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* ForegoneConclusion: The use of the FramingDevice with a depressed Cécile, filled with regrets, thinking back to the previous summer and believing she can never be happy again, basically guarantees that Raymond and Anne's romance will end badly (though that it will end in [[spoiler: Anne's death]] might still be something of a shock).

to:

* ForegoneConclusion: The use of the FramingDevice with a depressed Cécile, filled with regrets, thinking back to the previous summer and believing she can never be happy again, basically guarantees that Raymond and Anne's romance will end badly (though that it will end in [[spoiler: Anne's death]] might still be come as something of a shock).
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* ForegoneConclusion: The use of the FramingDevice with a depressed Cécile, filled with regrets, thinking back to the previous summer and believing she can never be happy again, basically guarantees that Raymond and Anne's romance will end badly.

to:

* ForegoneConclusion: The use of the FramingDevice with a depressed Cécile, filled with regrets, thinking back to the previous summer and believing she can never be happy again, basically guarantees that Raymond and Anne's romance will end badly.badly (though that it will end in [[spoiler: Anne's death]] might still be something of a shock).
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None


* ShippingTorpedo: Cécile doesn't super oppose the idea of her dad dating her dead mom's BestFriend Anne at first, but changes her mind upon realizing that their relatioship would finish her and Raymond's laid-back, hedonistic lifestyle. It ends in tragedy when Cècile [[ShipperOnDeck tries to re-hook up Raymond and his ex-lover Elsa]]... and Anne [[DespairEventHorizon cracks so badly]] that she goes the SpurnedIntoSuicide way.
* SpurnedIntoSuicide: Anne, broken-hearted after seeing Raymond and Elsa together--the fact that the camera does not show them implies that Raymond and Elsa might be naked, and in any case Raymond makes some nasty comments about how he only asked Anne to marry him to get into her pants--goes speeding away in her car, and goes off a cliff to her death, in what is strongly implied to be suicide. (Cécile for one is sure that it was.)

to:

* ShippingTorpedo: Cécile doesn't super oppose the idea of her dad dating her dead mom's BestFriend Anne at first, but changes her mind upon realizing that their relatioship would finish her and Raymond's laid-back, hedonistic lifestyle. It ends in tragedy when Cècile [[ShipperOnDeck tries to re-hook up Raymond and his ex-lover Elsa]]... [[spoiler: and Anne [[DespairEventHorizon cracks so badly]] that she goes the SpurnedIntoSuicide way.
way.]]
* SpurnedIntoSuicide: [[spoiler: Anne, broken-hearted after seeing Raymond and Elsa together--the fact that the camera does not show them implies that Raymond and Elsa might be naked, and in any case Raymond makes some nasty comments about how he only asked Anne to marry him to get into her pants--goes speeding away in her car, and goes off a cliff to her death, in what is strongly implied to be suicide. (Cécile for one is sure that it was.))]]
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* DeliberatelyMonochrome: While the bulk of the film showing the romantic summer on the French Riviera is in rich Technicolor, the FramingDevice set the next year is in black and white. This demonstrates how Cécile, ridden with guilt over Anne's death, is empty inside and no longer able to get any pleasure from her lifestyle of endless dancing and drinking.

to:

* DeliberatelyMonochrome: While the bulk of the film showing the romantic summer on the French Riviera is in rich Technicolor, the FramingDevice set the next year is in black and white. This demonstrates how Cécile, [[spoiler: ridden with guilt over Anne's death, death]], is empty inside and no longer able to get any pleasure from her lifestyle of endless dancing and drinking.
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None


* AmbiguousSituation: Cécile says that Anne's fatal crash was the seventh fatality on that particular cliff side hairpin turn that summer. But she's sure it was suicide, reflecting that anyone else in that situation would have left a note but that Anne chose to "let us believe" that it was an accident.

to:

* AmbiguousSituation: Cécile says that [[spoiler: Anne's fatal crash crash]] was the seventh fatality on that particular cliff side hairpin turn that summer. But she's sure it was suicide, reflecting that anyone else in that situation would have left a note but that [[spoiler: Anne chose to "let us believe" that that]] it was an accident.
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''Bonjour Tristesse'' ("Hello Sadness") is a 1958 drama film directed by Creator/OttoPreminger, [[TheFilmOfTheBook adapted]] by screenwriter Arthur Laurents from Françoise Sagan's 1954 novel of the same name.

to:

''Bonjour Tristesse'' ("Hello Sadness") is a 1958 drama film directed by Creator/OttoPreminger, [[TheFilmOfTheBook adapted]] by screenwriter Arthur Laurents from Françoise Sagan's the 1954 novel of the same name.
name by French author Françoise Sagan.



