IMDb on iPhone and iPod touch Learn more Learn more Download from the App Store
IMDb > Fin août, début septembre (1998)

Fin août, début septembre (1998) More at IMDbPro »

Photos (see all 16 | slideshow)

Overview

User Rating:
6.9/10   773 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
No change in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writer:
Olivier Assayas (written by)
Contact:
View company contact information for Late August, Early September on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
10 February 1999 (France) more
Genre:
Plot:
A story about the transition from late youth to early maturity, the film follows several friends and... more | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
Awards:
2 wins & 1 nomination more
User Comments:
Disappointing in that it's not the greatest film in the world, but still miles above everybody else. more (14 total)

Cast

  (Cast overview, first billed only)
Mathieu Amalric ... Gabriel

Virginie Ledoyen ... Anne
François Cluzet ... Adrien
Jeanne Balibar ... Jenny
Alex Descas ... Jérémie

Arsinée Khanjian ... Lucie
Mia Hansen-Løve ... Véra
Nathalie Richard ... Maryelle
Eric Elmosnino ... Thomas
Olivier Cruveiller ... Axel
Jean-Baptiste Malartre ... Editeur
André Marcon ... Hattou
Elisabeth Mazev ... Visiteuse de l'appartement
Olivier Py ... Visiteur de l'appartement
Jean-Baptiste Montagut ... Joseph Costa
more
Create a character page for: ?

Additional Details

Also Known As:
Late August, Early September (USA)
Les regrets (France) (working title)
Das Ende der Unschuld (Germany) (TV title) [de]
Ende August, Anfang September (Germany) [de]
Finales de agosto, principios de septiembre (Spain) [es]
Kun kesä on ohi (Finland) [fi]
Mellan två höstar (Sweden) [sv]
more
Runtime:
112 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Sound Mix:
Certification:
Company:

Fun Stuff

Soundtrack:
Altar more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful.
Disappointing in that it's not the greatest film in the world, but still miles above everybody else., 27 August 1999
Author: Darragh O' Donoghue (hitch1899_@hotmail.com) from Dublin, Ireland

In many ways, FIN AOUT is a dismaying and disappointing experience. Assayas' IRMA VEP is the best French film of the last quarter century: thematically rich, stylistically remarkable, emotionally devastating. FIN AOUT is, in comparison, a rather drab, handheld take on Eric Rohmer, filled with dull, aimless, middle-class intellectuals who have such 'financial problems' that they get their uncle to lend them his country villa; they whinge and emote in the most banal terms, in a plot that says nothing and goes nowhere.

This very aimlessness seems to be the film's theme. Although the title is very specific about time and the seasons, the film itself seems to exist in a timeless vacuum. Each episode has a temporal subtitle (eg 'six months later'), but no month is ever specified, and could therefore be any or none. This is not the film's failing, but that of the characters, who are locked in their own solipsism, flailing desperately, but unable to escape.

Gabriel says of Adrien, the writer, that he was minor because he could only see the world from his limited viewpoint, but this is a much more general malaise - all the talk about friendship can't hide the fact that each character is fatally limited in perception of others, because of obsession with self (figured in the cramped interiors. The trips to the country are literally bursts of fresh air). This doesn't mean that Assayas isn't generous with his characters; he is probably kinder than some of them deserve (Gabriel, in particular, needs a good shaking). The search for an apartment, therefore, is not a trite subject - these rootless characters, forming their own community, are so desperate for a sense of place, home, that they search everywhere for it: the country, abroad, the past, death.

FIN AOUT has in common with IRMA VEP a concern with the crisis of expression in this era of post-modernism. The crucial figure here is Adrien, significantly a receptacle of death (the funeral is becoming a recurring motif in modern French cinema, as in THOSE WHO LOVE ME TAKE THE TRAIN); focus for all the other characters.

The question is: in an age of pastiche and reprodution, is it possible to insist on authentic personal expression (the film's structure focuses on a shifting series of pairs: uneasy doublings and reproductions)? And does it matter that the person making an art of the personal (both the director in IRMA VEP and the writer here) is rather objectionable as a human being? Is the insistence on the personal elitist and restrictive?

In IRMA VEP these questions were urgently juggled up to the end, with no clear answers. Here the writer is unrecognised until he dies, perhaps confirming our decadent dependence on the past, and our inability to come to terms with and express the present (although even this is undermined; as his publisher remarks on Adrien's perceived success, 'I wouldn't go that far').

Unlike the director in IRMA VEP, we get no example of Adrien's work, save a self-serving and cliched letter (significantly breaking up a relationship of the May/December variety that has nearly stifled French cinema). There is no transcendental moment, like the final sequence of IRMA VEP; in essence an archetypal post-modern artefact - a fragmentary, abandoned, incomplete, distorted, scratchy, uncontextualised piece of film; a haunting palimpsest from another age (a call to return to the beginnings of cinema, when possibilities were endless, before ossifying into the codes we are stuck with now?); it is also the locus for Assayas' faith in cinema, personal expression and emotion. This issue is left rather vague here, because we have no evidence with which to judge.

Well, except this film of course. It is this that raises FIN AOUT - Assayas' complete, mature mastery of the medium. Although his material is banal, he electrifies and enlivens it with his style: the fluidity of his camera movements and editing; his emotional use of colour, light and space; his mastery of the techniques of melodrama (many scenes echo the godlike Nicholas Ray); his intimate ability to capture and make profound every seemingly trivial gesture; his enlarging every detail to convey and enrich meaning.

Chris Darke has called FIN AOUT a cubist work, but it seems to me more like an obsessive Monet serial: the characters and place, for all the narrative perambulations, never seem to change, or resolve the problems that opened the film (even if they leave a place, it's back to somewhere they've been before), but Assayas' impressionistic eye, in capturing the moment, asserts the beauty and depth of the transitory.

In fact, the film's nearest peers, for all its cinematic brilliance, might be literary - especially Proust and Beckett, in its avoidance of the dramatic (the main death occurs off-screen) in favour of the phatic, the continuous and the elliptical, giving a truer account of lives dominated by lack (the film's credits have the actors' names split apart, figuring the personality crises depicted within).

I have been using a lot of superlatives, and here's another. Assayas is now, along with Tim Burton, Takeshi Kitano and Wong Kar-Wai, the greatest director in the world; he has often been compared to the latter, although he hasn't yet quite reached Wong's offhand, melancholy poetry. This film, then, is his HAPPY TOGETHER, an absolutely astonishing example of cinematic authority, wasted on a rather monotonous psychodrama.

Was the above comment useful to you?
more (14 total)

Message Boards

Discuss this movie with other users on IMDb message board for Fin août, début septembre (1998)

Recommendations

If you enjoyed this title, our database also recommends:
- - - - -
Die Blechtrommel Edvard Munch Babel Ceux qui m'aiment prendront le train The Pillow Book
IMDb User Rating:
IMDb User Rating:
IMDb User Rating:
IMDb User Rating:
IMDb User Rating:
Show more recommendations

Related Links

Full cast and crew Company credits External reviews
IMDb Drama section IMDb France section Add this title to MyMovies

You may report errors and omissions on this page to the IMDb database managers. They will be examined and if approved will be included in a future update. Clicking the 'Update' button will take you through a step-by-step process.