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Chris Knipp
01-27-2016, 06:49 PM
Rendez-Vous with French Cinema 2016
March 3-13

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Diane Kruger in Disorder/Maryland (Alice Wincour)

Festival Coverage thread here (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016)

THE FILM SOCIETY OF LINCOLN CENTER AND UNIFRANCE ANNOUNCE LINEUP FOR 21ST RENDEZ-VOUS WITH FRENCH CINEMA, MARCH 3-13 (http://www.filmlinc.org/daily/lineup-announced-for-21st-rendez-vous-with-french-cinema/)
Opens with New York Premiere of Guillaume Nicloux’s Valley of Love, starring Isabelle Huppert and Gérard Depardieu, and closes with Jacques Audiard’s Cannes Palme d’Or–winning Dheepan.

In person appearances include Huppert, Nicloux, Nabil Ayouch, Emmanuelle Bercot, Julie Delpy, Emmanuel Finkiel, Louis Garrel, Gregoire Hetzel, Eva Husson, Maïwenn, Nicolas Pariser, Melvil Poupaud, Rudi Rosenberg, Alice Winocour, and more

New York, NY (January 27, 2016) [FSLC press release] – The Film Society of Lincoln Center and UniFrance announce the 21st edition of Rendez-Vous with French Cinema, the celebrated annual showcase of the best in contemporary French film, March 3-13 at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. The lineup—which consists of 21 feature films making their New York, U.S., or North American premieres—demonstrates that the landscape of French cinema is as fertile as ever, and the voices calling from it never more distinct.

"We are extremely pleased to continue our 21-year partnership with UniFrance to bring a brilliant selection of French films to New York," said Film Society of Lincoln Center Associate Director of Programming Florence Almozini. “This year’s lineup exemplifies the diverse creativity coming out of the country year-round, including a record eight films directed by women.”

"Reflective of the turbulence in France in the last year, these artists have expressed their emotions, doubts and fears in their films," said Executive Director of UniFrance Isabelle Giordano. "This is why I am so proud to bring to New York audiences the best of French cinema. The rising and established talents behind the 21 selected films combine high artistic ambition with a strong political commitment. Voices of directors like Alice Winocour, Nabil Ayouch, Emmanuelle Bercot, Philippe Faucon are worth being listened to as they say a lot about the chaos of our world today."

The Opening Night selection is Guillaume Nicloux’s Valley of Love, featuring tour-de-force performances by Isabelle Huppert and Gérard Depardieu as a long-divorced couple who reconnect six months after their son’s suicide, with Nicloux and Huppert in person. Closing the festival is Jacques Audiard’s Cannes Palme d’Or–winning Dheepan, a harrowing, genre-bending portrait of three refugees who flee Sri Lanka only to end up in the equally violent housing projects outside Paris.

The series features the latest from established favorites Julie Delpy (Lolo), Philippe Faucon (Fatima), Rabah Ameur-Zaïmeche (Story of Judas), and Catherine Corsini (Summertime), as well as four remarkable debuts: the U.S. premiere of distinguished French actor Louis Garrel’s Two Friends, a tragicomic exploration of a love triangle; Nicolas Pariser’s The Great Game, in which a young novelist ghostwrites a manifesto with risky consequences; Rudi Rosenberg’s vivacious coming-of-age tale The New Kid; and Eva Husson’s Bang Gang (A Modern Love Story), an unapologetically explicit anthology of the sexual experiments of a group of teenagers over the course of a summer.

Additional highlights include many gems from Cannes and beyond, including Alice Winocour’s domestic thriller Disorder, starring Matthias Schoenaerts and Diane Kruger; Nabil Ayouch’s Much Loved, a portrait of sex workers in Marrakech so unflinching it was controversially banned in Morocco; Emmanuelle Bercot’s study of a teenage delinquent, Standing Tall, with Catherine Deneuve as the youth’s compassionate juvenile court judge; 21 Nights with Pattie, the latest oddball comedy from Jean-Marie and Arnaud Larrieu, about a prim woman who travels to a small village in the Pyrénées to bury her estranged mother, but gets mixed up in a surreal police investigation; and the innovatively modernized Chekhov adaptation Three Sisters by Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, co-written by Noemie Lvovsky and Caroline Deruas.