Enter Anne (Creator/DeborahKerr), a fashion designer. Raymond is the sort of cheerful cad who has no problem inviting a woman like Anne to spend time with him on the French Rivera while his previous girlfriend, Elsa (Mylène Demongeot), is still staying in the house. Anne, who has obvious feelings for Raymond, is taken aback to discover Elsa the hot blonde on the premises, but gamely rallies. Soon enough, as the attachment between Raymond and Anne deepens, an offended Elsa takes her leave. Not long after that, Anne and Raymond tell Cécile that they're getting engaged.

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Enter Anne (Creator/DeborahKerr), a fashion designer. Raymond is the sort of cheerful cad who has no problem inviting a woman like Anne to spend time with him on the French Rivera while his previous girlfriend, Elsa (Mylène Demongeot), (Creator/MyleneDemongeot), is still staying in the house. Anne, who has obvious feelings for Raymond, is taken aback to discover Elsa the hot blonde on the premises, but gamely rallies. Soon enough, as the attachment between Raymond and Anne deepens, an offended Elsa takes her leave. Not long after that, Anne and Raymond tell Cécile that they're getting engaged.
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* GoodStepmother: All Anne wants to do is get Cécile to quit drinking and partying so much, and actually take her studies seriously instead of relying on being a GoldDigger if her father's money ever runs out. For this, Cecile destroys her.

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* GoodStepmother: All Anne wants to do is get Cécile to quit drinking and partying so much, and actually take her studies seriously instead of relying on being a GoldDigger if her father's money ever runs out. For this, Cecile Cécile destroys her.
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/4037e2c3_7192_47e2_89b9_7f4b35b030b8.jpeg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:SingleTear!]]

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[[caption-width-right:350:SingleTear!]]
[[caption-width-right:345:SingleTear!]]



Cécile (Creator/JeanSeberg) is a jaded member of the European jet set, who lives an endless life of parties and dances and drinking with her father, Raymond (Creator/DavidNiven). Raymond regards his 17-year-old daughter with obvious affection but he treats her with an indulgence bordering on ParentalNeglect. In fact Cécile seems to be less of a daughter to him than a sort of companion in his life of drinking and debauchery, and Raymond really does not care if Cécile runs wild and drinks herself stupid, or if she flunks her college entrance exams.

to:

Cécile (Creator/JeanSeberg) is a jaded member of the European jet set, who lives an endless life of parties and dances and drinking with her father, Raymond (Creator/DavidNiven). Raymond regards his 17-year-old daughter with obvious affection but he treats her with an indulgence bordering on ParentalNeglect. In fact Cécile seems to be less of a daughter to him than a sort of companion in his own life of drinking and debauchery, and Raymond really debauchery; he does not care if Cécile she runs wild and wild, drinks herself stupid, or if she flunks her college entrance exams.

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Changed: 122

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Cécile (Creator/JeanSeberg) is a jaded member of the European jet set, who lives an endless life of parties and dances and drinking with her father, Raymond (Creator/DavidNiven). Raymond regards his 17-year-old daughter with obvious affection but he treats her with indulgence bordering on ParentalNeglect. In fact Cécile seems to be less of a daughter to him than a sort of companion in his life of drinking and debauchery, and Raymond really does not care if Cécile runs wild and drinks herself stupid, or if she flunks her college entrance exams.

to:

Cécile (Creator/JeanSeberg) is a jaded member of the European jet set, who lives an endless life of parties and dances and drinking with her father, Raymond (Creator/DavidNiven). Raymond regards his 17-year-old daughter with obvious affection but he treats her with an indulgence bordering on ParentalNeglect. In fact Cécile seems to be less of a daughter to him than a sort of companion in his life of drinking and debauchery, and Raymond really does not care if Cécile runs wild and drinks herself stupid, or if she flunks her college entrance exams.



* AmbiguousSituation: Cecile says that Anne's fatal crash was the seventh fatality on that particular cliff side hairpin turn that summer. But she's sure it was suicide, reflecting that anyone else in that situation would have left a note but that Anne chose to "let us believe" that it was an accident.

to:

* AmbiguousSituation: Cecile Cécile says that Anne's fatal crash was the seventh fatality on that particular cliff side hairpin turn that summer. But she's sure it was suicide, reflecting that anyone else in that situation would have left a note but that Anne chose to "let us believe" that it was an accident.



