Fat Girl

Introduced by Linda Williams(à Ma Soeur!). In Romance and 36 Fillette Catherine Breillat staked her claim as French cinema's foremost chronicler of female sexuality; with Fat Girl she achieved long-due international recognition and, as always, a flurry of bannings and tsk-tsk'ings from those unable to reconcile young girls and sexuality. Two sisters are on summer vacation near the sea; beautiful Elena is fifteen and looking for love among an assortment of willing dopes, while the dowdy Anaïs (the "fat girl" of the title, discovered in a Paris McDonalds) is also looking for love, but settles for dessert-filled spoons to practice her kissing technique. Their summertime idyll of sibling rivalry and mutual insults takes a turn with the arrival of the obligatory Italian collegian, complete with fast car and a Romeo's empty promises. Breillat painstakingly details the awkwardness of a teen's sexual awakening in all its fear, loathing, and panic - then overpoweringly releases those emotions. - Jason Sanders

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