Films in this year’s edition of Rendez-Vous with French Cinema garnered 34 nominations total for this year’s César Awards, which were announced this week. Nominated selections include Dheepan (nine nominations, including Best Film and Director), Standing Tall (eight nominations), Maïwenn’s My King (eight nominations), Fatima (four nominations), Much Loved (Best Actress), Summertime (Best Actress and Supporting Actress), and opening night selection Valley of Love (Best Actor and Actress).

Filmmakers and talent who will be in attendance at this year’s festival include, in alphabetical order: Nabil Ayouch, Emmanuelle Bercot, Julie Delpy, Emmanuel Finkiel, Louis Garrel, Gregoire Hetzel, Isabelle Huppert, Eva Husson, Maïwenn, Guillaume Nicloux, Nicolas Pariser, Melvil Poupaud, Rudi Rosenberg, Alice Winocour, and more to be confirmed at a later date.

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Summertime/La Belle saison (Catherine Corsini)

Lineup (FSLC blurbs)

Opening Night
*Valley of Love
Guillaume Nicloux, France/Belgium, 2015, DCP, 92m
English and French with English subtitles
Guillaume Nicloux’s sui generis, elegiac road movie puts a meta twist on a familiar setup: titans Gérard Depardieu and Isabelle Huppert star as famous French actors Gérard and Isabelle, a long-divorced couple whose son Michael has committed suicide six months prior to their Californian rendezvous in Death Valley, occasioned by an enigmatic letter from Michael that seems to have been written some time after his death. The letter asks them to visit a series of sites in the area; at the end of this tour, Michael claims he will appear before them. What follows is an utterly singular trip of a film, by turns melancholic and funny, self-reflexive and surreal. In their first film together since Maurice Pialat’s Loulou in 1980, Depardieu and Huppert astound with their enthralling portrayal of grieving parents who, to an ambiguous degree, appear to be versions of themselves, making for a tour de force as moving as it is complex. A Strand Releasing release. [AlloCiné 3.4/33]

Closing Night
*Dheepan
Jacques Audiard, France, 2015, DCP, 109m
French with English subtitles
Jacques Audiard (A Prophet, Rust and Bone) won the Palme d’Or at Cannes for this daring, genre-bending portrait of three Sri Lankan refugees—Dheepan (Antonythasan Jesuthasan), Yalini (Kalieaswari Srinivasan), and Illayaal (Claudine Vinasithamby)—who form a fake family unit to emigrate. When they find themselves living together in a violent, gang-dominated housing project outside Paris, they start to reevaluate the terms of their intimacy. Like his character, the actor and novelist Jesuthasan was a member of the militant nationalist army LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) before fleeing the country and settling into a series of odd jobs in Paris, while eventually renouncing all ties to the Tigers. When, in its bloody last act, his character has to fall back on his military training, Dheepan becomes something darker: a harrowing reckoning with the past. A Sundance Selects release. [AlloCiné 3.7/32]

21 Nights with Pattie / 21 nuits avec Pattie
Jean-Marie & Arnaud Larrieu, France, 2015, DCP, 115m
French with English subtitles
The Larrieu brothers make oddball, tonally mixed comedies unlike anything else in French cinema today. In their latest, a slightly prim woman Caroline (Isabelle Carré) arrives in a small village in the Pyrénées to bury her estranged mother. There, she befriends Pattie (Karin Viard), who offers tales of her sexual adventures with the local men, including a priapic half-man, half-beast creature (Denis Lavant). Caroline’s ongoing debate between pride and pleasure is just one link in a chain of increasingly wild events: the mysterious disappearance of her mother’s body, the ensuing surreal police investigation, and some shocking revelations about her mother’s former lover, who may or not be the writer J.M.G. Le Clézio—played to perfection by André Dussollier. U.S. Premiere [AlloCiné 4.2/21]

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The Apaches / Des Apaches
Nassim Amaouche, France, 2015, DCP, 97m
French with English subtitles
Les Inrocks accounted for the six years it took Nassim Amaouche to release his second feature by calling him "a director with a temperament as patient, roving and reflective as his films." He stars as Samir, a young French-Algerian man lured by a dubious "family" lawyer (André Dussollier) into making an occult business deal within a similarly marginalized setting: one of Paris’s largest and most diverse Kabyle communities. Having been drawn into the family bar business by his estranged father, Samir still agonizes over the memory of his late mother, while falling in love with a beautiful and mysterious single mom (Laetitia Casta). The Apaches is a delicate movie that doubles as a tense negotiation drama and a quiet, reflective memory play. U.S. Premiere [AlloCiné 3.2/14]

