Ava (2017) Poster

(II) (2017)

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8/10
Une surprise !
claudejunge28 September 2017
I found it bold in many ways. I'm not sure of having already seen something like this. Violence boldness, artistic boldness, hippie boldness, yes, but every day boldness ? boldness to accept one's weakness ? Boldness to accept my weakness ? I found it surprising in many ways but it goes with it. It's funny, crazy, sexy, cool, true. I do not want to spoil any surprises so I won't say much more. I don't know if it's a great movie, but for me it is a memorable movie as I do not often see.
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8/10
I did not expect reality from it
karolinaszin1 April 2018
I liked it: the film operates with loads and loads of symbols without becoming tedious or cumbersome. Instead, the viewer is invited to be curious about these ideas and dive deeper into the layers. Casting is spot on, characters are good, and I simply adore the soundtrack. What made me strangely detached early on was the fact that I simply did not find the film believable, and even the music score could hardly drag me back into the plot. Obviously, I did not expect reality from it. And I love fairy tales, by the way. Yet somehow the characters' motivations and the way these are fit into the narrative leave things to be desired. They felt incomplete. It's a very good movie, but as it is mighty close to being great, a slightly frustrating one at the same time.
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8/10
Puberty, love, adventure and blindness...
DukeEman10 July 2019
AVA is set on an idyllic seaside town during a typical French summer holiday were the 13-year-old title hero learns that her sight is deteriorating, (brilliant performance from Noee Abita who was 18 at the time for obvious reasons). This dilemma forces Ava to create her own world, where along the way she befriends a young Gypsy boy and his dog. They form a pact and hit the road as they make a run from the law and life itself. The young director, Lea Mysius, mixes it up with neorealism, a bit of pop culture, and some surreal moments, capturing perfectly the mindset of a teenager going through puberty during her pending ordeal.
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Blindness
searchanddestroy-124 June 2017
What a poignant but simple tale of a thirteen years old girl who lives with her baby sister and single mother and who discovers one day that she will slowly get blind in a few months. Then she becomes awry, especially as a teen. She steals a dog from a vagrant, a gypsy in his twenties, a wayward young gypsy searched by the police. With him, the young girl will try to get pleasure in life before getting prisoner of the forever darkness. You can think some minutes about a sort of BONNIE AND CLYDE scheme. A desperate but no totally hopeless story however.
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9/10
Amazing
Morten_59 November 2017
28th STOCKHOLM INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL. DAY 1, NOV 8th 2017. Swedish premiere of "Ava" (2017).

A beautiful, well-paced drama about being on the border between childhood and adulthood, "Ava" is a promising feature debut from Léa Mysius.

There is fine acting, a strong screenplay, good direction and deep emotions of fear, frustration, curiosity, excitement, joy, love, sensuality, as 13-year-old Ava learns she has an incurable eye disease that will soon make her blind. She tries to cope with it as best she can -- all while falling in love with an older boy and running away from home, during a hot summer on the French Atlantic coast.
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9/10
Impressive
derek-duerden23 March 2023
For a debut feature, this is nicely done, with some pleasantly-surprising turns that help avoid the cliches of the coming-of-age-rebellion trope.

As someone else has said, she doesn't really need to be 13 for the plot to work. Something like 16 would have been fine, and the fact that Noee was older than 13 at the time of filming would not have been so obvious. However, IMHO, she is excellent in this - even better than in Slalom, which I also saw recently.

Despite the underlying tragedy of her situation (horrifying disease prognosis, useless mother...), there are some nice touches of humour (loved the dog on the moped) and sweetness from the supporting characters (such as the bride).

Recommended.
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5/10
Disappointing
Stoshie31 December 2020
I'm American, but I like foreign movies. I especially like French movies. I most especially like French coming-of-age movies; they tend to be more authentic and honest than any others. But this one let me down, for a number of reasons.

First, the plot line of the girl slowly going blind went nowhere, and did not need to be there to justify the actions of the title character. A girl of that age, going through the changes of young adulthood, with all its mixed emotions, could easily have gone through the same experiences without that plot element. It was unnecessary.

There was some awkward editing in the film, too. It was like the filmmakers didn't know how to, or couldn't, end some scenes, so they just cut away from them. Among such moments was the scene by the raging river. It was obvious the scene couldn't be finished, so they just cut away from it. Like I said, awkward.

