While Cazeneuve's story is about gay love, it also charts universal truths about adolescent romance and high school politics with great aplomb.
We hate to say it, but we can't find anywhere to view this film.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Screenwriter Vincent Molina and director Fabrice Cazaneuve are wonderfully calm about the tumult of teen life.
The New York Times by Dave Kehr
Well-meaning and hopelessly bland, You'll Get Over It, instantly drops into the tone of didactic realism that rules most television fiction, drawing easy moral lessons from a scrubbed-up simulacrum of everyday, middle-class life.
Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
The story's celebration of honesty is commendable, even if the treatment of homophobia is no deeper than the hero's swimming pool.
Non-formulaic character interactions, a uniformly strong cast and deft handling by vet TV helmer Fabrice Cazaneuve render a refreshing take on youthful coming-out.
Too breezily, Youll Get Over It gets over it--the dewy, abrupt optimism of its ending seems wholly unearned.
Screenwriter Vincent Molina takes into account changing attitudes towards homosexuality and the resulting film never feels like the kind of thing we've seen time and again in the '80s and '90s.
Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas
There's a naturalness to the entire cast, yet there is considerable depth to the portrayals, and the interplay between the characters is exceptionally rich and nuanced.
Though its milieu is often ugly and its story fairly soft, You'll Get Over It gets by thanks to its cast. The French film industry has a knack for finding attractive, expressive young actors, and this movie is no exception.
What's Vincent to do? Will he come out of the closet? Will he lead the swim team to victory at the big match? Will he find happiness with Noemie? Does anybody care?