Jessica Forever

2018 French film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jessica Forever is a 2018 French fantasy sci-fi drama film written and directed by Caroline Poggi and Jonathan Vinel. The film premiered as the closing film of the Platform Prize section of the 2018 Toronto International Film Festival.[1][2] It also showed in the Panorama section of the 69th Berlin International Film Festival in 2019.[3]

Written byCaroline Poggi
Jonathan Vinel
Produced byEmmanuel Chaumet
Starring
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
Jessica Forever
Film poster
Directed byCaroline Poggi
Jonathan Vinel
Written byCaroline Poggi
Jonathan Vinel
Produced byEmmanuel Chaumet
Starring
Narrated bySarah-Megan Allouch
CinematographyMarine Atlan
Edited byVincent Tricon
Music byUlysse Klotz
Release date
  • September 16, 2018 (2018-09-16) (TIFF)
Running time
97 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench
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Plot

As a leader of a group of lost boys, Jessica, a loving and compassionate person, needs to lead them to a place where peace and harmony exists. Her goal is to create a world where Julien, Kevin, Lucas, Michael and Raiden, can live in peace together, and forever.

Cast

  • Aomi Muyock as Jessica
  • Sebastian Urzendowsky as Michael
  • Augustin Raguenet as Lucas
  • Lukas Ionesco as Julien
  • Eddy Suiveng as Kevin
  • Paul Hamy as Raiden
  • Maya Coline as Camille
  • Angelina Woreth as Andréa
  • Théo Costa-Marini as Trésor
  • Franck Falise as Sasha
  • Florian Kiniffo as Magic
  • Jordan Klioua as Dimitri
  • Ymanol Perset as Léopard
  • Jean-Marie Pittilloni as Maxime
  • Iliana Zabeth as ice cream seller
  • Ilyess Meftahi as party boy 1
  • Corentin Bachelair as party boy 2
  • Bastien Austruy as party boy 3
  • Christian Desole as boatmaster
  • Abel Mandico as voice of magic water

Reception

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes the film has a score of 54% based on reviews from 13 critics, with an average rating of 5/10.[4]

Pat Mullen of POV praised the lead actress, writing "Jessica Forever features a heroic woman of the Lara Croft variety leading a group of lost boys through a world in which orphans are hunted, but the film proves too sparse and thinly conceived for its ambiguously open premise to be remotely intriguing or effective".[5]

Jonathan Romney of Film Comment wrote that "Jessica Forever isn't primarily about effects or action - it's largely about feelings, and surprisingly delicate feelings at that".[6]

According to Rafael Motamayor of Bloody Disgusting, "[the film] starts up with a promising premise that it abandons after 5 minutes in favor of following the most boring group of characters in recent memory".[7]

Lena Wilson of The Playlist gave the film a "D" rating, explaining her reasoning by writing that "Jessica Forever has a few delightfully experimental moments – birthday cake letters and self-immolation make for some stunning visuals – but it quickly dovetails into nonsense".[8] She also added that "[t]here are movies, like I Think We're Alone Now and Annihilation" that according to her "use sci-fi strangeness to enhance their dramatic potential and further captivate the audience".[8]

References

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