Graduate First (French: Passe ton bac d'abord) is a 1978 French drama film directed by Maurice Pialat and starring Sabine Haudepin.[1] The film is set in the north of France, in Lens, in a region profoundly affected by unemployment – the students, from modest backgrounds, try to forget their fears of what tomorrow will bring.

Graduate First
Directed byMaurice Pialat
Written byMaurice Pialat
StarringSabine Haudepin
CinematographyPierre-William Glenn
Jean-Paul Janssen [de; es; fr]
Edited bySophie Coussein
Martine Giordano [de; fr]
Arlette Langmann
Release date
  • 14 September 1978 (1978-09-14)
Running time
86 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

Plot

edit

The film is an "unsparing portrait of teenage life in the French suburbs [that] sees a group of schoolfriends adrift at the end of the 1970s. There's drama, violence, and pot-induced laughs, group holidays, indiscriminate sex, advances from teachers twenty-five years their seniors, attempted moves to Paris – and few prospects of passing the Baccalauréat, the final set of exams French students take before embarking into the world... to do what?

Marking the last work of Pialat's turbulent cycle of 1970s films, this is the sequel to the filmmaker's feature debut L'enfance nue (1969) – picked up again from a vantage point ten years on from the lives of the earlier film's protagonists."[2]

Cast

edit
  • Sabine Haudepin as Élisabeth
  • Philippe Marlaud [fr] as Philippe
  • Annick Alane as La mère (as Annik Alane)
  • Michel Caron as Le père
  • Christian Bouillette [fr] as Le vieux dragueur
  • Bernard Tronczyk as Bernard
  • Patrick Lepcynski as Patrick
  • Valérie Chassigneux as Valérie
  • Jean-François Adam as Le professeur de philosophie
  • Agnès Makowiak as Agnès
  • Charline Pourré as Charline
  • Patrick Playez as Rocky, le marié
  • Muriel Lacroix as Muriel
  • Frédérique Cerbonnet as Frédérique
  • Fabienne Neuville as La soeur d'Élizabeth
  • Aline Fayard as La femme du patron

Release

edit

On 17 May 2016, Cohen Film Collection released Graduate First on DVD as part of their "Films of Maurice Pialat" collection.[3]

References

edit
  1. ^ Fountain, Clarke (2011). "New York Times: Graduate First". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Baseline & All Movie Guide. Archived from the original on 20 May 2011. Retrieved 25 July 2008.
  2. ^ Moviemail Monthly Film Catalogue, September 2009.
  3. ^ Remer, Justin (31 May 2016). "The Films Of Maurice Pialat: Volume 1 (The Mouth Agape / Graduate First / Loulou)". DVD Talk. Retrieved 21 June 2024.
edit