* CallingParentsByTheirName: In this case, Cecile calling her father either "Raymond" or occasionally "darling" shows how he doesn't act like her father and she doesn't seem to regard him as her father, and how they have a subtly creepy IncestSubtext relationship.

to:

* CallingParentsByTheirName: In this case, Cecile Cécile calling her father either "Raymond" or occasionally "darling" shows how he doesn't act like her father and she doesn't seem to regard him as her father, and how they have a subtly creepy IncestSubtext relationship.



* DeliberatelyMonochrome: While the bulk of the film showing the romantic summer on the French Riviera is in rich Technicolor, the FramingDevice set the next year is in black and white. This demonstrates how Cecile, ridden with guilt over Anne's death, is empty inside and no longer able to get any pleasure from her lifestyle of endless dancing and drinking.
* DramaticDrop: Anne drops a vase when she finds out, from Cecile, that Raymond's girlfriend Elsa is still in residence in the house even as Raymond has invited Anne to come stay with him. Soon she rallies and adapts a more carefree attitude (and eventually succeeds in forcing Elsa out).
* TheFilmOfTheBook: Adaptation of a French novel. Follows the plot of the novel quite closely, except for changing the name of Cecile's hapless boyfriend from Cyril to Phillipe.
* ForegoneConclusion: The use of the FramingDevice with a depressed Cecile, filled with regrets, thinking back to the previous summer and believing she can never be happy again, basically guarantees that Raymond and Anne's romance will end badly.
* FramingDevice: A framing device in black-and-white, in which Cecile, out for a night on the town with her father and all their friends, can't stop thinking of the summer before when Anne came to visit Raymond at their summer house on the Riviera.
* GoodStepmother: All Anne wanted to do is get Cecile to quit drinking and partying so much, and actually take her studies seriously instead of relying on being a GoldDigger if her father's money ever runs out. For this, Cecile destroys her.

to:

* DeliberatelyMonochrome: While the bulk of the film showing the romantic summer on the French Riviera is in rich Technicolor, the FramingDevice set the next year is in black and white. This demonstrates how Cecile, Cécile, ridden with guilt over Anne's death, is empty inside and no longer able to get any pleasure from her lifestyle of endless dancing and drinking.
* DramaticDrop: Anne drops a vase when she finds out, from Cecile, Cécile, that Raymond's girlfriend Elsa is still in residence in the house even as Raymond has invited Anne to come stay with him. Soon she rallies and adapts a more carefree attitude (and eventually succeeds in forcing Elsa out).
* TheFilmOfTheBook: Adaptation of a French novel. Follows the plot of the novel quite closely, except for changing the name of Cecile's Cécile's hapless boyfriend from Cyril to Phillipe.
* ForegoneConclusion: The use of the FramingDevice with a depressed Cecile, Cécile, filled with regrets, thinking back to the previous summer and believing she can never be happy again, basically guarantees that Raymond and Anne's romance will end badly.
* FramingDevice: A framing device in black-and-white, in which Cecile, Cécile, out for a night on the town with her father and all their friends, can't stop thinking of the summer before when Anne came to visit Raymond at their summer house on the Riviera.
* GoodStepmother: All Anne wanted wants to do is get Cecile Cécile to quit drinking and partying so much, and actually take her studies seriously instead of relying on being a GoldDigger if her father's money ever runs out. For this, Cecile destroys her.



* IncestSubtext: Cecile and Raymond's relationship is more spousal than father-and-daughter, and subtly creepy. In their first scene together, as they're getting ready to go out to the club, Raymond sees Cecile in her dress and says "[[ZipMeUp Any zipping or buttoning to do?]]", and Cecile answers "No thanks, darling, it's all done." When she's not calling her father "darling" she's calling him "Raymond", never "Father" or "Dad". When confronted with the prospect of Anne actually staying with them forever as Raymond's wife, Cecile acts exactly like a jilted spouse, saying to herself "It isn't her fault" (Anne's fault) "that he doesn't love you anymore." See also this exchange when Elsa is mystified by Cecile and Raymond's conversation, when Cecile and Raymond are talking about how upset Anne is.

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* IncestSubtext: Cecile Cécile and Raymond's relationship is more spousal than father-and-daughter, and subtly creepy. In their first scene together, as they're getting ready to go out to the club, Raymond sees Cecile in her dress and says "[[ZipMeUp Any zipping or buttoning to do?]]", and Cecile answers "No thanks, darling, it's all done." When she's not calling her father "darling" she's calling him "Raymond", never "Father" or "Dad". When confronted with the prospect of Anne actually staying with them forever as Raymond's wife, Cecile Cécile acts exactly like a jilted spouse, saying to herself "It isn't her fault" (Anne's fault) "that he doesn't love you anymore." See also this exchange exchange, when Elsa is mystified by Cecile Cécile and Raymond's conversation, when Cecile and Raymond are conversation as they're talking about how upset Anne is.



