Benjamin Biolay

  • Sophie Letourneur – Gaby Baby Doll (2014)

    2011-2020ComedyFranceRomanceSophie Letourneur

    As the awkward, insecure bubbly Gaby, Lolita Chammah suggests a Gallic Greta Gerwig in one of her not-quite-formed-adult roles. Upon arriving in the country, she’s promptly discarded by her boyfriend, and as solitude is not an option, the companionship-starved Gaby seeks out a replacement. She finds it in Nicolas (Benjamin Biolay), a seemingly hirsute vagabond whose shack she invites herself to share. Director Sophie Letourneur’s follow-up to 2012’s Les coquillettes is a tentative pastoral romance filled with endearing neuroses and an organically unpredictable plot, charming and moving in its investigation of why it is that some simply cannot bear to be alone.Read More »

  • Stéphanie Di Giusto – Rosalie (2023)

    2021-2030DramaFranceStéphanie Di Giusto

    Rosalie has a secret—her face and body are covered in hair. She’s concealed her hirsutism all her life, shaving to be accepted in polite society. But her perspective changes when Abel, an indebted bar owner unaware of her secret, marries her for her dowry. Will Abel be able to love the real her?Read More »

  • Bruno Dumont – France (2021)

    Bruno Dumont2021-2030ArthouseFrance

    Lawrence Garcia, Cinemascope wrote:
    In the seven years since P’tit Quinquin, it has become impossible to continue tagging Bruno Dumont with the longstanding clichés of Bresson criticism. Epithets like “ascetic,” “severe,” “punishing”—already limited descriptors of his first two works, La vie de Jésus (1997) and L’humanité (1999)—have only become more obviously incapable of describing Dumont’s recent films, from the carnivalesque contortions of Ma Loute (2016) to the musical extremes of his Jeanne d’Arc movies. Still, as Dumont’s methods (particularly his increasingly frequent use of professionals alongside non-actors) have ostensibly moved away from those of Bresson, the deeper affinities between the two filmmakers have only become clearer. Read More »

  • Emmanuel Finkiel – La douleur AKA Memoir of war (2017)

    Drama2011-2020Emmanuel FinkielFrance

    Quote:
    June 1944, France is still under the German occupation. The writer and communist Robert Antelme, major figure of the Resistance, is arrested and deported. His young wife Marguerite Duras, writer and resistant, is torn by the anguish of not having news of her and her secret affair with her comrade Dyonis. She meets a French agent working at the Gestapo, Pierre Rabier, and, ready to do anything to find her husband, puts himself to the test of an ambiguous relationship with this troubled man, only to be able to help him. The end of the war and the return of the camps announce to Marguerite Duras the beginning of an unbearable wait, a slow and silent agony in the midst of the chaos of the Liberation of Paris.Read More »

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