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  1. With its full-throttle mixture of emotionality and clear-eyed skepticism, L’enfance nue (Naked Childhood) was advance notice of one of the most masterful careers in French cinema, and remains one of Pialat’s finest works.

  2. Naked Childhood (French: L'enfance nue) is a 1968 French film. It was the feature-length debut of director Maurice Pialat, and was written by Pialat and Arlette Langmann. François Truffaut was one of the film's producers.

  3. Naked Childhood, which had its world premiere at 1968’s New York Film Festival, falls squarely in this category; Truffaut himself was a producer. But there’s no getting around the sense of ...

  4. A ten-year-old boy feels unwanted when his mother places him in a home for wayward children. He goes to a foster home where a family of workers finds him to be too much for them. When the unruly child discovers the family plans to give up on him, he kills their daughter's cat in retaliation.

  5. Maurice Pialat's debut feature, Naked Childhood, is a quiet, unassuming film about adolescent turmoil and isolation. It observes the displacement and abandonment of François (Michel Terrazon), a child within the French foster care system.

  6. François, a ten-year-old boy, has been handed over to foster care by his motherwhos unwilling to give up permanent custody. His destructive behaviour precipitates his relocation from the home of a long-term foster family to the care of a benevolent elderly couple.

  7. L’enfance nue (translated into English, “Naked Childhood”) consists of a series of sharply observed and well-chosen moments in the troubled life of Francois Fournier, a ten-year old ward of the French foster care system.