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Presque rien
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Presque rien
Theatrical release poster
Directed bySébastien Lifshitz
Written bySébastien Lifshitz
Stéphane Bouquet
Produced byChristian Tison
Jean-Christophe Colson
Cécile Amillat
StarringJérémie Elkaïm
Stéphane Rideau
CinematographyPascal Poucet
Edited byJann Dedet
Music byPerry Blake
Production
company
Distributed byAd Vitam Distribution
Release dates
  • 7 June 2000 (2000-06-07) (France)
  • 16 May 2001 (2001-05-16) (Belgium)
Running time
100 minutes
CountriesFrance
Belgium
LanguageFrench
Box office$326,484[1]

Presque rien, also titled Almost Nothing in the UK and Come Undone in the US, is a 2000 French-Belgian romantic drama film directed by Sebastien Lifshitz, set in Brittany, depicting a stormy holiday romance between two teenagers and what remains of that relationship eighteen months later.

Plot

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Upper-middle class Mathieu, is spending his summer vacation on the French coast before beginning studies in the autumn to become an architect. His mother is deeply depressed because of the death of his baby brother from cancer, and is cared for by her sister, while Mathieu and his moody younger sister cannot get along.

Then he meets Cédric at the beach, who is attractive and obviously looking for a boyfriend. The boys embark on a romance, and Mathieu's sudden secrecy and long hours away from home invite the curiosity of both his sister and aunt.

A parallel plotline focuses on Mathieu eighteen months later, as he recovers from the shock of their separation. After Mathieu has tried to commit suicide, he chooses to go back to the small seaside town to learn how to deal with what happened.

The film ends on a hopeful note when Mathieu looks up Pierre, another former boyfriend of Cédric's living in the seaside town, and they overcome past tensions to discover that they understand each other.

Cast

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Production

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Rather than having a clear, chronologically ordered narrative, the movie switches between the summer and the winter plotlines, depicting the differences in Mathieu's life at both points, as well as establishing the contrast between one and the other visually.

Soundtrack

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The soundtrack uses songs by Irish singer and songwriter Perry Blake (from his album Still Life) to convey Mathieu's melancholic, depressive mood.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
(English: Come Undone), is a 2000 French-Belgian romantic drama film written and directed by Sébastien Lifshitz in his feature directorial debut. The story centers on Mathieu, an 18-year-old introspective youth vacationing at his family's summer house in , who forms a passionate first relationship with Cédric, a local boy he encounters on the beach. Employing a non-linear structure, the narrative juxtaposes the fleeting intensity of their summer idyll against Mathieu's later emotional unraveling in urban life, emphasizing themes of sexual awakening, transience, and psychological fallout from intimate bonds. Starring as Mathieu and Stéphane Ridéau as Cédric, the film features naturalistic performances and explicit depictions of male intimacy, drawing acclaim for its authentic portrayal of adolescent homosexual experience without sensationalism. Premiering at the in the section, it received international recognition, including awards at LGBTQ+ film festivals, and holds a reputation as an arthouse benchmark for queer cinema due to its restrained capturing coastal serenity and relational volatility. Critically, it earned a 79% approval rating on based on contemporary reviews praising its emotional depth and avoidance of , though some noted its deliberate pacing as potentially alienating. No major controversies surround the production, though its unflinching focus on youthful male sexuality invited varied responses in conservative markets, underscoring Lifshitz's commitment to unvarnished realism over narrative contrivance. The film's title, translating to "almost nothing," reflects its meditation on ephemeral moments shaping lasting inner turmoil, influencing subsequent European indie explorations of identity and desire.

