IMDb RATING
6.4/10
4.8K
YOUR RATING
In the months after the heady weeks of May '68, a group of young Europeans search for a way to continue the revolution believed to be just beginning.In the months after the heady weeks of May '68, a group of young Europeans search for a way to continue the revolution believed to be just beginning.In the months after the heady weeks of May '68, a group of young Europeans search for a way to continue the revolution believed to be just beginning.
- Awards
- 5 wins & 4 nominations total
Felix Armand
- Alain
- (as Félix Armand)
Bobbi Salvör Menuez
- Leslie
- (as India Salvor Menuez)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
6.44.8K
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
Youthful zeal and idealism
A miniature portrait of the student movement, that focuses around a group of few passionate youngsters.
They do not just want better rights and more acknowledgment; they are prepared to fight in order to get it. It feels the world is at a turning point and so are their lives. If they do not fight for a better world, then what is it all for?
The struggle begins full of zeal, passion and fervour. The time, being unforgiving to all, changes everything. The views of society change, ideals and lives. Through fighting, facing consequences and experimenting with free love and drugs our heroes find themselves facing new realities and challenges. The goal seem to have been achieved, what now? The existential question in everyone's minds.
Though low key, it has enough youthful energy that exhumes passion, inspiration that can stir the audience's thought process expecting from all of us to not lose sight of our ideals, the very thing that makes us human.
They do not just want better rights and more acknowledgment; they are prepared to fight in order to get it. It feels the world is at a turning point and so are their lives. If they do not fight for a better world, then what is it all for?
The struggle begins full of zeal, passion and fervour. The time, being unforgiving to all, changes everything. The views of society change, ideals and lives. Through fighting, facing consequences and experimenting with free love and drugs our heroes find themselves facing new realities and challenges. The goal seem to have been achieved, what now? The existential question in everyone's minds.
Though low key, it has enough youthful energy that exhumes passion, inspiration that can stir the audience's thought process expecting from all of us to not lose sight of our ideals, the very thing that makes us human.
The idealism of youth
There's revolution on the mind in Something in the Air, as we watch a group of young idealists rage against the injustices in the world whilst also trying to figure out their own lives. Set in the early 1970s, this film looks and sounds the part, with a beautiful washed-out colour palette matched by a cracking soundtrack.
The storyline of Something in the Air feels a little uneven as it lurches between revolutionary activities and the human drama of the characters, however there's an underlying warmth to this film that makes it an enjoyable watch. The characters feel real, to the extent that this feels like just a snapshot of their lives, and that they lived before and after the small period we spend with them.
This isn't a flawless film. I would've liked to have spent a bit more time with some of the characters, getting to know their motivations deeper. However, provided you don't find the politics off-putting it's a pleasant way to spend a couple of hours.
The storyline of Something in the Air feels a little uneven as it lurches between revolutionary activities and the human drama of the characters, however there's an underlying warmth to this film that makes it an enjoyable watch. The characters feel real, to the extent that this feels like just a snapshot of their lives, and that they lived before and after the small period we spend with them.
This isn't a flawless film. I would've liked to have spent a bit more time with some of the characters, getting to know their motivations deeper. However, provided you don't find the politics off-putting it's a pleasant way to spend a couple of hours.
Liked it much better on a second viewing
Almost 20 years later, Assays returns to his own adolescence, which he examined expertly in 1994's "Cold Water". As if to make it clear that he is coming full circle the main character (clearly based on Assayas himself), and one of the key supporting characters bear the same screen names as their counterparts in "Cold Water".
This grew on me considerably on 2nd viewing. Because I knew not to expect a straight- forward plot, but something much more episodic and tonal, I stopped focusing on the story, and took in all the details, and the mood. I found the film much funnier the second time, catching Assayas' gentle mocking of the over seriousness of these petite-bourgeois youth, at the same time that he captures the sad beauty in adolescence's naiveté and out sized passions.
"Something in the Air" focuses on politics, art and sex, taking place 3 years after the May 1968 riots, as the high school kids of that moment try to live in the spirit of revolution that was already starting to fade into factionalism (some of the film's best humor documents the absurdly intense rivalries between groups who mostly share common goals, and the insane parsing of every word and idea to examine if it was the 'right' thing to foment revolution).
