Review of Blue Jean | A disturbing mirror effect





Synopsis
While a bill is being debated that would ban the “promotion” of homosexuality at school, a lesbian teacher is forced to live a double life that undermines her and affects those around her.




“Are your children being taught traditional moral values? Let’s get out the politics of education. The slogan, posted on a building in Blue Jean by Georgia Oakley, serves to frame the debate that raged in England towards the end of Margaret Thatcher’s reign.

The film is set in 1988, as evidenced by the soundtrack, which includes a New Order hit. His statement, however, echoes the fight currently being waged by the American right against what it considers harmful to children and the traditional family and which is embodied, among other things, by the adoption in 2022 in Florida of a law prohibiting the information about sexual orientation and gender identity to children, from kindergarten to third grade.

The slogan also sums up the reason why Jean (Rosy McEwen) lives under constant stress: a physical education teacher in a secondary school, she is forced to hide her homosexuality for fear of losing her job. A risk that becomes more and more plausible when a conflict involving one of his students threatens to reveal his secret.

There is nothing spectacular in the film written and directed by Georgia Oakley, which is the first feature film. No one here is playing heroes. Especially not Jean, stuck between his lover and his workplace, between his deep identity and the fear of seeing his life destroyed by the prevailing homophobia and the cruelty that results from it. This restraint is one of the great qualities of this film carried by Rosy McEwen’s nuanced, restrained and moving performance.

Blue Jean has won a number of awards on the festival circuit, especially from the public. With good reason: it’s a fair, controlled and touching film which, without supporting anything, holds up a disturbing mirror to our time. A reminder that some gains are never guaranteed.

Now showing in the original English version at the Cinéma Moderne

Blue Jean

Drama

Blue Jean

Georgia Oakley

With Rosy McEwen, Kerrie Ayes, Lucy Halliday

1:37 a.m.
Indoors

8/10


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