Bang Gang (A Modern Love Story) /Bang Gang Une histoird d'amour moderne
Eva Husson, France, 2016, DCP, 98m
French with English subtitles
Eva Husson’s debut feature, shot and set in the wealthy coastal suburbs of Biarritz, is an unapologetically blissed-out, frankly explicit anthology of the sexual experiments a cluster of teenagers undertake over the course of one summer. Determined to keep the attentions of her favorite boy Alex (Finnegan Oldfield), George (Marilyn Lima) encourages her group of horny friends and acquaintances to start hosting elaborate, sunlight-drenched, EDM-filled swingers parties. Husson doesn’t ignore the students who abstain, but she’s utterly entranced by the excesses, risks, and temptations of George’s universe—a pulsating, slow-motion bacchanal pitched somewhere between the world of Spring Breakers and that of Larry Clark. A Samuel Goldwyn Films release. U.S. Premiere
[AlloCiné 3.0/19]

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Dark Inclusion / Diamant noir
Arthur Harari, France/Belgium, 2016, DCP, 115m
French with English subtitles
"You want them to pay? You have to be lucid, cool, precise. You go there, you see, and you take—that’s payback." Arthur Harari’s first feature is a poised, stylish, and utterly assured revenge thriller in which violence erupts suddenly amid tense, hushed stretches of talk. Pier Ulmann (Niels Schneider) comes from a family of powerful diamond dealers based in Anvers. After his estranged father’s death, he vows vengeance against his relatives who had abandoned him and returns to the business with an elaborate robbery in mind. Featuring menacing tracking shots; a cool, metallic color palette; surprising third-act reversals; and a terrific ensemble cast, Dark Inclusion is a movie precisely attuned to the logistical and moral complexities that accompany lives of luxurious crime. U.S. Premiere [15 June French release]

A Decent Man / Je ne suis pas un salaud
Emmanuel Finkiel, France, 2015, DCP, 111m
French with English subtitles
"I am not a bastard"” The literal French translation of the title of Emmanuel Finkiel’s taut, intelligent morality play captures its tone perhaps better than its American name. In the film’s first act, Eddy (Nicolas Duvauchelle) is in a position of strength. Having just been injured in a mugging, he’s earned the sympathy and attention of his estranged family and gotten back on his feet. The same cannot be said for Ahmed (Driss Ramdi), whose life starts falling apart after he’s wrongly accused of the crime. When the case against Ahmed starts to unravel, Eddy has to go back on the defensive… U.S. Premiere [24 Feb. 2016 French release]

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Disorder / Maryland
Alice Winocour, France/Belgium, 2015, DCP, 101m
French with English subtitles
Alice Winocour’s follow-up to Augustine (Rendez-Vous 2013)—her study of the 19th-century neurologist Jean-Marie Charcot’s fraught relationship with one of his hysteria patients—is another finely tuned drama of unstable intimacy and mental imbalance. Having just returned from Afghanistan, Vincent (Matthias Schoenaerts) suffers from night terrors, pummeling headaches, and bouts of paranoia. To distract himself, he gets a job working security at the extravagant chateau of a Lebanese financier, whose beautiful wife (Diane Kruger) he’s soon hired to protect after the husband goes away on business. Disorder evolves from an exercise in nervous, slow-burn suspense into a tense domestic thriller. A Sundance Selects release. [AlloCiné 3.0/28]

Fatima
Philippe Faucon, France, 2015, DCP, 79m
French and Arabic with English subtitles
Middle-aged single mother Fatima (Soria Zeroual) lives with her two teenage daughters and works cleaning jobs to pay their way through school. Inspired by a true story and the poetry of the North African writer Fatima Elayoubi, who immigrated knowing very little French and slowly taught herself the language, Faucon’s eighth feature—winner of the prestigious Louis Delluc Prize for Best French Film—is a patient, reflective study of a woman pressured by her children and her neighbors alike to assimilate into a culture of which she’s wary. Despite the display of everyday racism, both veiled and overt; internal domestic disputes; and external gestures of inhospitality, Fatima offers an uplifting experience and one of recent French cinema’s most trenchant and moving portraits of immigrant experience. [AlloCiné 4.4/24]

