“Spring Blossom” – Blooming [MOVIE REVIEW]
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Suzanne Lindon as Suzanne in “Spring Blossom.” Photo courtesy of KimStim Films.
A surprising new talent has suddenly appeared. Like Venus emerging from the sea, Suzanne Lindon, age 20, has jumped to the front of the line with her first film, “Spring Blossom” which she wrote, directed, and starred in. It’s not that the film is flawless or will enter the canon of storytelling but this very young woman has taken the “coming of age” trope and found a new, and interesting angle.
Suzanne is bored; bored with school, friends, and her surroundings. Then one day as she passes a theater on the way to school a young man catches her eye. She starts looking for him whenever she passes by. She notes details about him his dress, his motor bike, what he eats in the café. Her head is turned and she sets out to capture him. She is 16 and he, an actor at the theater she passes, is more than twice her age. It is a slow dance and
Spring Blossom Provides a Female Perspective on a French Trope
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Spring Blossom, review: a French age-gap romance that s less problematic than placid
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