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50 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mesmerizing
Controversial French director Catherine Breillat's "Brief Crossing" (2001) is a mesmerizing 80-minute knockout that follows two very different travelers as they meet on an overnight ferry cruise and enter into a steamy one-night affair. The twist here is that the odd couple is a thirtysomething Englishwoman and a 16-year-old French schoolboy.

Breillat was...
Published on October 25, 2004 by James D. Leverton

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Engaging Breillat film but not for everybody
An engaging character study about a thirty-something English-woman who meets a hot-headed French teenager on a London-bound ship. Over the course of one night, they meet cute, philosophize, fight, and eventually hook up.

Stylistically, this is far different from anything Breillat has done before or since.

In previous films, Breillat was...
Published on March 2, 2009 by Ben Shepherd


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50 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mesmerizing, October 25, 2004
By 
James D. Leverton (San Marcos, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Brief Crossing (Breve Traversee) (DVD)
Controversial French director Catherine Breillat's "Brief Crossing" (2001) is a mesmerizing 80-minute knockout that follows two very different travelers as they meet on an overnight ferry cruise and enter into a steamy one-night affair. The twist here is that the odd couple is a thirtysomething Englishwoman and a 16-year-old French schoolboy.

Breillat was obviously inspired by David Lean's classic "Brief Encounter." However, the similarities end there. As anyone who has seen any of Breillat's previous features (including the [hot] "Romance" and "Fat Girl") will know, the director isn't interested in telling a conventional love story so much as chronicling the psychological fallout of sex. This film is no exception. As Breillat herself says in a revealing interview that accompanies the film, she made the film simply because she wanted to explore the loss of a young male's virginity. In this case, it is young Thomas (Gilles Guillan), who meets Alice (Sarah Pratt) while ordering dinner, then begins a mutual flirtation with the amused woman after she invites him to share a table with her. Over the course of the next hour, they share much revealing conversation, then eventually fall into bed together. What happens next is best left for the viewer to experience.

Obviously the centerpiece of this film is the sexual encounter, and let's just say it is beautifully handled by the director and her two actors. Perhaps because of the tender age of her young star, Breillat doesn't push the envelope as far as she did in "Romance," leaving it up to the viewer to decide just how real the encounter is. (Rest assured, young Guillan was 19 when he made the film, but still a virgin according to the director.) Still, it's an eye-opening moment. So, if you're one that is easily offended by on-screen sexuality, pass this one up.

The acting by Pratt and Guillan is perfect. The dinner scene in particular is brilliantly handled. It's fascinating to watch the older woman trying to act younger while the young boy puffs on a cigarette and vainly tries to impress the older woman by acting much older than he is. And the last fifteen minutes especially ring true, with a last-minute twist that ends the film on exactly the right note.

In all, "Brief Crossing" is a minor film which sacrifices plot to tell a simple story of two disparate souls who make a once-in-a-lifetime connection. The ending is sad but honest, and leaves the viewer to make his own judgments about the woman's behavior. (It helps to take into account the differing attitudes about sex that separates us American puritans with European sensibilities: an American film would end with the woman thrown in jail for statutory rape.) At least the film is honest about it's intentions to provide an erotic experience for the audience, unlike today's American coming-of-age films which disguise their intentions in dumb comedy and irresponsible filmmaking. (By irresponsible filmmaking, I mean that an American film would romanticize the encounter and make it appear to be a beautiful rite-of-passage for the boy and satisfying for the woman. In Breillat's world, the sex is raw, clumsy, unmutually satisfying, almost violent and even somewhat sad to watch. Quite a difference.)

In all, "Brief Crossing" is a small gem from a controversial director who delights in polarizing her audiences. The viewer's enjoyment will hinge on just how hung-up he/she is about in-your-face eroticism. Enter at your own risk. **** (out of *****)
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Engaging Breillat film but not for everybody, March 2, 2009
By 
Ben Shepherd (Philadelphia, PA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Brief Crossing (Breve Traversee) (DVD)
An engaging character study about a thirty-something English-woman who meets a hot-headed French teenager on a London-bound ship. Over the course of one night, they meet cute, philosophize, fight, and eventually hook up.

Stylistically, this is far different from anything Breillat has done before or since.

In previous films, Breillat was notorious for exploring the sickening depths of human depravity via sexuality ("A Real Young Girl", "Romance" "36 Fillette") and violence ("Perfect Love", "Fat Girl"), and unafraid to show her characters fully nude and to film them in unsimulated sex scenes.

But here, Breillat's perfectly content to let her fully-clothed characters light up a smoke in the ship's dining hall and just chat. On the surface, this may sound like a retread of "Perfect Love", since Breillat had seemingly already explored the older woman/younger man territory.

But whereas Christophe in "Perfect Love" was a petualant brat (and more than likely a closet homosexual), Thomas here is a full-blooded teenager: precocious and intelligent, but also hopelessly naive.

If you're with the characters, you'll follow them all the way to the ship's dock. If you're bored to tears by their chats and with following them around the ship, then this film is not for you.

As usual, Breillat favors character over plot, and unlike most French filmmakers, she has no use for her New Wave predecessors' jazzy pacing and quick jump-cuts. She prefers a stationary camera (that cross-cuts between characters and precious little else) in order to let the scenes breathe and the performances build. Critics have thus complained about Breillat's leisurely pacing making her films artsy at best and downright boring at worst.

Which is a shame, since "Brief Crossing", pacing issues aside, is probably Breillat's most accessible work. There's sex, to be sure, but it's nowhere near as explicity depicted as in Breillat's previous "Romance" (and several years after this film with "Anatomy of Hell").