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The Great Game / Le Grand jeu
Nicolas Pariser, France, 2015, DCP, 100m
French with English subtitles
Pierre (Melvil Poupaud), a onetime darling novelist disgusted with the publishing world, lets a duplicitous government insider (André Dussollier) tempt him into ghostwriting a manifesto designed to transform the landscape of French public opinion—a shift with risky consequences for the activist (Clémence Poésy) with whom he soon becomes involved. Nicolas Pariser’s debut feature is an elegant political thriller that makes much use of its stellar cast, particularly with the brittle, uneasy rapport between Poupaud—the soulful young man at the center of Eric Rohmer’s A Summer’s Tale and Xavier Dolan’s Laurence Anyways—and Dussollier, a resourceful and protean actor who commits to his character’s malevolence with relish. U.S. Premiere [AlloCiné 3.7/26]

*Lolo
Julie Delpy, France, 2015, DCP, 99m
French with English subtitles
Writer, director, actor, composer: Julie Delpy is one of current French cinema’s great renaissance talents. In her new movie, a four-string black comedy that develops on the thinking at work in her recent 2 Days in New York, a world-weary fashionista (Delpy) finds her happy new relationship with a divorced, slightly unpolished computer programmer (Dany Boon) threatened by the machinations of her wheeling, malevolent son (Vincent Lacoste). Delpy is a filmmaker with a wise, prickly comic sensibility, and her movies often slide—like screwball comedies—from cerebral verbal banter to outright farce. Lolo is no exception, although it’s also her darkest, riskiest, and most startling movie to date. A FilmRise release. U.S. Premiere [AlloCiné 3.3/24]

Much Loved
Nabil Ayouch, France/Morocco, 2015, DCP, 104m
Arabic and French with English subtitles
"What do you know about men?" a voice asks over the opening credits of Nabil Ayouch’s provocative portrait of several female sex workers in Marrakech. "Men are like makes [of cars]: high-end, medium, and sons of bitches. All that matters is the cash." Noha (Loubna Abidar), Randa (Asmaa Lazrak), and Soukaina (Halima Karaouane) are professional, thick-skinned, and practical about their line of work, which ferries them up and down the city’s class ladder and renders them vulnerable to a catalog of possible abuses. Controversially banned in Morocco for its "contempt for moral values," Much Loved offers such a candid and unblinking picture of a subculture that it’s a perilous job to represent on screen. [AlloCiné 4.1/25]

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*My King / Mon roi
Maïwenn, France, 2015, DCP, 128m
French with English subtitles
Tony (Emmanuelle Bercot, in a performance that won her the Best Actress Award at Cannes) and Georgio (Vincent Cassel) are an odd match—or so Tony’s brother Solal (Louis Garrel) thinks when she tells him that they’re falling quickly, recklessly in love. Actor-director Maïwenn’s fourth feature captures the couple’s tempestuous 10-year relationship in retrospect as a string of flash points, eruptions, betrayals, tender reconciliations, and life-altering decisions. At the center of My King’s wide, expansive frames are Bercot and Cassel for nearly every second of its runtime, and the movie stakes itself on their harrowingly committed, nerve-fraying performances. Maïwenn’s formidable new film is one of French cinema’s most memorable recent amour fous. U.S. Premiere [AlloCine 3.2/32]

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The New Kid / Le Nouveau
Rudi Rosenberg, France, 2015, DCP, 81m
French with English subtitles
In this delectable and vivacious debut feature, shy 14-year-old Benoît (Réphaël Ghrenassia) moves to Paris and a new high school, where he’s rejected by his cooler classmates and reluctantly sidelined into a precarious friendship with the "freaks and geeks." The New Kid is a rare case among coming-of-age movies: a portrait of allegiances made and broken among middle-schoolers that calls special attention to the uglier, less picturesque aspects of passing through puberty. The movie’s rhythm never stalls and its tone stays charmingly light partly thanks to its wonderful cast—a skilled and magnetic group of first-time young actors. U.S. Premiere [AlloCiné 3.8/20]