The worse part, though, was the lead actress. I'm not attacking her acting ability, but she just absolutely did not look like a 13 year-old. She didn't have the facial features, body, or mannerisms of a girl of that age. If they had made her, say, 16 instead of 13, she would have been more believable. And she could still have gone through the same emotions and done the same things. Honestly, that aspect, where the actress was so obviously older than the character she played, took me out of the film. Dig up an older French film named "Beau Pere" and see what I mean; there, the actress playing a 14 year-old looks and acts like, well, a 14 year old.

All in all, as French coming-of-age movies go, this was not one of the better ones.
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10/10
Tender movie with amazing soundtrack
adamsilhan7 January 2018
Teenage summer love - story told hundreds times and still done in a very fresh way.

Tender and heartwarming movie with great camera shoots and awesome soundtrack.
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4/10
Coming of Age Story - Not Well Done
paulscofield683 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Ava is the title character of a French coming of age / love story. It's filmed in summer in southwest France, and the scenery is great. It's competently filmed, and the acting is decent. The problem I have is with the story: too many implausible and/or over-the-top events. The film feels as though it was made by an inexperienced, young French woman for young French women. And worse, the love story was pretty weak: one felt her love for him but not his love for her. The impending blindness came to feel like an unnecessary story line gimmick, created more so to add drama than something necessary to the story itself. An unexceptional French drama.
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Home before dark.
dbdumonteil27 April 2018
This is an uneven movie: the first part is made with sensitivity ,avoiding pathos and melodrama;the second one may puzzle some viewers and seems written haphazardly,improvised ,a little a la old "Nouvelle Vague".

Ava is going to go blind sooner as she expected :her desease is not so unusual ,I know a person who suffers from it:but the progression ,fortunately, is much slower than Ava's who is only thirteen ,an age where she a new world should be waiting for her,the first beau, the first young emotions.

Medical exams are boiled down to one scene:the diagnosis is given by the ophtamologist with sympathy,quite openly:no tears,no cries ,but a strong restrained pain.

Her mother ,unfortunately ,athough she acts with her daughter as a chum, is an immature selfish person:about forty ,she still believes she is young and pretty , and that she can seduce younger men (gigolos ,says Ava);she does not realize that time has taken its toll and that she cannot pass for a teenage girl anymore,even with all the make up in the world.

The mother's implicit acceptance of her daughter's tragedy leads the girl to an act of defiance ;mom told her daughter she should not sleep with the boys till she is sixteen or seventeen or even more,"it's not a shame" ;but shortly after ,she swims in the nude (the movie includes full frontal female nudity) and seduces a foreign boy ,probably an immigrant ;her second act of rebellion is helping him escape for the police ,who will intervene again during the wedding in the restaurant where Ava has become a waitress (the cause is not specified,but he is probably a foreign national whose papers are not in order).

This rebellion against establishment may symbolize a rebellion against her own fate ,this darkness which hangs over like a sword of Damocles.

However ,I still believe this second part is underwritten ;the director has her movie back in control again only in the last minutes, with a good use of light and darkness.

That said,on the current "feel-good" French scene,it is definitely a worthwhile work.
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2/10
Unrealistic and exploitative
unator24 April 2023
This is a really bad movie. The coming of age of the young female protagonist is simply unconvincing.

The amount of unnecessary nudity is exploitative of all concerned. The male nudity especially appears to have been included by the (female) writer and director to titillate. What is it with female writers and directors and their desire to exhibit full frontal nude males? If I took a guess I would have to say they are trying to emasculate under the guise of 'edgy'. It is simply a sad reflection on their own psychological hang-ups.

If you have the time to waste on a movie like this you are very bored indeed.
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4/10
Ava fails to deliver
meinwonderland10 March 2024
The summer vacations of Ava, a teenage girl, with her mother and sibling take a turn for the worst after she is told her eyesight will be lost.

The movie has a good start, entertaining with the right pace where the protagonist is introduced and the family dynamics are shown. The predicament she faces is strong enough to make sympathy an easy end result. Ava, above all, is sad about not having seen beauty, so she decides to make the best of the time she has left.

The movie fails in the second act, where the action is stagnant and the story takes an unbelievable and boring turn.

It had the potential to be a good coming-of-age, but ultimately went astray.
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