The Dreamers Apr 2026

The ending is bittersweet and ambiguous. While Théo and Isabelle embrace the chaos of the barricades, choosing a different kind of radical fantasy (Maoism and street warfare), Matthew chooses to walk away. He recognizes that the romanticism of the revolution is just another movie, one he is no longer willing to star in. Conclusion

The 2003 film The Dreamers , directed by Bernardo Bertolucci and based on Gilbert Adair’s novel The Holy Innocents , serves as a lush, provocative exploration of the intersection between cinema, politics, and the volatile transition from adolescence to adulthood. Set against the backdrop of the May 1968 student riots in Paris, the film follows Matthew, an American exchange student, who becomes entangled in the insular, eroticized world of twins Isabelle and Théo. The Sanctuary of the Cinémathèque The Dreamers

When the twins' parents leave for the summer, their grand Parisian apartment becomes an "island"—a hermetically sealed laboratory for social and sexual experimentation. Within these walls, the trio creates their own morality, often fueled by "forfeits" or dares based on film trivia. The ending is bittersweet and ambiguous

This isolation allows for a regression into "holy innocence," a state where social taboos—most notably the blurred boundaries of incest between Théo and Isabelle—are ignored. However, this innocence is also a form of narcissism. By retreating into their private utopia, they ignore the burgeoning revolution outside their windows. Matthew, as the outsider, acts as the voice of reason, often challenging the twins' pretenses and their detached, radical posturing. The Intrusion of Reality Conclusion The 2003 film The Dreamers , directed