Parisienne / Peur de rien
Danielle Arbid, France, 2015, DCP, 120m
French with English subtitles
The French title of Danielle Arbid’s fourth feature, a luminous study of a young Lebanese woman restlessly accommodating herself to her new home in Paris during the mid-’90s, translates to "fear of nothing." Lina might sometimes be afraid, but—as played by the great young actress Manal Issa—she’s also intrepid, adventurous, confident, independent, and breathtakingly self-possessed. Parisienne follows her as she flees the abusive uncle in whose care she’s been placed, flits from bed to bed, passes in and out of university classes, makes friends on both extreme sides of the political spectrum, takes a handful of lovers, and, in the movie’s climax, fights a legal battle to stay in the city that’s become hers. [10 Feb. 2016 French release]

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Standing Tall / La Tête haute
Emmanuelle Bercot, France, 2015, DCP, 119m
French with English subtitles
Emmanuelle Bercot’s fourth feature, which opened last year’s Cannes, is a candid, sympathetic, impassioned study of a teenage delinquent surrounded by adults both callous and supportive. On the latter side is a warm-hearted juvenile court judge (Catherine Deneuve) and a devoted social worker (Benoît Magimel); on the other side stand, it can seem, most other authority figures. Sixteen-year-old Malony (Rod Paradot) is clearly a victim of his circumstances and poor parenting from his basket case of a mother (Sara Forestier), but he’s also a bully, a brute, and a sexually violent offender. Part of the strength of Standing Tall is that it refuses to entirely absolve its central character; instead, it counts on Paradot, a powerful new actor, to render him as a convincingly troubled, tempestuous soul. A Cohen Media release. [AlloCiné 3.9/21]

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Story of Judas / Histoire de Judas
Rabah Ameur-Zaïmeche, France, 2015, DCP, 99m
French with English subtitles
French-Algerian director-actor Rabah Ameur-Zaïmeche boldly renders the final days of Jesus of Nazareth from the perspective of Judas Iscariot in this utterly novel reenvisioning of the key biblical tale. Ameur-Zaïmeche himself stars as Judas, Jesus’s closest disciple, as the two men find themselves swept up in political tumult amid tensions between the Jews and the Romans over the escalating popularity of the man who claims to be the Son of God. Story of Judas is both strikingly stylized (with shimmering, physical cinematography by Irina Lubtchansky, daughter of the late, legendary DP William) and compelling in its engagement with the myth of Judas, interweaving recent revelations about the role he may or may not have played in the real-life Passion story. The result is a ravishing and genuinely new addition to the Jesus film canon. Winner of a Jury Prize in the Forum section at last year’s Berlinale. U.S. Premiere [AlloCiné 3.9/19]

Summertime / La Belle saison
Catherine Corsini, France/Belgium, 2015, DCP, 105m
French with English subtitles
Acclaimed director Catherine Corsini has made melodramas that range in tone from the bleak and violent to the tender and emotionally warm. At first glance, her Locarno prize-winning new film is one of her brightest and most bucolic. Soon after Delphine (Izïa Higelin) moves from her conservative parents’ farm near Limoges to Paris in 1971, she meets the older Carole (Cécile de France), a feminist organizer with whom she embarks on a passionate, mutually invigorating love affair. When a family sickness pulls Delphine back to the farm, Carole has to decide whether to follow her into hostile territory—and Summertime becomes something more complicated and fraught than its seductive, luminous visual palette initially suggests. A Strand Releasing release. U.S. Premiere [AlloCiné 3.6./18]

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Three Sisters / Les Trois soeurs
Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, France, 2015, DCP, 110m
French with English subtitles
"Life is hard. It seems to many of us dull and hopeless; but yet we must admit that it goes on getting clearer and easier, and it looks as though the time were not far off when it’ll be full of happiness." For her latest project, commissioned by Arte and starring members of the Comédie-Française, Valeria Bruni Tedeschi shot an idiosyncratic, half-modernized adaptation of one of Chekhov’s greatest, most expansively melancholy plays. The three sisters of the title—two unmarried, one unhappily married—congregate in their family’s ancestral house and, along with the additional soldiers, debtors, pensioners, and spouses who populate the play, struggle to give their futures a shape. From a translation by André Markowicz and Françoise Morvan. U.S. Premiere [French release date unknown]

