review À nos amours, and not the 500th? This is the sixth feature by Pialat, and it is a masterpiece. The travails of Suzanne and her family have universal implications; if you think only of her relations with her brother Robert--violent at times, yet often tender and half-incestuous--that's enough material for a film in itself. Some people are bothered by the promiscuous nature of Suzanne's love life, how she just doesn't behave like a regular teenage girl should. I have met a girl like her.

    About two-thirds of the way through, we are confronted with a scene of astonishing virtuosity: the party at the family home, into which erupts the absent father, played by Pialat himself. The script the actors had been given gave no notice of this plot turn; it is fascinating to watch eight actors dealing with this incredible event--no one blows the scene, no matter how dumbfounded they must have been. For about ten minutes, we get pure acting, or reacting, however you want to put it. This is the kind of film event that makes movies worthwhile.

    Bonnaire is tremendous, it's one of the greatest debuts in film history. Pialat as the father is great, all the more remarkable in that he had never acted before. The dimple scene is wonderful. Dominique Besnehard has to bring off an unsympathetic role as the brother, and he performs very well.
    8lastliberal

    Life's not much fun when you don't love anyone.

    France dubbed this the best film of 1983, and named the love Sandrine Bonnaire, in her first credited role, as it's most promising actress for that year. It is easy to see why as she was a joy to watch as she flitted from bed to bed trying to find happiness. I am sure there are many who will shirk at the thought of admiring the 15-year-old's body.

    Those not in the loop on French films will not appreciate the style and grace of her life as she deals with a family that fights all the time, and can only find an outlet for emotions in the arms of willing lovers. But, she avoids the one who loves her Luc (Cyr Boitard), treating him like dirt when he says he loves her.

    Excellent film with great performances by Maurice Pialat as the father and Evelyne Ker as the mother, as well as a knockout job by Bonnaire.
    bill-729-637551

    How can anybody get bored watching a film like this?

    Others have already said that "À nos amours" is a great film, even more have said that Sandrine Bonnaire was a knockout in her demanding rôle as Suzanne. There is a sort of timeline, a beginning and an end, but this is really a film about a personal journey through a part of Suzanne's late adolescence. Young people who have watched the film recently are sometimes very annoyed with Suzanne, but this only proves that Miss Bonnaire has made them care about her character even to the point that they perhaps want to shake her, to take her into a corner and tell her what mistakes she is making. There is also a conflict which some pretend had disappeared by the end of the "swinging sixties" - the generation gap between the sexual mores of parents and adolescents, which was of course still real in the early eighties and remains so in many cultures. Unpredictable behaviour (by Suzanne's brother, for example) is also a real part of family life for many young people. Every time I watch the film (and I have seen it very often, as I used it in my French classes more than once) I notice details which had escaped me or which I had forgotten. Pialat made other great films, but "À nos amours" remains my favourite. If possible watch it in French, with subtitles if necessary - but see it before you die!

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    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the original script, the father was due to die and was not scheduled to return at the time of the dinner scene. Maurice Pialat walked into the scene and left the actors to improvise in a situation they hadn't planned for.
    • Goofs
      In the sequence with the American, Suzanne's outfit changes from a one-shoulder black dress with white stripes trimming just the top of the bodice, to a one-shoulder black&white striped top with a black skirt, and back again.
    • Quotes

      Le père: You think you're in love, but you just want to be loved.

    • Connections
      Featured in Sebastian (2024)
    • Soundtracks
      The Cold Song
      Henry Purcell (as Percell)

      interprété par Klaus Nomi

      disques RCA

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 16, 1983 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • France
    • Official sites
      • Gaumont (France)
      • Unifrance
    • Languages
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Auf das, was wir lieben
    • Filming locations
      • Cité Bergère, Paris 9, Paris, France(Suzanne and Jean-Pierre looking for a hotel)
    • Production companies
      • Les Films du Livradois
      • Gaumont
      • France 3
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,575
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 39m(99 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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