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This Special Friendship
Overlook Pick

This Special Friendship

What Was Their Guilt?
78
User Score82 ratings
TMDB 7.816+19641h 36mFrench
DramaRomance

Synopsis

A tale of the tender relationship between a twelve-year-old boy and the fourteen-year-old upperclassman who is the object of his desire, all set within the rigid atmosphere of a Jesuit-run school.

Director
Jean DelannoyFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Lux Compagnie Cinématographique de France3 production companies
Release
September 4, 1964Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 13
Francis Lacombrade
Francis Lacombrade
Georges de Sarre
Didier Haudepin
Didier Haudepin
Alexandre Motier
François Leccia
François Leccia
Lucien Rouvière
Dominique Maurin
Dominique Maurin
Marc de Blajean
Louis Seigner
Louis Seigner
Father Lauzon
Michel Bouquet
Michel Bouquet
Father Trennes
Lucien Nat
Lucien Nat
Father Superior
Gérard Chambre
Gérard Chambre
André Ferron

Trailers & Photos

No media available

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Jan 12, 2024

As love stories go, this has to be one of the more touching I've seen on film. Set amidst the controlling but not oppressive environment of a Jesuit run school, we meet the young "Comte Georges" (Francis Lacombrade) who develops a friendship with the younger "Alexandre (Didier Haudepin). Now it's not in any way a sexual or predatory relationship, but the two instantly click with the younger lad clearly infatuated with his older friend who sees in "Alexandre" an opportunity to nurture a genuine love and affection. Naturally, the fathers take a fairly dim view of any friendship that suggests even the most platonic degree of intimacies between the boys, and so "Fr. Superior" (Lucien Nat) attempts to put a stop to things by threatening to send "George" away from the school. What now ensues are a series of decisions to be faced by people too young and immature to fully comprehend, let alone, rationalise - and a tragic denouement starts to look increasingly likely as young "Alexandre" really does come across more and more as a "lost sheep". What struck me about this is it's positivity. It's not about abusive priests with canes and excessive doctrine - the Father Superior comes across as a decent man genuinely concerned with the souls of his charges, whilst the two - especially the thoroughly charming Haudepin - just engage as two people whom you could image being friends forever. It has moments of poignancy, of disappointment and of fun - and although maybe it could have taken a bit longer to build the characters more, it is still a potent look at two boys in love - forbidden yet thriving.

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