Eloise

2009
6.3| 1h32m| en
Details

A sensuous and ethereal story of two young women falling in love for the first time. Young, beautiful Àsia lies in a coma, her mother and boyfriend keeping constant vigil by her side. In flashback we see what led up to her accident, her life studying architecture at university, the somewhat overbearing relationship she has with her mother and her passionless relationship with Nathaniel.

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Tockinit not horrible nor great
Softwing Most undeservingly overhyped movie of all time??
BallWubba Wow! What a bizarre film! Unfortunately the few funny moments there were were quite overshadowed by it's completely weird and random vibe throughout.
Zlatica One of the worst ways to make a cult movie is to set out to make a cult movie.
lazarillo This Catalan-Spanish teen lesbian movie very much anticipates the later Cannes-winning French film "Blue is the Warmest Color". Like the later film, it is about a sexually confused girl in her late teens who becomes involved with an older female artist who is much more of a committed lesbian. This results here though in tragedy as the heroine begins the movie in a coma after an accident and the rest of the movie is told in flashbacks.In America movies like this are called "gay interest", which implies--unfortunately accurately in many cases--that they may not hold much interest for anyone else who is NOT female and gay. But then again, many lesbians might justifiably scoff at some other "lesbian" movies like "Room in Rome" which seem a lot more interested in hot girl-on-girl action than in seriously portraying believable lesbian relationships. Even "Blue is the Warmest Color" fell victim to this latter criticism by people who couldn't see beyond the 15 minutes of hot sex scenes to consider the REST of the three-hour long movie. This film though is more immune to that criticism since there is really only one graphic lesbian scene near the end of the movie, long after most horny frat-boy types would have lost interest. Most of the movie is fairly believable if somewhat pedestrian female romance. The best scene by far is the startlingly filmed night swimming scene where the lovers break into the university pool after hours. This scene is so beautifully filmed and lit, you perhaps won't question why they turned on all these lights if they weren't supposed to be in the pool. This scene really transcends the rest of the movie and eventually returns later as a metaphoric image for the heroine's deep and perhaps irreversible coma.The coma plot is perhaps a little melodramatic and reminiscent of trite Hollywood crap like "If I Stay", but that is perhaps an unfair criticism since this movie came out years earlier. Despite the melodrama though, this is not nearly as dramatically compelling as "Blue is the Warmest Color" (and is also only about half the length). Diana Gomez, as the young university student, and Ariadna Cabrol, as the older artist, are both muy pretty girls with beautiful bodies even if they're not nearly as strong of actresses as Adele Exarchopolous and Lea Seydoux in "Blue" (but they also both have a lot more nude scenes than than Chloe Moretz in "If I Stay"). Some individual scenes are very impressive, but the movie as a whole is bit slight and rather cliché. But it also matters what you choose to compare it to. It is worth seeing at least.
Robert J. Maxwell Not a badly done story of a young university student, Asia, attracted to and then running off with a Bohemian girl, Eloise, though I had a few problems with it.First of all, I happen to be rather quick at language and have been studying Spanish assiduously for ten years. I'm already on Lesson Two, "How To Find Your Way Around The Airport." Yet, I could hardly understand a word of this really el freako dialect. Okay, okay. It was shot in Cataluna. (I don't have that little diacritical mark for the "n".) I finally figured out it was shot in Spain because they pronounce "sais" as "shay". But --"D'accord" means, "Sure"? That's FRENCH! That aside, the film kept my interest. Asia is the pale, innocent, slightly shapeless, thoughtful and ordinary young lady. She has a casual boyfriend, Nat, who is an easy-going sort of guy who gets bored at the ballet. It's hard to see why he would. The ballet is no "Swan Lake" but some challenging stuff involving gymnastics out of Pilotes taking place among half-filled bottles of Evian water. Something like that. Weird, but hardly boring.The tickets were given to Asia by Eloise, an artist of her own age for whom Asia is modeling. Eloise is different from Asia. She's a pariah at the university. She's dark, a little feral, with large, expressive, hypnotic eyes and plump sensual lips. The other girls gossip about her, giggle, call her a lesbian.In fact, it turns out she pretty much is. Without really setting out to do so, she begins introducing Asia to the immoral life -- drinking at a gay bar, posing nude, and the next thing they're in the sack. When Asia wakes up she feels dirty. And then Asia's uptight mother begins to sense what's