Twenty-year-old Lolita (Marilou Berry) wants to be a classical singer, to be slim and, most of all, she wants to win the approval of her father, Etienne (Jean-Pierre Bacri). A successful writer, Etienne has been fรชted and fawned over for most of his adult life, to the extent that he no longer needs to be pleasant to those around him. His daughter is a disappointment to him because sheโ€™s dumpy, neurotic and so desperately needs his affection. Lolita canโ€™t accept that any friendship she forms doesnโ€™t have its roots in her fatherโ€™s celebrity. Into this maelstrom of repressed tensions come Lolitaโ€™s singing teacher (Agnรจs Jaoui, who directed and co-wrote with Bacri), her writer husband and Sรฉbastien, who falls for Lolita, only to discover that she can be as difficult as her father. Jaoui (The Taste Of Others) is not only a fine actress but clearly a very able ringmaster for this circus of monstrous egos and corrupted self-image. French cinema at its most sophisticated and rewarding.