The New Girlfriend

Your secrets, her lies.

6.1
20141h 45m

Production

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A young woman makes a surprising discovery about the husband of her late best friend.

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The New Girlfriend | Official US Trailer

The New Girlfriend | Official US Trailer

Thumbnail for video: The New Girlfriend - Trailer (2015)

The New Girlfriend - Trailer (2015)

Cast

Photo of Romain Duris

Romain Duris

David / Virginia

Photo of Aurore Clément

Aurore Clément

Liz, la mère de Laura

Photo of Jean-Claude Bolle-Reddat

Jean-Claude Bolle-Reddat

Robert, le père de Laura

Photo of Anita Gillier

Anita Gillier

Infirmière

Photo of Alex Fondja

Alex Fondja

Aide soignant

Photo of Zita Hanrot

Zita Hanrot

Serveuse restaurant

Photo of Mayline Dubois

Mayline Dubois

Laura 7 ans

Photo of David Sevier

David Sevier

Homme ascenseur

Photo of Sébastien Pouderoux

Sébastien Pouderoux

Collègue Claire

Photo of Anne-Laure Gruet

Anne-Laure Gruet

Collègue Claire

Photo of François Ozon

François Ozon

Homme cinéma

Photo of Cédrick Spinassou

Cédrick Spinassou

Curé mariage

Photo of Valérie de Monza

Valérie de Monza

Directrice école

Photo of Laëtitia Richard

Laëtitia Richard

Institutrice

Photo of Axel Bry

Axel Bry

Père Claire

Photo of Sylvie Degryse

Sylvie Degryse

Mère Claire

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

"David" (Romain Duris) is married to "Laura" (Isild Le Besco) and they are best pals with "Claire" (Anaïs Demoustier) and her husband "Gilles" (Raphaël Personnaz). All is going along nicely until a tragedy strikes poor old "David". The kindly "Claire" comes to visit him and his newborn baby "Lucie" and boy does she get a surprise! What now ensues is a little reminiscent of "Tootsie" (1982) as "Virginia" starts to emerge onto the scene and with the help of a somewhat perplexed "Claire" as his new best friend/life coach embarks on quite a journey that provides for some self-discovery all round. It does run out of steam a little towards the end when the comedy elements start to become subsumed into an increasingly contrived plot that doesn't quite seem to know how it wants to end, but an engaged Duris is clearly having some fun with the part and there's a gently effective swipe at sexual stereotypes and restrictive definitions that keeps it entertaining for the most part. Remember - left eye left hand, right eye right hand....!

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