going on and there is a heated confrontation. Asia backslides for a while before realizing she must follow her bliss, then she runs off with Eloise and her own mother's doubtful blessings. Unless Asia dies first and the ending is a wistful dream -- I couldn't quite make it out.It's always interesting to watch movies made outside of the English-speaking world. They broaden the mind. Mostly they broaden it by demonstrating the many parallels between the lives of these exotics and our own. Those stupid electric alarm clocks sound as irritating in Barcelona as they do in Keokuk, Iowa -- three high-pitched urgent beeps separated by a short space. In Morse Code, they're crying S -- S -- S. Beyond that, it's sometime amazing how closely the management of conflicts resemble each other across cultures. Asia's mother, for instance, is a snoop, like many mothers, and paws through her daughter's personal effects until she uncovers evidence of the unholy alliance. She waits up all night for Asia to return from her date. But instead of confronting her, she gives Asia an expensive present, a formal dress, which she will wear when she next goes to the ballet -- WITH NAT. It's a sensitive and unspoken way or urging her daughter to return to the comforting folds of heterosexuality.But I do have some problems with it. They're not necessarily serious ones but they are obvious. Example: Asia gets stoned and wanders into the ladies' room. She looks into the mirror, takes out her lipstick, and draws a mustache under her nose. It's a good idea because it illustrates Asia's confusion over her gender identity. But the scene is stupidly shot by the director. He has Asia stare not at her own image but at an angle, into the camera lens, so that when the mustache is complete the underestimated viewer can grasp what's going on. That clumsy mistake lancinates much of the good will that the movie has built up. It's only partially compensated for by some other shots. One is a lengthy shot of Asia talking to Nat on the phone. The conversation ends on an ambiguous note, after which she hangs up, takes the phone out into the hall, and calls Eloise, while the camera lingers in the first room and we can only listen to Asia and Eloise, like the eavesdroppers we are. A less imaginative director would have done the expected and simply cut to Asia in the hallway. Instead, the conversation is as hidden from us as it is from society.I like the way women look. They're beautiful. Not moreso than men but in a different way. Even with less than perfect figures they suggest a voluptuous grace. Men, with their hairy angularity, suggest strength.In this case, when the musculature is stripped off, when the endoskeleton is laid bare, it's familiar territory -- tentative and unfulfilled woman finds release through the realization of her own sexuality. It's like "Emmanuelle," a search for the perfect orgasm if that orgasm had emotional overtones. "The Graduate" is a more grounded example, "Belle de Jour" more sophisticated. So it's a genre movie, but as this genre goes, it's involving enough. There is, by the way, considerable nudity but only one scene that's at all explicit.
kezzles *** This review may contain spoilers ***Look I love lesbian films, being one myself, but I am very tired of this plot. This film contains nothing original. It's not a happy 'coming out' film by any stretch of the imagination. With quotes like "It made me feel dirty" and "that's disgusting" when referring to lesbian sexuality - my enthusiasm waned a tad. The other main flaw of this film is the poor editing. Some scenes just don't fit, and are completely out of context. Especially the ending. She's dead right?The film does have some good qualities, mostly the two main leads, but its poor fodder for any type of film goer. If you want sad traumatic lesbian film - go see a classic like "The Killing of Sister George" or "The Fox".
Red-125 Eloïse's Lover, originally entitled Eloïse (2009) was directed by Jesús Garay. It is listed as a film in Spanish, but it's actually in Catalan, the language of the region that includes Barcelona.This movie is, unfortunately, a pretty stereotypic lesbian love story. A young college student is more or less engaged to a fine young man, but she's clearly not in love with him. She meets an intriguing and beautiful lesbian woman, and the rest of the film is fairly predictable. We know from the outset that the young student is in the hospital in a coma, but we don't know whether or not she will recover. That's the biggest suspense of the plot.Still, the movie has its good points. Both Diana Gómez as Àsia (the young student) and Ariadna Cabrol as Eloïse (the out lesbian) are very beautiful. It was interesting to get multiple shots of the university in Barcelona, and it's rare to find a film in Catalan in Upstate New York.In my opinion, this isn't a film that you must see, but it's worth watching if it's readily available. It will work well on DVD, if that's an option. We saw it at Rochester's Little Theatre, as part of the wonderful ImageOut:The Rochester Lesbian and Gay Film Festival.