Top-rated
Sat, Aug 7, 2010
Twelve-year-old Virginie, Xavier, Aurelie, Thys, Melanie, Jordann and Rachel approach adolescence full of dreams but also with anxiety. They feel that they are changing and that it is time to assert themselves, especially as regards their parents. This is the time of the first family conflicts and the search for independence. They deliver their secrets with great sincerity, describe their problems and let us inside their world, showing us how difficult it is to leave the innocence of childhood behind and to discover the turmoil of adolescence. Laughter, tears, anger, doubts and revolt characterize the first episode.
Top-rated
Sat, Aug 7, 2010
Melanie, Xavier, Virginie, Jordan, Rachel, Ttys and Aurelie are fourteen years old. The boys' voices break, the girls see their bodies change. Flirts, evenings out and drunkenness preoccupy them, while their parents desperately try to maintain (if not influence or authority) a modicum of communication with them. But the youngsters' need to assert themselves and to shape their identity disrupts their daily lives. Everything or almost becomes a source of conflict, phone bills, homecoming hours and clothes. The rift between the teenagers and their parents gradually widens.
Top-rated
Fri, Sep 16, 2011
At almost sixteen, the seven teenagers from western Switzerland are confronted with happy moments but mostly with the difficulties of adolescence. The first flirts, sexual experiences and jobs shake them up both mentally and physically. They now want to mature among their peers only, far away from their parents, who, in their mind, do not understand a thing about their lives. Rachel, Ttys, Virginie, Jordan, Aurelie, Xavier and Melanie evolve at great speed and, for some of them, in a totally unexpected way compared with the image they painted of themselves at twelve.
Top-rated
Sat, Aug 7, 2010
The seven teens from western Switzerland, who have been followed since their preadolescence, are now almost eighteen years old and faced with their coming of age! The freedom that goes with it and that they had so eagerly anticipated shortly before, appears to worry several of them. The responsibilities of adults, the army, and aspects of political life both scare and attract them. The choices and decisions take on full meaning and reality, and although they are still mischievous, they sound more serious. It is stock-taking time. With their newly acquired, still fragile maturity they look back on the long years spent on sharing their views in this exceptional series.