*Two Friends / Les Deux amis
Louis Garrel, France, 2015, DCP, 102m
French with English subtitles
One of France’s most distinguished and recognizable actors for over a decade now, Louis Garrel makes his much-anticipated feature-length directorial debut with this clever and moving twist on the ménage à trois. Garrel stars as Abel, a gas-station attendant with literary ambitions, an underage girlfriend, and an always-active libido. Abel is all too accustomed to seducing away the crushes of his best friend, movie-extra Vincent (Vincent Macaigne)—but when an incognito convict working at a pastry counter in the Gare du Nord (Golshifteh Farahani) enters Vincent’s orbit (and, by extension, Abel’s), a comic, manic, and eminently romantic love triangle soon unfolds. Co-written by his frequent collaborator Christophe Honoré, Two Friends marks an auspicious and heartfelt first feature for Garrel, striking a pitch-perfect balance between tragedy and charm. U.S. Premiere [AlloCiné 3.7/18]

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Winter Song / Chant d’hiver
Otar Iosseliani, France, 2015, DCP, 117m
French with English subtitles
There’s no mistaking the tone and structure of a film by the 81-year-old Georgian director Otar Iosseliani: caustic, mordant, detached, extremely funny, and dizzyingly panoramic. Like several of his earlier films, Winter Song doesn’t center on a single figure so much as a dense cluster of interrelated characters, all united by objects (an executed aristocrat’s skull), places (the apartment building where most of them live), historical events (from the French Revolution to the Russo-Georgian War), and pure coincidence. An aging upper-crust patriarch burning his letters; a tramp hoping to avoid the advances of a steamroller; an 18th-century nobleman who insists on taking his pipe to the guillotine: Winter Song is a well-stocked encyclopedia of human variety, eccentricity, and folly, elevated by an exquisite cast that include Rufus, Pierre Étaix, and Mathieu Amalric. U.S. Premiere [AlloCiné 3.0/14]

_________

*Previously reviewed.


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Chris Knipp
02-02-2016, 06:35 PM
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Rendez-Vous 2016 public screenings schedule.

The series offers a wide variety, with love and coming of age and domestic issues outweighing action or comedy by a fair margin. A lot of the titles have been well reviewed by French critics; and whatever you think of My King/Mon roi, it did win Emmanuelle Bercot (who has a film she directed here also) the Best Actress award at Cannes. Those who come for Closing Night will get to see Jacques Audiard's (somewhat inexplicable) Cannes Palme d'Or winner Dheepan. Teens or as the French call them "les ados" are well represented with Le Nouveau, about a sensitive (new) boy, and Bercot's Standing Tall/La Tête haute about a delinquent; Delpy's Lolo about a bratty son who seeks to break up his divorced mom's new relationship; and Bang Gang, which recounts teen sexual experiences a la Larry Clark/Gus Van Sant/Sofia & Gia Coppola. More sex comes in Much Loved, about Moroccan prostitutes; and there's a lesbian love affair with the vibrant Cécile de France, Summertime/aka/La Belle saison. We get the somewhat lugubrious reunion of an old couple - and of two of French cinema's most famous actors - in Nicloux's Valley of Love, the opening night film starring Gérard Depardieu and Isabelle Huppert. Passion, machismo, and disaster are chronicled exhaustively in Mon roi. Young male love issues and bromance get an engaging treatment in Louis Garrel's directing debut Two Friends/Les Trois amis, in which Louis himself plays opposite droopy French indie regular Vincent Macaigne with the luminous Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani as the pivot point. Immigrant issues come up in Parisienne/aka/Peux de rien, Faucon's Fatima, and elsewhere, notably in Audiard's Dheepan. Three of the films have the word "thriller" attached to them: Le Grand jeu (with Melvil Poupaud), Winocour's Disorder/aka/Maryland, and Dark Illusion/aka/Diamond noir. 21 Nights with Pattie combines cops and comedy. Valeria Bruni Tedeschi has received funding from Arte TV to make a film of Chekhov's Three Sisters, and there's even a film, by a director with an Arabic name, about Jesus, Story of Judas/Histoire de Judas. Otar Iosseliani is an idiosyncratic, sui generis director: the topic of his new film, Winter Song / Chant d’hiver, is anyone's guess. --CK

(The press screenings have also just been announced and will run from Feb. 18-26. I expect to be publishing on the spot reviews during that time.)