'''Cecile''': Very.\\

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'''Cecile''': '''Cécile''': Very.\\



* InnerMonologue: Heard from Cecile throughout the film, both in the FramingDevice where she describes her life as "a hopeless waste of time" and explains her regrets, and in the story set the previous summer where rebellious teen Cecile is plotting how to break her dad and his new girlfriend up.
* LetUsNeverSpeakOfThisAgain: In her InnerMonologue in the closing scene Cecile says that she and her father have never discussed the previous summer since it happened. She further explains that this year Raymond says they'll summer in Italy rather than the French Rivera, "for a change", without saying ''why'' he wants a change.

to:

* InnerMonologue: Heard from Cecile Cécile throughout the film, both in the FramingDevice where she describes her life as "a hopeless waste of time" and explains her regrets, and in the story set the previous summer where rebellious teen Cecile Cécile is plotting how to break her dad and his new girlfriend up.
* LetUsNeverSpeakOfThisAgain: In her InnerMonologue in the closing scene Cecile Cécile says that she and her father have never discussed the previous summer since it happened. She further explains that this year Raymond says they'll summer in Italy rather than the French Rivera, "for a change", without saying ''why'' he wants a change.



** Cecile's answer when Jacques asks if he can see her again is less snark, and more an illustration of a deeply depressed Cecile no longer able to fake politeness.

to:

** Cecile's Cécile's answer when Jacques asks if he can see her again is less snark, and more an illustration of a deeply depressed Cecile Cécile no longer able to fake politeness.



'''Cecile''': Yes.\\

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'''Cecile''': '''Cécile''': Yes.\\



'''Cecile''': I don't know.

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'''Cecile''': '''Cécile''': I don't know.



'''Cecile''': On which side?\\

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'''Cecile''': '''Cécile''': On which side?\\



* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: At the last moment, when Cecile sees how horrified and broken-hearted Anne is to see Raymond and Elsa together, Cecile realizes she's gone too far. She tries to beg Anne's forgiveness but it's too late.
* OperationJealousy: Seeking to break Anne and Raymond up, Anne enlists Raymond's sexy ex-girlfriend Elsa in a secret operation. Cecile will arrange for Raymond to see Elsa and Cecile's boyfriend Philippe together repeatedly, canoodling, in the hopes that this will make Raymond jealous and lead him to pursue Elsa, thus breaking up his engagement to Anne. It works--too well.
* RevealingHug: Cecile gets up to dance with Jacques, but, as they dance together, she's staring off emptily. Her InnerMonologue reflects how she's built "a wall" around herself and can't feel pleasure from her old leisure activities anymore.
* RunningGag: Albertine, Léontine, and Claudine, the three sisters with the rhyming names who keep replacing each other as the maid at Raymond's place, when one or the other is busy or calls in sick. Raymond and Cecile can't tell them apart, and in one scene Cecile is astonished when she actually guesses correctly which sister it is. (All three characters were played by the same actress.)
* ShippingTorpedo: Cecile doesn't super oppose the idea of her dad dating her dead mom's BestFriend Anne at first, but changes her mind upon realizing that their relatioship would finish her and Raymond's laid-back, hedonistic lifestyle. It ends in tragedy when Cècile [[ShipperOnDeck tries to re-hook up Raymond and his ex-lover Elsa]]... and Anne [[DespairEventHorizon cracks so badly]] that she goes the SpurnedIntoSuicide way.
* SpurnedIntoSuicide: Anne, broken-hearted after seeing Raymond and Elsa together--the fact that the camera does not show them implies that Raymond and Elsa might be naked, and in any case Raymond makes some nasty comments about how he only asked Anne to marry him to get into her pants--goes speeding away in her car, and goes off a cliff to her death, in what is strongly implied to be suicide. (Cecile for one is sure that it was.)
* TitleDrop: From TheChanteuse who is singing at the nightclub where Raymond and Cecile go in the opening sequence.

to:

* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: At the last moment, when Cecile Cécile sees how horrified and broken-hearted Anne is to see Raymond and Elsa together, Cecile she realizes she's gone too far. She tries to beg Anne's forgiveness forgiveness, but it's too late.
* OperationJealousy: Seeking to break Anne and Raymond up, Anne enlists Raymond's sexy ex-girlfriend Elsa in a secret operation. Cecile Cécile will arrange for Raymond to see Elsa and Cecile's Cécile's boyfriend Philippe together repeatedly, canoodling, in the hopes that this will make Raymond jealous and lead him to pursue Elsa, thus breaking up his engagement to Anne. It works--too well.
* RevealingHug: Cecile Cécile gets up to dance with Jacques, but, as they dance together, she's staring off emptily. Her InnerMonologue reflects how she's built "a wall" around herself and can't feel pleasure from her old leisure activities anymore.
* RunningGag: Albertine, Léontine, and Claudine, the three sisters with the rhyming names who keep replacing each other as the maid at Raymond's place, when one or the other is busy or calls in sick. Raymond and Cecile Cécile can't tell them apart, and in one scene Cecile Cécile is astonished when she actually guesses correctly which sister it is. (All three characters were played by the same actress.)
* ShippingTorpedo: Cecile Cécile doesn't super oppose the idea of her dad dating her dead mom's BestFriend Anne at first, but changes her mind upon realizing that their relatioship would finish her and Raymond's laid-back, hedonistic lifestyle. It ends in tragedy when Cècile [[ShipperOnDeck tries to re-hook up Raymond and his ex-lover Elsa]]... and Anne [[DespairEventHorizon cracks so badly]] that she goes the SpurnedIntoSuicide way.
* SpurnedIntoSuicide: Anne, broken-hearted after seeing Raymond and Elsa together--the fact that the camera does not show them implies that Raymond and Elsa might be naked, and in any case Raymond makes some nasty comments about how he only asked Anne to marry him to get into her pants--goes speeding away in her car, and goes off a cliff to her death, in what is strongly implied to be suicide. (Cecile (Cécile for one is sure that it was.)
* TitleDrop: From TheChanteuse who is singing at the nightclub where Raymond and Cecile Cécile go in the opening sequence.



* ToplessnessFromTheBack: With {{Sideboob}} to boot, in the last scene when Cecile is changing out of her dress. This was a pretty daring shot for 1958 and was typical of Otto Preminger who continually pushed boundaries and was possibly the single filmmaker most responsible for the downfall of UsefulNotes/TheHaysCode.
* YoureNotMyFather: When Anne tries to act like a mom, sending Philippe away after catching him and Cecile horizontal on the floor and telling Cecile she has to start studying, Cecile says "My father tells me what to do, not you!". The point of course is that Raymond does ''not'' tell Cecile what to do and in fact lets her run wild.

to:

* ToplessnessFromTheBack: With {{Sideboob}} to boot, in the last scene when Cecile Cécile is changing out of her dress. This was a pretty daring shot for 1958 and was typical of Otto Preminger who continually pushed boundaries and was possibly the single filmmaker most responsible for the downfall of UsefulNotes/TheHaysCode.
* YoureNotMyFather: When Anne tries to act like a mom, sending Philippe away after catching him and Cecile Cécile horizontal on the floor and telling Cecile Cécile she has to start studying, Cecile says Cécile angrily tells her "My father tells me what to do, not you!". The point point, of course course, is that Raymond does ''not'' tell Cecile Cécile what to do and in fact lets her run wild.wild.

----
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Cécile (Creator/JeanSeberg) is a member of the European jet set, who lives an endless life of parties and dances and drinking with her father, Raymond (Creator/DavidNiven). Raymond regards his 17-year-old daughter with obvious affection but he treats her with indulgence bordering on ParentalNeglect. In fact Cécile seems to be less of a daughter to him than a sort of companion in his life of drinking and debauchery, and Raymond really does not care if Cécile runs wild and drinks herself stupid, or if she flunks her college entrance exams.

to:

Cécile (Creator/JeanSeberg) is a jaded member of the European jet set, who lives an endless life of parties and dances and drinking with her father, Raymond (Creator/DavidNiven). Raymond regards his 17-year-old daughter with obvious affection but he treats her with indulgence bordering on ParentalNeglect. In fact Cécile seems to be less of a daughter to him than a sort of companion in his life of drinking and debauchery, and Raymond really does not care if Cécile runs wild and drinks herself stupid, or if she flunks her college entrance exams.
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''Bonjour Tristesse'' ("Hello Sadness") is a 1958 film directed by Creator/OttoPreminger.

Cecile (Creator/JeanSeberg) is a member of the European jet set, who lives an endless life of parties and dances and drinking with her father, Raymond (Creator/DavidNiven). Raymond regards his 17-year-old daughter with obvious affection but he treats her with indulgence bordering on ParentalNeglect. In fact Cecile seems to be less of a daughter to him than a sort of companion in his life of drinking and debauchery, and Raymond really does not care if Cecile runs wild and drinks herself stupid, or if she flunks her college entrance exams.

