अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA coming of age story about two great friends during the school years whose friendship is truly tested when one of the boys start to develop different feelings for the other. At first, it se... सभी पढ़ेंA coming of age story about two great friends during the school years whose friendship is truly tested when one of the boys start to develop different feelings for the other. At first, it seems Philippe and Claude are just experimenting new sensations, everything is pure curiosit... सभी पढ़ेंA coming of age story about two great friends during the school years whose friendship is truly tested when one of the boys start to develop different feelings for the other. At first, it seems Philippe and Claude are just experimenting new sensations, everything is pure curiosity to them. But total reciprocity isn't the name of the game and Philippe is clearly infatu... सभी पढ़ें
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
As they start spending time together, the line between friendship and infatuation becomes blurry. Confused about themselves and their burgeoning sexuality, a tension remains between them. One afternoon, the two boys are on Philippe's bed, and Claude confesses to him that the train movement usually provokes him an erection, not unlike the one he is about to experience in his buddy's bed. They talk about boys stuff, about wet dreams and, above all, self-pleasuring. Claude asks Philippe to jerk off in front of him; and Philippe explains to his friend that in order to masturbate one must first think of someone or something.
This assertion makes perfect sense if one thinks about Michele Foucault's observations in his Histoire de la Sexualité, wherein the author affirms that masturbation cannot take place without fantasy, without an image that can exacerbate sexual desire. For Foucault, the first sexual stage in animals is coitus; for humans, however, this first stage is masturbation.
Lacan, on the other hand, would affirm that masturbation is the joy of the idiot, and although there can be many interpretations about this phrase, there is no doubt that in this short film, Philippe assumes the role of the idiot, id est, the role of the subject that can no longer escape from the phantasm, the idealized image of the other boy, precluding him from accepting reality as it is.
Later on, in a sleepover, Philippe starts touching Claude's shoulder and torso; Claude pretends to be asleep but makes it easy for his friend to gain access to his crotch; as Philippe strokes Claude's naked body, a moment of intimacy and clumsiness becomes poignant for the teenagers. Because of the age difference, Claude admires his friend, he feels like there is much he can learn from him, but at the same time he tries to defend his masculine position in the symbolic order Although Claude seems to be what Freud would denominate as a pubescent "perverse polymorph", Philippe wrongly interprets the signs he thinks his friend is giving off. As a result, when they go camping and Claude kisses a girl, Philippe understands what's going and starts crying. The two boys share a tent, and once Claude gets in, Philippe almost loses his mind, he tries to touch the schoolboy and demands for his nudity; he ends up begging to see him nude, but the young boy refuses to indulge in yet another masturbatory setting.
Philippe leaves the tent, desperate, and from that moment on, everything falls to pieces. Whatever's left of their friendship is now shattered, and Claude eludes his older friend. Philippe gets depressed, he stops eating, and he starts calling Claude's home and following his friend from a distance. But nothing works. He has lost him. Claude lingers on, imprisoned as an idealized figure inside Philippe's psyche, and it is Philippe's inability to cope with the real what ultimately ruins everything. The ending, fierce and despondent, proves once again that we might have access to the body of the other, but we never have access to the other's mind; the emotional void, the emptiness in Philippe's heart will forever remain there.
Claude, rather a typical h i s t r i o n i c youngster with apparent bisexual interests watches the slightly older Philippe with sighing admiration. Philippe responds to Claude's pass at him by overtly falling in love with the boy.
There's a lot of shy mutual caressing, yet they do not kiss, and when Claude brings up the sex issue, the context is less homo-erotic than out of ordinary adolescent curiosity: "Do you masturbate? Have you measured your dick?" However, they end up in bed anyway. Splendid French sensuality!
Alas, Claude sees a girl when out camping with Philippe and loses interest in his friend, all of a sudden and all in a very immature fashion.
The inscrutable final scene where Philippe pays his former friend for sex, as well as an early scene that indicates that Claude had an adult admirer/partner previous to Philippe, really don't fit with the juvenescent romantic overture, and lends a contradictory ambiguity as to the maturity of Claude's character and his motives. Either he's a modest and inexperienced teenager struggling with his awakening sexual feelings or he's a precocious histrionic, adept in hustling, but he cannot be both at the same time. I choose to label him a histrionic due to his attention seeking by means of a seductive approach.
The portrayal of Philippe makes much more sense though: he appears strong, self-confident and masculine to begin with, but gradually he loses all these qualities, as he yields to the unexpected seduction, and gets infatuated.
It's almost as if it was the point that the relationship made the two of them switch roles.
The b/w footage is quite suggestive, and the arguably low budget hampered to a great effect fancy additions and digressions.
क्या आपको पता है
- कनेक्शनEdited into Courts mais GAY: Tome 8 (2004)
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
- चलने की अवधि44 मिनट
- रंग
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