Valley of Love (Guillaume Nicloux) - Opening Night film
Thursday, March 3, 6:00pm (Intro only by Isabelle Huppert and Guillaume Nicloux)

Dheepan (Jacques Audiard) - Closing Night film
Sunday, March 13, 6:00pm and 8:30pm

21 Nights with Pattie / 21 nuits avec Pattie (Jean-Marie & Arnaud Larrieu 2015)
Friday, March 11, 1:30pm
Saturday, March 12, 6:45pm

Apaches, The / Des Apaches (Nassim Amaouche 2015)
Friday, March 4, 4:00pm
Sunday, March 13, 1:30pm

Bang Gang (A Modern Love Story) / Bang Gang (une histoire d'amour moderne) (Eva Husson 2016)
Friday, March 4, 9:15pm (Q&A with Eva Husson)
Sunday, March 6, 1:00pm (Q&A with Eva Husso

Dark Inclusion / Diamant noir (Arthur Harari 2016)
Thursday, March 10, 1:30pm
Saturday, March 12, 9:15pm

Decent Man / Je ne suis pas un salaud (Emmanuel Finkiel 2015)
Saturday, March 5, 1:00pm
Monday, March 7, 1:45pm

Disorder / Maryland (Alice Winocour 2015)
Saturday, March 5, 6:30pm (Q&A with Alice Winocour)
Monday, March 7, 4:00pm

Fatima (Philippe Faucon 2015)
Friday, March 4, 2:00pm
Sunday, March 13, 4:00pm

Great Game, The / Le Grand jeu (Nicolas Pariser 2015)
Friday, March 4, 6:30pm (Q&A with Nicolas Pariser, Clémence Poésy and Melvil Poupaud)
Saturday, March 5, 9:15pm (Q&A with Nicolas Pariser, Clémence Poésy and Melvil Poupaud)

Lolo (Julie Delpy 2015)
Tuesday, March 8, 6:30pm (Q&A with Julie Delpy and composer Mathieu Lamboley)
Wednesday, March 9, 9:30pm (Introduction by Julie Delpy)

Much Loved (Nabil Ayouch 2015)
Thursday, March 10, 7:00pm
Friday, March 11, 4:00pm

My King / Mon roi (Maïwenn 2015)
Wednesday, March 9, 6:30pm (Q&A with Maïwenn and Louis Garrel)
Thursday, March 10, 9:45pm (Introduction by Maïwenn)

The New Kid / Le Nouveau (Rudi Rosenberg 2015)
Monday, March 7, 6:30pm (Q&A with Rudi Rosenberg)
Wednesday, March 9, 1:30pm

Parisienne / Peur de rien (Danielle Arbid 2015)
Thursday, March 10, 4:00pm (Q&A with Danielle Arbid)
Saturday, March 12, 1:30pm (Q&A with Danielle Arbid)

Standing Tall / La Tête haute (Emmanuelle Bercot 2015)
Sunday, March 6, 3:30pm (Q&A with Emmanuelle Bercot)
Sunday, March 6, 9:00pm (Introduction by Emmanuelle Bercot)

Story of Judas / Histoire de Judas (Rabah Ameur-Zaïmeche 2015)
Saturday, March 5, 3:45pm
Tuesday, March 8, 1:45pm

Summertime / La Belle saison (Catherine Corsini 2015)
Tuesday, March 8, 9:15pm (Introduction by composer Gregoire Hetzel)
Saturday, March 12, 4:30pm

Three Sisters / Les Trois soeurs (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi - unreleased)
Wednesday, March 9, 3:30pm (Q&A with Valeria Bruni Tedeschi)
Friday, March 11, 6:30pm (Q&A with Valeria Bruni Tedeschi)

Two Friends / Les Deux amis (Louis Garrel 2015)
Sunday, March 6, 6:30pm (Q&A with Louis Garrel)
Monday, March 7, 9:00pm (Introduction by Louis Garrel)

Winter Song / Chant d’hiver (Otar Iosseliani 2015)
Tuesday, March 8, 4:00pm
Friday, March 11, 9:15pm


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Chris Knipp
02-04-2016, 01:59 PM
Iranian beauty Golshifteh Farahani - in Louis Garrel's feature directing debut Two Friends (http://www.chrisknipp.com/writing/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=3198&view=previous) - wants to be everywhere and play everything.


