Film review: Reel 2 Real festival's Belle and Sebastian: The New Generation is a beautifully shot, Alps-set boy-and-his-dog story
Closing-night French film is unaffected and unpatronizing in its themes around nature, animal treatment, and disappearing farm traditions

Reel 2 Real Film Festival for Youth screens Belle and Sebastian: The Next Generation on April 6 at 6 pm
CANADIAN AUDIENCES may associate the name Belle and Sebastian more with a Scottish indie-pop band than a French TV series in the '60s, and its ensuing movie franchise. What they need to know is that the latest installment of the big-screen series about this beloved boy-and-his-dog story set in the French Alps is a beautifully shot, heartwarming film that will engage both children and adults—minus any of the sentimentality of Hollywood kids’ movies. That despite the fact Belle and Sebastian: The Next Generation—Reel 2 Real Film Festival for Youth’s closing-night film—features an adorable, gigantic white Great Pyrenees that will win over even the non-dog people out there.
For a sense of how effortlessly cool the French are, even in their family flicks, witness the scene when 10-year-old Parisian Seb (an unaffected Robinson Mensah Rouanet) steps into his granny and aunt’s remote Alp sheepherding cabin for the first time. Tacked to the stone wall is a gigantic poster of Iggy Pop, prompting the youth to ask “Who’s that?” Cue a géant eye roll from grandma Corrine (a wonderfully no-nonense Michèle Laroque) and then her answer: “The God of Rock.”
Grand-mère also happens to ride a motorcycle, birth lambs, and run an entire farm in much the same way it’s existed for generations. A lot of the beauty of the film comes from the allusions to a disappearing way of life—and landscape. Corinne is preparing to sell her land to neighbours who are working with ski resort developers. (It’s important to note that kids are never spoken down to when it comes to these themes—ditto for topics around animal abuse and loss, all handled sensitively here.)
But when Seb is sent to stay with her, neither Corinne nor her grandson are eager about the arrangement. Seb has gotten into trouble at a Paris skate park, and needs a place to hang out while his mother travels to Prague for work. The boy is warmly welcomed by his freespirited mountainclimbing aunt Noémie (Alice David), but Corinne takes a while to bond with him—slowly opening up with her own issues. Together they take one last journey on the transhumance, a long, summer walking route up into the mountains where the flock can graze.
At the centre of it all is the dog Belle, a supposedly unruly mutt owned by Noé’s boyfriend Gas. But when Seb bonds with the dog, helping it escape Gas’s mistreatment, he realizes it’s a gifted sheep herder and protector against wolves—not to mention a loyal friend for a lonely kid. It’s all emotionally resonant and surprisingly engrossing (especially for a film that, from the outset, sounds like a mix between Lassie and that 1970s Alp-dog TV show George).
Celebrating a city kid’s opening to the majesty of nature, director Pierre Coré creates a gorgeous backdrop of towering Alp peaks, emerald-mossed forests, and shimmering cave lakes.
Admittedly the late-act action sequences, complete with a parasailing sequence, diverge a little into Hollywood territory. But granny on her Avinton Roadster in a chic scarf and cargo jacket, her grandkid holding on tightly behind her, both sans helmets? Welcome to Europe.
Janet Smith is founding partner and editorial director of Stir. She is an award-winning arts journalist who has spent more than two decades immersed in Vancouver’s dance, screen, design, theatre, music, opera, and gallery scenes. She sits on the Vancouver Film Critics’ Circle.
Related Articles
Her National Geographic Live event From Roots to Canopy lands in the Lower Mainland care of Vancouver Civic Theatres
Director Tod Browning’s 1927 film starring Lon Chaney is characterized by sadomasochistic obsession, deception, murder, and disfigurement
The Cinematheque program proves that digital filmmaking has a future beyond artificial intelligence
Attending VIFF, NFB chair Suzanne Guèvremont has a new strategic plan that strives to reach out to the next generation
Tree canopy ecologist Nalini Nadkarni leads audiences up into the clouds to see the fascinating world of Costa Rican branches with From Roots to Canopy
Quick takes on Dracula, Idiotka, Akashi, and Ma—Cry of Silence, plus documentaries about one family’s scattered heritage and the true cost of global capitalism
The Painted Life of E.J. Hughes reveals quiet life of a master who avoided spotlight; The Art of Adventure tracks a young Robert Bateman’s journey with Bristol Foster across the world in a Land Rover
Centenary screening features live music by seven-piece orchestra and 80-person choir, with Michael Dirk on Wurlitzer organ
Film veteran steps into the role as Shirley Vercruysse begins her retirement after an 11-year term
Kent Donguines’s new documentary journeys to Buscalan, where ancient Kalinga hand-tapped tattooing is thriving again
High-school hell meets a literal demon in the North Vancouver writer-director’s partly autobiographical feature
The artist also known as Neil Fraser will revisit his work with Massive Attack in a VIFF Live show at the Chan Centre
Visions Ouest screens a lighthearted Cannes entry that looks at family, connection, and fine art, bouncing between 1895 and 2025
Five boundary-pushing events mix audio and visual components at the festival, which takes place from October 2 to 12
Through intensely personal perspectives and sharp detail, audacious new features and short films throw light on culture-spanning issues
French videographer and activist Vincent Verzat reconnects with biodiversity in Visions Ouest presentation
Documentary at the Vancouver Queer Film Festival highlights peer-led groups working to overcome a long history of stigma and isolation by creating connection to the broader queer community
With sharp visions of life in Mexico, Venezuela, and early-’70s Quebec, the event continues to reveal a deeply interconnected world where history is ever-present
Strong performances in the story of a French bookstore owner who forms bonds with a father and child make Visions Ouest’s final summer installment a must-see
Through its mix of Indigenous artists, musicians, and technicians, the Vancouver Latin American Film Festival feature puts the common good at the centre
Ido Fluk’s ode to Keith Jarrett concert Köln 75 closes the fest, while VIFF Live brings in Mad Professor, claire rousay, and more
The Polygon Gallery’s annual outdoor film series takes place on Cates Deck