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Lola and the Sea
Overlook Pick

Lola and the Sea

64
User Score67 ratings
TMDB 6.416+20191h 30mFrench
Drama

Synopsis

Just when Lola, 18 years old and transgender, learns that she can finally have surgery, her mother, who is her only financial support, passes away. Abiding by her mother’s last wishes, Lola and her father, who are permanently in conflict and have not seen each other for two years, undertake a journey all the way to the Belgian coast. They realize the outcome of the journey may not be the one they were both expecting...

Director
Laurent MicheliFrom TMDB credits
Studio
10:15! Productions2 production companies
Release
December 11, 2019Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 23
Mya Bollaers
Mya Bollaers
Lola
Benoît Magimel
Benoît Magimel
Philippe
Els Deceukelier
Els Deceukelier
La patronne
Sami Outalbali
Sami Outalbali
Samir
Jeremie Zagba
Antoine
Anemone Valcke
Anemone Valcke
La danseuse
Adriana Da Fonseca
Adriana Da Fonseca
La secrétaire médicale
Delphine Bibet
Delphine Bibet
La chirurgienne

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Apr 2, 2026

“Lola”, or “Lionel” as her dad would have it, has returned home uninvited for the wake of her late mother. Bluntly, “Philippe” (Benoît Magimel) wants nothing to do with his offspring and so sends her packing. Despondent, she (Mya Boolaers) waits until he has gone out and then breaks in to take one last look around her home and also, more incidentally, acquires the urn with her mum’s ashes in it. Of course it doesn’t take long for him to realise where they are but after a tussle he agrees that she can accompany him to the familial seaside home where they can spread the ashes over the water. What now ensues sees us take a road trip with a difference with both starting out despising the other, but then beginning a realisation that neither of their entrenched positions are going to help one or the other. No, this isn’t a predicable effort that all ends in cuddles and champagne as both of these actors and some pithy writing invite us to consider just what our priorities might be in the face of grief, when the relationship is already well cemented into quite a toxic bedrock of misunderstanding and loathing. The fact that “Lola” is about to undergo her transitional surgery adds an extra layer of complexity to the story, but even without that this is still quite a resonating tale of a father/child relationship that has festered and been neglected because for both parties, that might actually have been the easier short-term solution. It’s not just “Lola” who is having issues with identity here and both Magimel and the impressive Bollaers deliver something more substantial than soapy here.

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