Synopsis

Plot summary

The narrative unfolds non-linearly, interweaving present-day events in winter with flashbacks to the preceding summer eighteen months earlier. It begins with 19-year-old Mathieu returning alone to the seaside town of following a , directed by his to revisit the site of formative experiences. Flashbacks depict Mathieu's family vacation in during the hot summer, where he accompanies his ailing mother and sister amid tense household dynamics. One night, Mathieu encounters local 19-year-old Cédric on a deserted , sparking initial mutual attraction that rapidly evolves into a series of intimate encounters, including and lovemaking in the dunes. Their relationship intensifies, with extended periods of physical closeness and shared daily routines, while Mathieu maintains secrecy from his family, prompting suspicions from his sister due to his frequent absences. As the summer concludes, Mathieu departs for to resume studies, severing the connection with Cédric amid the strains of separation and external pressures, leading to the affair's dissolution. In the winter present, Mathieu wanders the now-desolate locations of their past intimacy, contemplating the relationship's end and grappling with persistent emotional distress.

Cast and characters

Principal cast

Jérémie Elkaïm portrays Mathieu, an 18-year-old Parisian teenager from a troubled family who spends the summer at a coastal house in , where he begins to explore his through an initial same-sex encounter. Elkaïm, aged 21 at the time of filming, delivered a performance noted for its authenticity in depicting youthful introspection. Stéphane Rideau plays Cédric, a local of similar age who engages Mathieu in a romantic involvement during the vacation period. Rideau, 23 during production, brought prior acting experience to the role, contributing to the film's realistic portrayal of adolescent relationships. Dominique Reymond appears as Mathieu's mother, a figure central to the family's seaside dynamics and underlying relational strains. Marie Matheron depicts Annick, Mathieu's sister, involved in the siblings' interactions amid the summer setting.

Production

Development and scripting

Presque rien marked the debut of director Sébastien Lifshitz, who also co-wrote the screenplay. The project originated from Lifshitz's earlier short films, which explored themes of sexual discovery and masculinity, extending those preoccupations into a narrative of holiday romance, separation, and emotional aftermath among young men. Rather than drawing directly from , the script prioritized naturalistic depictions of youth sexuality and relationships, eschewing dramatic conventions in favor of subtle, observational realism to capture the mundane intensities of first love and its dissolution. Lifshitz's approach emphasized a documentary-like intimacy, influenced by the aesthetic radicalism of the and neorealist traditions within , which favored unadorned portrayals over heightened melodrama or stereotypical representations of gay experiences. This scripting philosophy aimed to avoid reductive tropes, instead foregrounding authentic psychological tensions and the quiet domesticity of emerging identities, as seen in decisions to structure the narrative non-linearly around memory and loss. Produced as a French-Belgian co-production, the film benefited from cross-border collaboration typical of European independent cinema, though specific funding details remain limited in public records. These pre-production choices set the foundation for a restrained exploration of relational fragility, distinguishing it from more sensationalized queer narratives of the era.

Filming and locations

Principal photography for Presque rien took place in 1999 in the coastal communes of Pornichet and Saint-Nazaire, both in the Loire-Atlantique department of western France. These sites provided the seaside environments depicted in the film's summer sequences and off-season scenes. The production utilized 35mm negative , processed with a spherical cinematographic technique for projection on 35mm format. The final cut runs 100 minutes.

Music

Soundtrack and score

The soundtrack of Presque rien features songs by Irish Perry Blake, primarily drawn from his 1996 album . Blake was commissioned by director Sébastien Lifshitz to contribute original material after Lifshitz reviewed and observed filming on location. He recorded two custom songs for the film, integrated sparingly to punctuate key emotional moments without overpowering the narrative's subtlety. In lieu of a conventional composed score, the film's prioritizes diegetic elements, including environmental recordings of Brittany's coastal landscapes—such as waves, , and sparse —to amplify realism and introspective pauses. These ambient layers, captured during in and surrounding areas, were refined in to support non-dialogue sequences, fostering a of temporal stasis through extended silences rather than melodic progression. No dedicated awards were given for the sound work, though its restraint aligns with Lifshitz's intent for auditory .