Enter Anne (Creator/DeborahKerr), a fashion designer. Raymond is the sort of cheerful cad who has no problem inviting a woman like Anne to spend time on the French Rivera with him while Raymond's previous girlfriend, Elsa, is still staying in the house. Anne, who has obvious feelings for Raymond, is taken aback to discover Elsa the hot blonde on the premises, but gamely rallies. Soon enough, as the attachment between Raymond and Anne deepens, an offended Elsa takes her leave. Not long after that, Anne and Raymond tell Cecile that they're getting engaged.

Cecile quite likes the life of hedonism and pleasure-seeking that she enjoys with her father, and is not too thrilled when Anne becomes a permanent presence, especially when Anne suggests that Cecile should actually study and go to school instead of flunking out and letting her boyfriend knock her up. She devises a plan to break up Raymond and Anne's relationship. She does not anticipate the consequences of her action.

to:

''Bonjour Tristesse'' ("Hello Sadness") is a 1958 drama film directed by Creator/OttoPreminger.

Cecile
Creator/OttoPreminger, [[TheFilmOfTheBook adapted]] by screenwriter Arthur Laurents from Françoise Sagan's 1954 novel of the same name.

Cécile
(Creator/JeanSeberg) is a member of the European jet set, who lives an endless life of parties and dances and drinking with her father, Raymond (Creator/DavidNiven). Raymond regards his 17-year-old daughter with obvious affection but he treats her with indulgence bordering on ParentalNeglect. In fact Cecile Cécile seems to be less of a daughter to him than a sort of companion in his life of drinking and debauchery, and Raymond really does not care if Cecile Cécile runs wild and drinks herself stupid, or if she flunks her college entrance exams.

Enter Anne (Creator/DeborahKerr), a fashion designer. Raymond is the sort of cheerful cad who has no problem inviting a woman like Anne to spend time with him on the French Rivera with him while Raymond's his previous girlfriend, Elsa, Elsa (Mylène Demongeot), is still staying in the house. Anne, who has obvious feelings for Raymond, is taken aback to discover Elsa the hot blonde on the premises, but gamely rallies. Soon enough, as the attachment between Raymond and Anne deepens, an offended Elsa takes her leave. Not long after that, Anne and Raymond tell Cecile Cécile that they're getting engaged.

Cecile Cécile quite likes the life of hedonism and pleasure-seeking that she enjoys with her father, and is not too thrilled when Anne becomes a permanent presence, especially when Anne suggests that Cecile Cécile should actually study and go to school instead of flunking out and letting her boyfriend knock her up. She Cécile devises a plan to break up Raymond and Anne's relationship. She does relationship, not anticipate anticipating the disastrous consequences of her action.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* ShippingTorpedo: Cecile doesn't super oppose the idea of her dad dating her dead mom's best friend Anne]] at first, but changes her mind upon realizing that their relatioship would finish her and Raymond's laid-back, hedonistic lifestyle. It ends in tragedy when Cècile [[ShipperOnDeck tries to re-hook up Raymond and his ex-lover Elsa]]... and Anne [[DespairEventHorizon cracks so badly]] that she goes the SpurnedIntoSuicide way.

to:

* ShippingTorpedo: Cecile doesn't super oppose the idea of her dad dating her dead mom's best friend Anne]] BestFriend Anne at first, but changes her mind upon realizing that their relatioship would finish her and Raymond's laid-back, hedonistic lifestyle. It ends in tragedy when Cècile [[ShipperOnDeck tries to re-hook up Raymond and his ex-lover Elsa]]... and Anne [[DespairEventHorizon cracks so badly]] that she goes the SpurnedIntoSuicide way.
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Added DiffLines:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/4037e2c3_7192_47e2_89b9_7f4b35b030b8.jpeg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:SingleTear!]]
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Added DiffLines:

* TheFilmOfTheBook: Adaptation of a French novel. Follows the plot of the novel quite closely, except for changing the name of Cecile's hapless boyfriend from Cyril to Phillipe.


Added DiffLines:

* GoodStepmother: All Anne wanted to do is get Cecile to quit drinking and partying so much, and actually take her studies seriously instead of relying on being a GoldDigger if her father's money ever runs out. For this, Cecile destroys her.


Added DiffLines:

* ShippingTorpedo: Cecile doesn't super oppose the idea of her dad dating her dead mom's best friend Anne]] at first, but changes her mind upon realizing that their relatioship would finish her and Raymond's laid-back, hedonistic lifestyle. It ends in tragedy when Cècile [[ShipperOnDeck tries to re-hook up Raymond and his ex-lover Elsa]]... and Anne [[DespairEventHorizon cracks so badly]] that she goes the SpurnedIntoSuicide way.
* SpurnedIntoSuicide: Anne, broken-hearted after seeing Raymond and Elsa together--the fact that the camera does not show them implies that Raymond and Elsa might be naked, and in any case Raymond makes some nasty comments about how he only asked Anne to marry him to get into her pants--goes speeding away in her car, and goes off a cliff to her death, in what is strongly implied to be suicide. (Cecile for one is sure that it was.)