There are some truly great sequences. An early scene of the kids battling the cops is exciting, raw and immersive. And there's a sequence at a party that's pretty breathtaking. Throughout, Assayas uses perfect music from the period, without using the same 6 songs every film about the late 60s/early 70s seem to fall back on. If the film isn't quite a masterpiece it is touching, funny and worthwhile work from one of the most interesting voices making films right now, one who can go from the near operatic "Carlos" to the quiet and intimate "Summer Hours", bringing each their own unique style. Assays is a true auteur, but he hasn't let that trap him into a single style or tone.
This grew on me considerably on 2nd viewing. Because I knew not to expect a straight- forward plot, but something much more episodic and tonal, I stopped focusing on the story, and took in all the details, and the mood. I found the film much funnier the second time, catching Assayas' gentle mocking of the over seriousness of these petite-bourgeois youth, at the same time that he captures the sad beauty in adolescence's naiveté and out sized passions.
"Something in the Air" focuses on politics, art and sex, taking place 3 years after the May 1968 riots, as the high school kids of that moment try to live in the spirit of revolution that was already starting to fade into factionalism (some of the film's best humor documents the absurdly intense rivalries between groups who mostly share common goals, and the insane parsing of every word and idea to examine if it was the 'right' thing to foment revolution).
There are some truly great sequences. An early scene of the kids battling the cops is exciting, raw and immersive. And there's a sequence at a party that's pretty breathtaking. Throughout, Assayas uses perfect music from the period, without using the same 6 songs every film about the late 60s/early 70s seem to fall back on. If the film isn't quite a masterpiece it is touching, funny and worthwhile work from one of the most interesting voices making films right now, one who can go from the near operatic "Carlos" to the quiet and intimate "Summer Hours", bringing each their own unique style. Assays is a true auteur, but he hasn't let that trap him into a single style or tone.
Revolution and privilege
Olivier Assayas's film 'Something in the Air' is an affectionate, although not uncritical, look at the lives of young French radicals after 1968. Watching it, you get an interesting sense of an era when students were interested in something other than building their careers (although the protagonists don't all completely abandon their bourgeois dreams); there's also the contrast between their profound political beliefs, and the feeling that their beloved freedom is basically the freedom of being young and moneyed - the revolution as a gap year, so to speak. The way that a life spent chasing experience ultimately does not build the foundation of lasting relationships is also well-conveyed. Overall, the cast are a little too beautiful - who wouldn't be a revolutionary when the benefits were so obvious? - and if the film has a serious weak-point, it's in not fully explaining quite why youth was drawn to the counter-culture except in a vague, spirit-of-the-age type way. A final quibble - the English translation of the French title (Apres Mai) is an awful one, better befitting a light romantic comedy.
Self-indulgent and a little on the dull side.
The problem with autobiographical cinema is that it can be very self-indulgent or just downright dull depending on the life being portrayed. Olivier Assayas made "Apres Mai" in 2012, looking back to his student days in the Paris of 1971. To give the film its English title it was a time when there was "Something in the Air", revolution mostly. It was a time when France, indeed the world, was changing. Assayas himself went on to have a very successful and productive career in cinema but you would never guess it from this film in which he is a callow youth , (played by newcomer Clement Metayer), going through the motions most of us went through at the time without realising we only made a difference if we were part of a much larger picture. Autobiographical cinema is better when it makes that larger picture the centre of attention. Of course, maybe I'm just an old cynic who now finds that period of student revolution not so much 'something in the air' as something in the past. Fundamentally this is a film for Assayas acolytes and old hippies who want to relive their youth, very well done for what it is, but ultimately adding little to the Assayas canon.
Did you know
- TriviaWith the exception of Lola Créton, the actors portraying the youths were inexperienced, mostly first-time actors found through director Olivier Assayas and casting director Antoinette Boulat having flyers handed out in front of high schools and having set up a casting Facebook page. They did audition other experienced young actors, but only Créton was selected.
- ConnectionsFeatured in At the Movies: Venice Film Festival 2012 (2012)
- How long is Something in the Air?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- Щось у повітрі
- Filming locations
- Brunoy, Essonne, France(High School: Lycee Talma)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- €5,400,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $85,154
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $13,288
- May 5, 2013
- Gross worldwide
- $1,305,473
- Runtime
- 2h 2m(122 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content





