“The French Fracture”
During a night of chaos in the hospital, Catherine Corsini evokes both the health crisis and the yellow vests, and even manages to make us laugh.
During a night of chaos in the hospital, Catherine Corsini evokes both the health crisis and the yellow vests, and even manages to make us laugh.
Presented at the Deauville Festival and produced by actress Geena Davis, Tom Donahue’s documentary is devoted to parity in cinema.
Special Prize of the Deauville Festival, the film by Carlo Mirabella-Davis is as disturbing as it is aesthetic.
Not so sure! English is becoming more and more popular via our screens. Molière bows to Shakespeare.
“It’s both a film about belief, the relationship to faith, and the link between faith and money,” says Alaa Eddine Aljem, the Moroccan director of this endearing fable.
“It’s a subject that has never been tackled,” says Clovis Cornillac, who plays a veterinarian in this charming country fable by Julie Manoukian.
It was obviously before the fire that ravaged the cathedral that Valérie Donzelli turned this hectic life of Maud Crayon into one. “I wanted to find something happy again, to reconnect with comedy,” says the actress and director.
In this film with Sara Giraudeau and Nicolas Duvauchelle, Pascal Bonitzer tries an approach towards fantasy cinema.
In this superb film, Terrence Malick evokes the fate of Franz Jägerstätter, an Austrian peasant who said no to Nazism.
During the Feast of St. Nicholas, a friendly country is invited to come and share its culture. This year, it is Luxembourg, which in June 2019 included its own Saint-Nicolas celebrations in its Intangible Cultural Heritage.
“It’s a thriller of everyday life,” says director Lucie Borleteau, who adapted Leïla Slimani’s book, with Karin Viard as a nanny of “a disturbing strangeness.
“It’s a thriller of everyday life,” says director Lucie Borleteau, who adapted Leïla Slimani’s book, … Read more