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* CallingParentsByTheirName: In this case, Cecile calling her father either "Raymond" or occasionally "darling" shows how he doesn't act like her father and she doesn't seem to regard him as her father, and how they have a subtly creepy IncestSubtext relationship.



* DramaticDrop: Anne drops a vase when she finds out, from Cecile, that Raymond's girlfriend Elsa is still in residence in the house even as Raymond has invited Anne to come stay with him. Soon she rallies and adapts a more carefree attitude (and eventually succeeds in forcing Elsa out).
* ForegoneConclusion: The use of the FramingDevice with a depressed Cecile, filled with regrets, thinking back to the previous summer and believing she can never be happy again, basically guarantees that Raymond and Anne's romance will end badly.
* FramingDevice: A framing device in black-and-white, in which Cecile, out for a night on the town with her father and all their friends, can't stop thinking of the summer before when Anne came to visit Raymond at their summer house on the Riviera.
* TheHedonist: Raymond, who wants to spend his life drinking and dancing and going from one hot young babe to the next, and isn't interested in anything else interrupting that life, whether it be an emotional commitment or actually taking responsibility for his teenaged daughter. The main issue in the second half is whether or not he's really serious about ending his gallivanting around and starting a real relationship with Anne. She's honest enough to tell him this directly.
-->'''Anne''': That's what you want, isn't it? A playmate? Someone to have fun with?....Raymond I cannot be casual.



* MathematiciansAnswer: Cecile's answer when Jacques asks if he can see her again is less snark, and more an illustration of a deeply depressed Cecile no longer able to fake politeness.

to:

* MathematiciansAnswer: MathematiciansAnswer:
**
Cecile's answer when Jacques asks if he can see her again is less snark, and more an illustration of a deeply depressed Cecile no longer able to fake politeness.



** Raymond might be TheHedonist, and at heart a shallow and insensitive person, but he does have a quick wit.
-->'''Raymond''': Rene is Helen's nephew, and chauffeur.\\
'''Cecile''': On which side?\\
'''Raymond''': On the left side, it's an American car.
* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: At the last moment, when Cecile sees how horrified and broken-hearted Anne is to see Raymond and Elsa together, Cecile realizes she's gone too far. She tries to beg Anne's forgiveness but it's too late.
* OperationJealousy: Seeking to break Anne and Raymond up, Anne enlists Raymond's sexy ex-girlfriend Elsa in a secret operation. Cecile will arrange for Raymond to see Elsa and Cecile's boyfriend Philippe together repeatedly, canoodling, in the hopes that this will make Raymond jealous and lead him to pursue Elsa, thus breaking up his engagement to Anne. It works--too well.



* RunningGag: Albertine, Léontine, and Claudine, the three sisters with the rhyming names who keep replacing each other as the maid at Raymond's place, when one or the other is busy or calls in sick. Raymond and Cecile can't tell them apart, and in one scene Cecile is astonished when she actually guesses correctly which sister it is. (All three characters were played by the same actress.)



-->I wake up every morning and I say, "Bonjour tristesse."

to:

-->I wake up every morning and I say, "Bonjour tristesse.""
* ToplessnessFromTheBack: With {{Sideboob}} to boot, in the last scene when Cecile is changing out of her dress. This was a pretty daring shot for 1958 and was typical of Otto Preminger who continually pushed boundaries and was possibly the single filmmaker most responsible for the downfall of UsefulNotes/TheHaysCode.
* YoureNotMyFather: When Anne tries to act like a mom, sending Philippe away after catching him and Cecile horizontal on the floor and telling Cecile she has to start studying, Cecile says "My father tells me what to do, not you!". The point of course is that Raymond does ''not'' tell Cecile what to do and in fact lets her run wild.