Themes and analysis

Exploration of sexuality and relationships

The film portrays the initial phases of homosexual experiences among adolescents as marked by intense , characterized by uninhibited physical and that rapidly fosters attachment. This depiction aligns with observable patterns in youthful first encounters, where novelty and hormonal drives amplify pleasure but often precipitate over-reliance on the partner for validation, evolving into codependent dynamics fraught with possessiveness and interpersonal friction. Such trajectories reflect causal mechanisms wherein suppressed prior desires, unprocessed due to lack of prior , intensify bonding but erode , leading to conflicts over boundaries and expectations without external structures typical in adult relationships. A stark temporal contrast emerges between the summery of unbridled passion and the ensuing disillusionment in colder, routine settings, underscoring how environmental cues and seasonal isolation exacerbate relational strains. Repressed inclinations, when abruptly actualized, correlate with heightened vulnerabilities, as the shift from idealization to unmasks incompatibilities, amplifying anxiety and depressive episodes through unmet projections. Empirical data on adolescent same-sex attractions reveal elevated risks of , with sexual minority youth reporting 2-3 times higher rates of depression and compared to heterosexual peers, often linked to relational turbulence rather than solely external stigma. Rather than romanticizing these dynamics, the empirically illustrates volatility—such as abrupt escalations from to antagonism—without prescriptive judgment, highlighting inherent instabilities in nascent same-sex pairings among . This approach counters prevalent selective emphases on affirmative outcomes in media representations, which underreport dissolution rates; studies indicate same-sex adolescent relationships exhibit greater breakup propensity due to amplified emotional intensities and fewer stabilizing norms. Real-world patterns affirm that early homosexual initiations carry distinct emotional weights, frequently transitioning from heightened salience to disillusion via identity consolidation challenges, fostering isolation or maladaptive absent in more conventional peer experiences.

Psychological and emotional elements

Mathieu's psychological development in Presque rien traces a path from emotional suppression to acute breakdown, rooted in familial dysfunction rather than imposed external narratives of . His initial manifests as detachment during the summer romance, compounded by a home environment marked by parental separation and maternal depression stemming from the of a , which deprives him of foundational affective security. This internal causal chain—unresolved attachment deficits leading to relational volatility—culminates in post-breakup despair, including a that underscores self-directed harm as an extension of pre-romantic instabilities, not merely reactive loss. The film's depiction aligns with empirical patterns in , where intense early romantic engagements correlate with heightened depressive trajectories, particularly when layered atop adverse family histories. documents that multiple experiences from predict sustained elevations in depressive symptoms and general decline into early adulthood, driven by interpersonal volatility rather than isolated stigma. Such dynamics mirror Mathieu's arc, where the romance amplifies rather than originates his fragility, challenging reductive attributions that prioritize societal factors over character-inherent causal mechanisms like neglect-induced . Emotional realism emerges through unvarnished portrayals of Mathieu's fluctuations—intermittent joys amid mounting isolation—avoiding monolithic depression tropes while highlighting as a logical outgrowth of unmet needs. Prolonged silences and stark coastal landscapes function as neutral amplifiers of his , reflecting objective emptiness without interpretive , thus privileging behavioral realism over empathetic externalization. This approach counters prevalent interpretive biases in that favor victimhood framing, instead grounding turmoil in verifiable personal antecedents like familial coldness.

Release

Premiere and distribution

Presque rien premiered at the on May 15, 2000, in the section, marking its international debut ahead of domestic release. The film was theatrically released in on June 7, 2000, distributed by Ad Vitam, an independent company specializing in arthouse cinema. Internationally, it was released under the title Come Undone in the United States, opening in limited theatrical runs starting June 29, 2001, primarily in art-house theaters. The U.S. box office gross reached $326,484, reflecting modest commercial performance consistent with independent queer dramas targeting niche audiences. Distribution extended to select European markets and through specialized outlets, with limited wider availability via festivals and subsequent . No comprehensive global data is available, underscoring its focus on critical rather than mass-market appeal.

