Jean-Paul Roussillon

  • Arnaud Desplechin – Léo, en jouant “Dans la compagnie des hommes” AKA Playing ‘In the Company of Men’ (2003)

    2001-2010Arnaud DesplechinDramaFrance

    SYNOPSIS:
    A troupe of actors rehearse a play. In the play-within-the-film, an ambitious son and his distant father fight for control of an armaments firm and are pushed to eventual destruction by dangerous outside forces and traitorous aides.Read More »

  • Jean-François Stévenin – Mischka (2002)

    2001-2010ComedyDramaFranceJean-François Stévenin

    PLOT: Provincial France at the beginning of the summer break. A family is going south for their holidays, from Burgondy to the Landes (South French Atlantic coast). When Mischka, a difficult old Grandpa, is accidentally left behind at a highway rest stop by his family, he manages to take his own journey with a ragtag group of travelers. This alternative off-beat family of wandering gypsy-misfit include a rocker, Joli-cœur, a teenage runaway, Jane and a male nurse, Gégéne, who’s left his days behind. Spending a few days together, while they seem a disparate group, they all bond and become a new sort of family. A few days in which to come to terms with how to navigate between the family they’re born with and that which they choose.Read More »

  • Samantha Lang – L’Idole AKA The Idol (2002)

    2001-2010DramaFranceSamantha Lang

    In an old Parisian apartment block, Zao, an elderly refined Chinese man, crosses paths with Sarah, a troubled young Australian actress, who has just moved in across the hallway. The day she reveals her plans for a vengeful suicide, he proposes a pact: to cook for her until the fateful date. And so begins an ambiguous and subtly erotic friendship, under the ever watchful and envious eyes of the other inhabitants who do their best to disrupt this mystifying relationship.Read More »

  • Arnaud Desplechin – Un conte de Noël aka A Christmas Tale (2008)

    2001-2010Arnaud DesplechinComedyDramaFrance

    Criterion wrote:
    In Arnaud Desplechin’s beguiling A Christmas Tale (Un conte de Noël), Catherine Deneuve brings her legendary poise to the role of Junon, matriarch of the troubled Vuillard family, who come together at Christmas after she learns she needs a bone marrow transplant from a blood relative. That simple family reunion setup, however, can’t begin to describe the unpredictable, emotionally volatile experience of this film, an inventive, magical drama that’s equal parts merriment and melancholy. Unrequited childhood loves and blinding grudges, brutal outbursts and sudden slapstick, music, movies, and poetry, A Christmas Tale ties it all together in a marvelously messy package.
    Read More »

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