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Changed: 523

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* DeliberatelyMonochrome: While the bulk of the film showing the romantic summer on the French Riviera is in rich Technicolor, the FramingDevice set the next year is in black and white. This demonstrates how Cecile, ridden with guilt over Anne's death, is empty inside and no longer able to get any pleasure from her lifestyle of endless dancing and drinking.

to:

* AmbiguousSituation: Cecile says that Anne's fatal crash was the seventh fatality on that particular cliff side hairpin turn that summer. But she's sure it was suicide, reflecting that anyone else in that situation would have left a note but that Anne chose to "let us believe" that it was an accident.
* AnimatedCreditsOpening: The credits play over an abstract animation--swirling circles, lines, and stars--that at the end resolve themselves into a drawing of a woman's face shedding a SingleTear.
* CastFullOfRichPeople: Rich folks in tuxedoes and fancy dresses swilling wine and dancing on the French Riviera.
* DeliberatelyMonochrome: While the bulk of the film showing the romantic summer on the French Riviera is in rich Technicolor, the FramingDevice set the next year is in black and white. This demonstrates how Cecile, ridden with guilt over Anne's death, is empty inside and no longer able to get any pleasure from her lifestyle of endless dancing and drinking.drinking.
* IncestSubtext: Cecile and Raymond's relationship is more spousal than father-and-daughter, and subtly creepy. In their first scene together, as they're getting ready to go out to the club, Raymond sees Cecile in her dress and says "[[ZipMeUp Any zipping or buttoning to do?]]", and Cecile answers "No thanks, darling, it's all done." When she's not calling her father "darling" she's calling him "Raymond", never "Father" or "Dad". When confronted with the prospect of Anne actually staying with them forever as Raymond's wife, Cecile acts exactly like a jilted spouse, saying to herself "It isn't her fault" (Anne's fault) "that he doesn't love you anymore." See also this exchange when Elsa is mystified by Cecile and Raymond's conversation, when Cecile and Raymond are talking about how upset Anne is.
-->'''Raymond''': Is she...?\\
'''Cecile''': Very.\\
'''Elsa''': You two don't even need words! The perfect marriage.
* InnerMonologue: Heard from Cecile throughout the film, both in the FramingDevice where she describes her life as "a hopeless waste of time" and explains her regrets, and in the story set the previous summer where rebellious teen Cecile is plotting how to break her dad and his new girlfriend up.
* LetUsNeverSpeakOfThisAgain: In her InnerMonologue in the closing scene Cecile says that she and her father have never discussed the previous summer since it happened. She further explains that this year Raymond says they'll summer in Italy rather than the French Rivera, "for a change", without saying ''why'' he wants a change.
* MathematiciansAnswer: Cecile's answer when Jacques asks if he can see her again is less snark, and more an illustration of a deeply depressed Cecile no longer able to fake politeness.
-->'''Jacques''': Will I see you later?\\
'''Cecile''': Yes.\\
'''Jacques''': Where?\\
'''Cecile''': I don't know.
* RevealingHug: Cecile gets up to dance with Jacques, but, as they dance together, she's staring off emptily. Her InnerMonologue reflects how she's built "a wall" around herself and can't feel pleasure from her old leisure activities anymore.
* TitleDrop: From TheChanteuse who is singing at the nightclub where Raymond and Cecile go in the opening sequence.
-->I wake up every morning and I say, "Bonjour tristesse."
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Much more to come

Added DiffLines:

''Bonjour Tristesse'' ("Hello Sadness") is a 1958 film directed by Creator/OttoPreminger.

Cecile (Creator/JeanSeberg) is a member of the European jet set, who lives an endless life of parties and dances and drinking with her father, Raymond (Creator/DavidNiven). Raymond regards his 17-year-old daughter with obvious affection but he treats her with indulgence bordering on ParentalNeglect. In fact Cecile seems to be less of a daughter to him than a sort of companion in his life of drinking and debauchery, and Raymond really does not care if Cecile runs wild and drinks herself stupid, or if she flunks her college entrance exams.

Enter Anne (Creator/DeborahKerr), a fashion designer. Raymond is the sort of cheerful cad who has no problem inviting a woman like Anne to spend time on the French Rivera with him while Raymond's previous girlfriend, Elsa, is still staying in the house. Anne, who has obvious feelings for Raymond, is taken aback to discover Elsa the hot blonde on the premises, but gamely rallies. Soon enough, as the attachment between Raymond and Anne deepens, an offended Elsa takes her leave. Not long after that, Anne and Raymond tell Cecile that they're getting engaged.

Cecile quite likes the life of hedonism and pleasure-seeking that she enjoys with her father, and is not too thrilled when Anne becomes a permanent presence, especially when Anne suggests that Cecile should actually study and go to school instead of flunking out and letting her boyfriend knock her up. She devises a plan to break up Raymond and Anne's relationship. She does not anticipate the consequences of her action.

----
!!Tropes:

* DeliberatelyMonochrome: While the bulk of the film showing the romantic summer on the French Riviera is in rich Technicolor, the FramingDevice set the next year is in black and white. This demonstrates how Cecile, ridden with guilt over Anne's death, is empty inside and no longer able to get any pleasure from her lifestyle of endless dancing and drinking.

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