Friday, June 4, 2021

Day 4 Naissance des Pieuvres (2007)

Naissance des Pieuvres

Céline’s roles: Screenwriter, Director, & Actor (& costume designer; uncredited)





English Title

     Water Lilies (direct translation is Birth of the Octopuses)

Year

     2007 (Released in France 15 August 2007)

Music

     ParaOne, the musical persona of La Fémis buddy, director Jean-Baptiste de Laubier.

Editing

     Julien Lacheray

Cinematography

     Crystel Fournier



"Naissance des Pieuvres tells above all how one falls in love."

Céline Sciamma

"The octopus is the physical manifestation of the emerging feelings of adolescence, this monster of desire and jealousy in the hollow of the belly when we awaken to desire, to sexuality, when we start to fall in love," explains Céline Sciamma in introducing the screening at the Royal Utopia in Pontoise.

 

At this age, all desires are unfulfilled or unliveable."

 

Synopsis

     Summer when you're 15. Nothing to do except look at the ceiling. They are three: Marie, Anne, Floriane. In the secret of the locker room their destinies intersect, and desire arises.

If the first times are unforgettable it is because they have no laws.

 

Honours/Awards

     Before the film was made, the screenplay was awarded the 2006 Prix Junior du Meilleur Scénario (PJMS) (Junior Prize for Best Screenplay), which is open to filmmakers younger than 28 years.

 

Awards & Honours for the film

Awards

  • Prix Louis Deluc Du Meilleur Premier Film (Louis Delluc Prize for Best First Film)
  • Cabourg Film Festival – Youth Jury Prize

Awards Nominations

  • Caméra d'Or (2007 Cannes Film Festival)
  • César Award for Best First Feature Film
  • Adèle Haenel: César Best New Female
  • Louise Blachère: César Best New Female 

Selected for the following Film Festivals (& probably more...)

  • Sélection Officielle Festival Cannes 2008 Un Certain Regard (Selected for screening at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival – Un Certain Regard section) 
  • Selection, The Alliance Française French Film Festival (Australia) (Australia, 2008)
  • Selection, Singapore French Film Festival (Singapore, 2009) [Feature films]
  • Selection, French Cinepanorama (Hong-Kong, 2008) [First films]
  • Selection, Kyiv Molodist International Film Festival (Ukraine, 2008)
  • Selection, French Cinema Today
  • Selection, Bangkok French Film Festival (Thailand, 2008)
  • Selection, San Francisco International Film Festival (United States, 2008)
  • Selection, CoLCoA French Film Festival (United States, 2008) [Feature films selection]
  • Selection, Bratislava Francophone Film Festival (Slovakia, 2008)
  • Selection, New York - New Directors New Films (United States, 2008) [Selected French Films]
  • Selection, French Film Festival in Japan (Japan, 2008)

  • Selection, Rotterdam International Film Festival (IFFR) (Netherlands, 2008) [Official Feature Film Selection]
  • Selection, Turin Film Festival (TFF) (Italy, 2007) [Official Selection - Feature Films]
  • Selection, Tübingen International Francophone Film Festival, Stuttgart (Germany, 2007) [International competition]
  • Selection, Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival (Brazil, 2007) [Gay section]    

Excerpts from reviews

With terrific poise and the crispest, cleanest cinematography imaginable, the 27-year-old French director Céline Sciamma has given us a very provocative and stylish drama set in the world of teenage girls' synchronised swimming…”

The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2008/mar/14/worldcinema.drama


“Directed by 27-year old Celine Sciamma in an astounding feature debut, “Naissance” is precise, uncluttered and (despite the subject matter) very disciplined. There’s nothing extraneous about the visuals or sentimental about the story. The texture of the film has something of legendary Japanese director Yasujiro Ozu and his measured, less-is-more aesthetic — though the content is worlds apart.

Japan Times
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2008/07/04/films/film-reviews/naissance-des-pieuvres/

 

“A writing and directing debut for Céline Sciamma, this marks her as a talent to watch. Unflinching in its portrayal of complex psychosexual territory, it immediately calls to mind the work of Michael Haneke. This is a beautiful film, never less than convincing. Technically it is a masterwork, visually splendid with excellent sound work. The underwater sequences are handled with a particular subtlety as are those in nightclubs and bedrooms.

Water Lilies is sophisticated, literary, and totally deserving of the awards attention it has received. Like synchronised swimming it is technically demanding, almost exclusively female, and worth watching for the effort and turmoil below the surface.”

https://www.eyeforfilm.co.uk/review/water-lilies-film-review-by-andrew-robertson

 

“…Handling the drama with quiet assurance, Sciamma teases two incredibly expressive performances from her young cast: Haenel is like a Parisian Scarlett Johanssonall pouting poses and teasing come onwhile Acquart throws a never-ending barrage of long, loving looks in her direction.

