Love at Twenty (French: L'Amour à vingt ans, Japanese: 二十歳の恋, romanized: Hatachi no koi, Italian: L'amore a vent'anni, German: Liebe mit zwanzig, Polish: Miłość dwudziestolatków) is a 1962 French-produced omnibus project of Pierre Roustang, consisting of five segments, each with a different director from a different country.
It tells the story of a tough mistress who loses her lover to an older, wealthier and more appreciative woman.
[4] The third, "Tokyo" by Japanese film director Shintarō Ishihara, has been described as a "weird, grotesque"[3] and "clumsy"[5] tale of obsessive and morbid love.
The fourth, "Munich", is by Marcel Ophüls and was described as a "charming, but somewhat sentimental"[3] story of an unwed mother who contrives to trap her baby's father.
The fifth and final segment, "Warsaw" by Andrzej Wajda, depicts a brief intergenerational liaison based upon multiple misunderstandings.