Reception

Critical responses

Presque rien received mixed critical reception, with praise for its unflinching realism in depicting young romance but criticism for its fragmented and unrelenting pessimism. On , the film holds a 79% approval rating based on 33 reviews, reflecting appreciation among critics for its naturalistic portrayal of and relationships free from . Reviewers highlighted the film's authentic emotional depth, with James Travers awarding it 4 out of 5 stars for its depiction of a first affair, emphasizing the extraordinary naturalism in performances by and Stéphane Ridéau. Conversely, some critics faulted the film for narrative opacity and emotional barrenness. described it as a "bleak, unyielding movie" that adheres too closely to its title's implication of "almost nothing," criticizing its sullen tone and lack of redemptive elements in exploring a failed suicide's return to the site of a past romance. Professional consensus remains divided, contrasting with user-voted aggregates like IMDb's 6.7/10 rating from over 5,500 votes, which incorporates broader audience perspectives beyond critics. Regarding explicit content, opinions varied: supporters commended its mature handling of as integral to the story's raw intimacy, while detractors viewed such scenes as gratuitous, failing to deepen character development or advance the plot beyond surface-level . This tension underscores the film's polarizing approach to themes, prioritizing psychological over conventional dramatic arcs.

Audience and cultural reception

Audience reception to Presque rien has been polarized, with an average IMDb user rating of 6.7 out of 10 based on over 5,500 votes. Queer viewers often praised its emotional depth and realistic portrayal of young gay relationships, appreciating the naturalistic depiction of intimacy and personal turmoil without sentimental gloss. However, many expressed discomfort with the film's unglamorous outcomes, particularly the protagonist's suicide, which some users described as "cruel" and "dark," contributing to frustration over the lack of resolution or uplift. This explicitness and bleakness limited mainstream appeal, as evidenced by the film's niche circulation rather than broad commercial success, aligning with audience preferences for more affirming narratives in LGBTQ+ media. The film's handling of relational failures and psychological strain sparked cultural discussions on realism versus idealized depictions in storytelling, challenging romanticized media tropes by emphasizing causal breakdowns like and mismatched expectations. In LGBTQ+ film communities, it garnered a dedicated following for its unflinching , with users noting its resonance for those grappling with similar experiences of fleeting summer romances turning to despair. Retrospective views have been shaped by home video releases and sporadic streaming availability on platforms like OK.ru, fostering reevaluations among art-house enthusiasts since its 2000 premiere. Its inclusion in lists of influential French cinema underscores a sustained, if specialized, cultural footprint, prompting debates on the value of non-affirmative endings in representing lived complexities over advocacy-driven .

Awards and recognition

Festival honors and nominations

Presque rien garnered international recognition primarily through extensive festival selections rather than competitive wins or nominations. The film was screened at over 50 international festivals following its French release on June 7, 2000. Among notable screenings, it appeared at the New York New Festival in 2001. No nominations or awards were documented at prestigious events such as the or Berlin International Film Festival's for queer cinema. Similarly, it received no César Award nominations in despite critical attention to its direction and performances.

Legacy

Influence on queer cinema

Presque rien advanced naturalistic representations in cinema by portraying homosexual relationships with unflinching emotional honesty, avoiding stereotypes and melodramatic excess common in prior gay-themed films. This approach highlighted the mundane failures, isolation, and struggles of young , countering the selective optimism often favored in narratives during the late 1990s and early 2000s. The film's depiction of a summer romance dissolving into depression and relational breakdown influenced subsequent French works emphasizing causal emotional realism over activist or politicized framing. Within Sébastien Lifshitz's oeuvre, Presque rien set a for raw explorations of sexual awakening and domesticity in later films such as Wild Side (2004) and Going South (2009), which extended its focus on fragmented identities without idealized resolutions. Academic analyses of French cinema cite the film for normalizing full-frontal and intimate bodily fragmentation, contributing to a shift toward integrated, non-sensationalized bodies post-New Queer Cinema. However, its bleak —culminating in a and enduring sorrow—has drawn critique for potentially limiting broader emulation, as evidenced by sparse direct influences on international directors. Despite inclusion in canonical lists of French gay films, Presque rien lacks documented major revivals, adaptations, or transformative cultural shifts beyond niche academic discourse, underscoring a legacy confined to specialized queer film studies rather than mainstream adoption.

References

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