Bottom line: If you don't mind a grounded character study that centers on a love interest between a woman at the crossroads of her life and a boy whose ship is just beginning to sail, then by all means check it out. And if you're interested in Breillat, this is probably the perfect starting point, as you can then build up to the director's gritter, take-no-prisoners work.

But if you've never seen a European film and aren't used to the style, you'd best look elsewhere. There's no shoot-outs or flashy camera work. No CGI or MTV-casting. Just one night in the life of two regular people.

It's not Breillat's best film, but still a worthy addition to her scattered ouevre, and a nice left turn from her more uncompromising and polarizing works.

SIDE NOTE: The DVD also features a long interview with Breillat as she talks about the making of the film.

It's a fascinating interview to be sure, however it's marred by a language barrier.

The DVD producers chose to conduct an interview in English with Breillat.
Breillat speaks English fluently, but her French accent is so haltingly thick that her answers are often difficult to understand. As a result, the English language interview is sub-titled.

Anyone who's ever seen Breillat give an interview in her native tongue knows that the woman is a handful: Out-spoken and uncompromising. The DVD producers could've easily brought in a French interviewer for Breillat, or at least an off-screen translator so Breillat could answer the English questions in her own language.

Since we all just sat through a 90-minute French film sub-titled in English, do they really think we would've griped about a Special Feature having the same? Especially since they went and sub-titled the interview anyway....
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant Superb, April 29, 2010
This review is from: Brief Crossing (Breve Traversee) (DVD)
What makes this more than "Very good" is the attention to psychological precision that a lesser film would have left out. Mangled passport, not applauding, and dozens of other such that shows the director understands her characters inside and out to the point that they are indistinguishable from actual people she knows. And on top of that the film generates enough thought and ideas about love and age differences to last months.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A Catherine Breillat film for those who don't like her, February 3, 2010
This review is from: Brief Crossing (Breve Traversee) (DVD)
The Bottom Line:

Though Brief Crossing is just as concerned with the battle of the sexes as everything else in Ms. Breillat's work, here she seems to be crafting a story rather than attempting to shock viewers with graphic depictions of sexuality; in any event, it's an interesting film about a man and a woman who meet for one night on a ferry (call it the anti-Before Sunrise) with good performances by the two leads, an ending that changes everything that came before it, and yes, a hefty amount of nudity.

3/4
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18 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Erotic, but left me cold, August 31, 2005
This review is from: Brief Crossing (Breve Traversee) (DVD)
The youngsters (sixteen y/o male and thirty y/o female) are highly desirable and the gradual seduction interesting; you will want to watch this art house movie for the sexy scenes. The initial attraction, flirtation and tactical maneuvering between a very young man and an older woman are covered here quite competently.

Be warned, like most French movies having anything to do with adults and sex, everybody smokes, and their philosophy is deeply cynical materialism or even nihilism. They have zero values and zero aspirations and should be medicated on Prozac but aren't.

I kept wondering what is the real story here. There doesn't seem to be one. It is merely an indulgence in titillation; and within those limitations this film is no better than so many others. It did not move me or make me feel anything in particular. The ending, which I will not reveal, per request, reminded me too much of personal experiences.
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12 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Attractive (...), July 3, 2004
By 
This review is from: Brief Crossing (Breve Traversee) (DVD)
On a ferry crossing the channela 30 year old English womans seduces a 16 years old French schoolboy,in graphic detailThe confusion of sex and love is just as thought provoking as the reversal of he usual 'older man -young woman'metaphor.My desire for gender equality would throw the Englishwoman in jail but was attenuated by the sexual philosophy expounded by the schoolboy, reflecting his generations disregard for crisis and trauma in sexual encounters.Catherine Breillats best movie so far,well worth seeing.
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1 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars INTERESTING BUT A BIT SLOW AT TIMES., January 5, 2007
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This review is from: Brief Crossing (Breve Traversee) (DVD)
I BOUGHT ABOUT 20 FORIEGN FILMS ONE DAY WITH THE INTENT OF DIVING IN AND EXPOSING MYSELF TO SOMETHING I HAD IGNORED ALL MY LIFE. SO FAR, I'VE EITHER MADE POOR CHOICES OR THESE FORIEGN FILMS ARENT FOR ME. THIS ONE, I DID LIKE BECAUSE ITS THE SORT OF THING THAT COULD HAPPEN TO YOU. NO PART OF THIS WAS IN ANY WAY FAR FETCHED OR UNBELIEVEABLE. I WILL SAY THAT IT IS A BIT SLOW THOUGH- SOME SCENES DRAG ON LONGER THAN THEY NEED TO WHICH MAKES IT A TAD BORING IN PLACES. IF YOU'RE LIKE ME AND ARE THINKING ABOUT TRYING FOREIGN FILMS- THIS MIGHT BE A LOW OCTANE GOOD FIRST CHOICE- BECAUSE THERE ARE SOME OUT THERE THAT ARE VERY HARD TO WATCH, VIOLENT,PORNOGRAPGHIC, AND SHOWING LIFES NEGATIVES.THIS ONE IS NOT.
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0 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Simple Review, May 25, 2007
By 
Thumper (San Diego, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Brief Crossing (Breve Traversee) (DVD)
Good movie with a twist. The twist leaves it up to the viewer of who seduce who in this movie.
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Brief Crossing (Breve Traversee)
Brief Crossing (Breve Traversee) by Catherine Breillat (DVD - 2004)
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