Deborah Kerr,
David Niven,
Jean Seberg,
Mylène Demongeot,
Geoffrey Horne
... see more
Francoise Sagan's bittersweet novel Bonjour Tristesse is given a sumptuous Riviera-filmed screen treatment. David Niven plays a wealthy playboy, the father of teenaged libertine-in-the-making Jean Seb... read more
DVD Release Date: December 16, 2003
Stats: 70 reviews
Your Rating
Flixster Reviews (70)
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January 11, 2008
[font=Century Gothic]In "Bonjour Tristesse," Cecile(Jean Seberg) is the 17-year old daughter of Raymond(David Niven), a wealthy businessman. They are also the best of friends who are having fun on their summer holiday in the south of France. She has met a young man, Philippe(Ge... read more
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September 30, 2007
Honest truth time: I know the name Otto Preminger, and it was the inspiration behind my purchase of this title, but I couldn't tell you, for the life of me, why I know it, other than in his role here as director. What did he direct before? No idea. So, that might be something to ... read more
Critic Reviews
Script deficiencies and awkward reading -- some lines are spoken as though just that -- have static results. Full Review
Niven and Kerr keenly satirize their onscreen iconographies-the cad and the goody-goody, respectively-but it's Seberg who cuts deepest. Full Review
Misunderstood at the time and still underappreciated, this 1958 glossy melodrama improves on Sagan's French novella, displaying Preminger's best qualities as auteur, moral ambiguity, detached, nonjudg... Full Review
Has a glacial tone that gets covered with a lobster red French Riviera sunburn. Full Review
Kerr, of course, is a standout talent in spite of script deficiencies, and Demongeot plays the role of a silly blonde well. The Riviera scenes are rich in eye appeal and Kerr's chic costuming by Given... Full Review
The flirtation with incest at the centre of this adaptation of Françoise Sagan's novel is tame by modern standards, but the evil scheming of Seberg as the daughter set on separating her father and his... Full Review
While some may be put off by Preminger's glossy presentation of the idle rich, his direction in Bonjour Tristesse engages the mind while it stimulates the senses. Full Review
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