Summer of 85 review – François Ozon's sunny, sad gay teen romance

Two teenage boys fall for each other with tragic results in an intimate and well-acted, if a little overfamiliar, drama about infatuation and death

Originally intended for a Cannes unveiling this past May, François Ozon’s blue-skied coming-out-of-age romance Summer of 85 would have been a fitting film for the Croisette, filled with vistas not dissimilar to those one would have seen post-premiere. His flawed, bittersweet drama feels less at home screening at this year’s virtual Toronto film festival, months after its French theatrical release, but like any potent summer fling, it’s how it makes us feel out of the sun that truly counts and while there’s tenderness and fire here, it all burns out a little too fast, the embers stamped out by the reality of September.

Based on the British 1982 YA novel Dance on My Grave by Aidan Chambers, Ozon’s adaptation transports events to Northern France focusing on Alex (Félix Lefebvre), a death-obsessed 16-year-old in need of a friend during a long hot summer. After capsizing a boat on the sea, he’s saved by David (Benjamin Voisin), confident and slightly older, who immediately takes him under his wing. The two become fast friends before something else more passionate quickly takes over. But like the book it’s based on, Ozon’s storytelling informs us early on that David dies and through flashbacks, we discover how.

With a teasing voiceover, Ozon initially plays with the beats of a noir thriller suggesting something more nefarious at the film’s centre, making us question how involved Alex might have been in David’s death, and there are echoes of 2003’s Swimming Pool in its themes of obsession and the therapeutic power of writing. In order to process what happened, Alex is urged to document the summer months, to figure out both his emotions and the specifics of how David died and it becomes one of the film’s more piercing elements. The trauma Alex must face up to is made slightly more bearable by his ability to turn himself into a character in a story, a similar idea to one that was explored in Safy Nebbou’s Who You Think I Am last year although in this instance, there’s no room for fabrication, just a growing awareness of how perspectives can wildly differ within a relationship.

Looking back on our romantic history can lead to an unhealthy amount of rose-tinted nostalgia but, with a deeper analysis, it can also lead us to consider situations from the other side, a vital realisation that feelings are never entirely identical. For Alex, it’s a lesson we can tell will imprint in his memory but for us, there’s something about the film that isn’t quite heady enough to stick. While the book it was based on caused a stir at the time for its progressive subject matter, the years since have seen queer stories of this ilk become more commonplace both on page and on screen and while some cliches are artfully sidestepped, too much of the film feels overfamiliar. One of Ozon’s smartest decisions is to avoid centring the coming out narrative and the many formulaic scenes that come with it and there is a quiet, well-acted subtlety to how the pair’s parents deal with their relationship. But while there’s a natural, unforced intimacy between the two, their burgeoning connection is sweet but insubstantial. They share an interesting discussion about mortality (Alex’s obsession with death exists because he’s never really experienced grief as opposed to David whose father died the year before) but it’s mostly paper-thin, if pleasant, flirting and when tragedy strikes, it doesn’t strike us hard enough.

There’s strong work from both Lefebvre and Voisin but Ozon doesn’t give their characters enough distinguishable colour and so there’s a limit to how much they can bring to the table. Unlike the woozy love at its centre, Summer of 85 doesn’t haunt in the way that it should. It fades when it should burn.

  • Summer of 85 is showing at the Toronto film festival with a release date to follow later this year

Contributor

Benjamin Lee

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Monday review – hedonistic romance drama is a party worth avoiding
Sebastian Stan and Denise Gough have zero chemistry as a couple dealing with a series of uninteresting relationship crises in a disappointing drama

Peter Bradshaw

11, Sep, 2020 @6:32 PM

Article image
Penguin Bloom review – Naomi Watts saved by a magpie in charming drama
An Australian family moves on from tragedy with the help of a bird in a modest and warm-hearted true story

Benjamin Lee

12, Sep, 2020 @4:37 PM

Article image
Another Round review – Mads Mikkelsen anchors boozy tragicomedy
A reunion between director Thomas Vinterberg and his star of the 2012 drama The Hunt is a flippant and very, very drunken story of an unusual experiment

Peter Bradshaw

30, Jun, 2021 @3:28 PM

Article image
If Beale Street Could Talk review – Barry Jenkins' tragic romance soars
With his follow-up to best picture winner Moonlight, the writer-director brings James Baldwin’s 1974 novel to the screen with heartbreaking, visually audacious results

Benjamin Lee

10, Sep, 2018 @3:49 AM

Article image
Summer of 85 review – François Ozon's bittersweet teen romance
Two boys in a French seaside resort fall fatally in love in a nostalgic coming-of-age tale

Mark Kermode Observer film critic

25, Oct, 2020 @8:00 AM

Article image
True Mothers review – Naomi Kawase's heartfelt yet frustrating drama
The director of The Mourning Forest returns with another sensitive film, this time about a difficult adoption, yet plot holes prove distracting

Peter Bradshaw

13, Apr, 2021 @10:17 AM

Article image
Joe Bell review – Mark Wahlberg affects in moving homophobia drama
The actor makes a convincing plea for awards recognition in a heartbreaking true story of a father whose gay son kills himself after being bullied

Benjamin Lee

15, Sep, 2020 @2:30 AM

Article image
Submergence review – James McAvoy and Alicia Vikander drown in soggy romance
Wim Wenders’s globe-trotting tale of two lovers separated by circumstance is handsomely told but stilted dialogue and genre confusion weigh it down

Benjamin Lee

11, Sep, 2017 @10:14 PM

Article image
My Policeman review – Harry Styles is arrestingly awkward in stodgy gay romance
Toronto film festival: A bland lead performance is one of many faults with a melodramatic and unconvincing drama about a love triangle in the 1950s

Benjamin Lee in Toronto

12, Sep, 2022 @1:00 AM

Article image
76 Days review – haunting Covid-19 documentary leaves its mark
A chilling look at what frontline workers faced in Wuhan might not expand the canvas quite enough but remains a potent and horrifying document

Peter Bradshaw

14, Sep, 2020 @10:40 PM