BBC
http://www.bbc.co.uk/films/2008/03/10/water_lilies_2008_review.shtml

 

Newly graduated from Femis, Celine Sciamma made Naissance des Pieuvres her very first film essay, an end-of-study project by a filmmaker who has since become essential in the French landscape. Everything about this first excursion behind the camera exudes exercise in style

...Naissance des Pieuvres is the first milestone of a filmmaker who will gradually assert her gaze, tone and voice....” 

Le Bleu du Miroir
http://www.lebleudumiroir.fr/critique-naissance-des-pieuvres/

(translated by Google)

 


Comments 

This is the first film that Céline Sciamma directed—and it is a feature film! This is unusual, as most directors develop their skills while making a number of short films, rather than on a feature film. After completing a Masters in literature and working in marketing for a while, Céline Sciamma studied scriptwriting at the premiere institution for filmmaking in France—La Fémis.

The screenplay for Naissance des Pieuvres was Céline’s graduation project and the chair of the examination panel, director & actor Xavier Beauvois (who plays the role of Jacques, a patron at the brothel in the film L’Apollonide: Souvenirs de la Maison Close), encouraged her to make the film and to direct it herself. She worked with another La Fémis graduate, producer Bénédicte Couvreur, to source funding and within a year of graduation she was directing her first feature film. The film had a budget of 2 million Euros. She was 26 when she made this film.

 

For her first feature film Céline chose to continue to work with her La Fémis colleagues Jean-Baptiste de Laubier, who is also a talented musician and wrote the score for the film as ParaOne, and editor Julien Lacheray. This team had worked together through their student days—and they continue to work together until today.

 

This film had amazing success, in particular for a director's first film and one made with non-professional actors—it was shown at the Cannes film festival, it won an award for best first film award, and two of the young actresses (one of whom was not a professional actor) were nominated for best new talent at the César awards, which is a reflection of the quality of the direction. It was screened at film festivals across the world.


The film was nominated for, though it did not win, the 'Best First Film' award at the César awards. Something, perhaps better, happened that night. The legendary Jeanne Moreau was given an honorary César to mark 60 years of her contributions to the French film industry. She then chose to give this award to Céline Sciamma, as a symbol of passing the torch of film making to this young film maker who had just completed her first film. This was a profound honour from an icon of French Cinema.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CEH3JMx69gA

 (this very roughly translates as:

JM: "It's an honorary Caesar so I'm going to entrust it. The first film has already received a Cesar and I would like Celine Sciamma to come here with her young team. Come quickly, we're in a hurry. Come on. So you take care of it and pass it on from year to year. Okay? Goodbye.")

 

Para One & Céline Sciamma

The music for the film is written & performed by the artist known as Para One. This is Jean-Baptiste de Laubier, who was at La Fémis with Céline. Jean-Baptiste was in the Director's stream, while Céline was in the Scriptwriting stream. While students together Jean-Baptiste directed three films that Céline wrote the screenplay for— En attendant la neige (2003), Les Premier Communions (2004), and Cache ta joie (2006).

The soundtrack is available on CD. The music is both relaxing and hypnotic and listening to it separate to the film is a good way to appreciate it.

 “The score by Jean-Baptiste de Laubier (aka Para One) is apt, weirdly reminiscent of Vangelis and Eurotechno but still somehow working. It's vaguely unsettling in its artificiality, a strange blend that's not quite one thing or another. This general state of "between" runs through Water Lilies, compounded by its status as a subtitled international release.”

https://www.eyeforfilm.co.uk/review/water-lilies-film-review-by-andrew-robertson

 

Filming

The movie was filmed over 38 days in late July, August and early September 2006 in Cergy (Val d'Oise), a town/suburb about 30km north of central Paris and where Céline grew up. She chose this locale as it is not 'typically French' and could be a setting in any nameless city in the world. She also deliberately excluded technologies, such as mobile phones and computers and used original music, which gives it more of a timeless feel—it is not anchored in a particular year. Significant is the absence of adults. This was done so that viewers are required to identify with the girls, not with a parent/adult.

Cameos

There is a cameo from Céline as the server in the scene in McDonalds and one from Christel Baras (casting director) is the 'Inspectrice' who checks the girls' armpits.

 

Film Title

The French title translates to Birth of Octopuses and this refers to the rise of desire (a theme that Céline has continued in her films) in the girls. Though a bit cryptic, I think that it's a better title that Water Lilies. Octopuses make me think of squirming and grasping creatures that are hard to control. That's a great metaphor for desire. The English-language title is much more passive—water lillies just seem to float and look pretty…which is not what this film is about.

 

Final thoughts 

This is great film, with so many layers. Céline’s talents were evident from the start of her career and she established her core film making team here in her (and possibly their) first professional gig—with Jean-Baptiste de Laubier (aka ParaOne) creating original music for the film and Julien Lacheray editing the film.


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