I saw her in the Iranian drama The Patience Stone, a solemn, static drama set in Afghanistan. She has just appeared in Louis Garrel's light, kinetic, talky feature directing debut, Two Friends/Les Deux amis. She has just finished shooting Christophe Honoré's new film. Next, she will make one with Jim Jarmusch. She has been banned, then un-banned, from Iran, for her bold nude appearances. She now lives in France. A new quick interview with her in the French women's magazine Marie Claire (http://www.marieclaire.fr/,golshifteh-farahani-je-suis-une-femme-avant-d-etre-une-iranienne,780357.asp) (trans. CK):



GOLSHIFTEH FARAHANI : "I'M A WOMAN BEFORE I'M AN IRANIAN"
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She has gotten herself banned from her own country for having chosen roles like any other actress. She continues her path with Louis Garrel's film 'Deux amis.' Full of grace.

Marie Claire: You've often played the role of victims in your films. This time your character seems totally emancipated. Would you say this film is a change of direction?

Golshifteh Farahani: Yes, absolutely. For the first time, I wasn't looked upon as a foreigner, a slightly exotic person, different. In this film, I'm almost an ordinary woman, with her own emotions, pains, worries. I hope this will inspire other filmmakers to stop looking at people solely throughthe prism of their origins. I am a women before I am an Iranian.

Marie Claire: You are finishing shooting Christophe Honoré's new film ('The Sufferings of Sophie'), you're starting one with Jim Jarmusch. What moves you to make so many movies?
It's linkked to a very childish pleasure in playacting, putting on masks. I love the idea of being able to shoot one day in Afghanistan and the next in Paris, to be a Vicomtesse of the 19th century and then, two months later, a woman lost in the desert in Tadjikistan. My comprehension level isn't so important; I want to be able to act in all languages, to be a kind of chameleon.

Would you consider yourself a 'workaholic'? Is that compatible with your private life?
Everything is so unstable, fragile, and moving in my life that I don't particularly pose that kind of question. It's just that I want to establish myself more in real life rather than cinema in future. I want to start a family, go to the beach, play music. Live. I think trouble begins when work comes before personal achievements, and I don't want to be that kind of woman.
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At the 2014 Césars awards

Chris Knipp
02-18-2016, 09:16 PM
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The 2016 Rendez-Vous reviews will begin now and I'll post notices of new reviews each day in this thread linked to them. There are skeleton reviews or previews of all 21 of the R-V films already, with an index of links (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34353#post34353), in the Festival Coverage section. The first, Opening Night, film is Guillaume Nicloux's VALLEY OF LOVE, which was in Competition at Cannes but in my opinion is a dull clunker. It just happens to feature Isabelle Huppert and Gérard Depardieu. I already reviewed it in San Francisco's earlier French series.

VALLEY OF LOVE (Guillaiume Nicloux 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34420#post34420)

See above.

FATIMA (Philippe Faucon 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34421#post34421)

This is one of a number of new French films about immigration and the problems of minorities in France. The director is a Frenchman who was born and grew up in the Maghreb and most of his eight features deal with immigration, Muslim, or Maghreb issues. This one grows out of the story of a Moroccan cleaning lady who taught herself French and has become kind of famous in France by writing a book about her life. Faucon's quotidian, low-key approach won accolades in France. This quiet film has charm, and emotional realism.

THREE SISTERS/LES TROIS SOEURS (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi 2015 (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34420#post34420)

She's the older sister of Sarkozy's wife, from a rich Italian family, a prolific actress who has directed only four films. This one was made for TV in collaboration with the Comédie Française with a grant from the French-German Arte network, and is a slightly modernized French adaptation of Chekhov's famous play about bored, out-of-date provincial Russian semi-aristocrats, co-written with Noémie Lvovsky and dedicated to the late Patrice Chéreau.

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Chris Knipp
02-20-2016, 08:39 PM
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THE GREAT GAME/LE GRAND JEU (Nicolas Pariser 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34423#post34423)

A sophisticated, smart political thriller about manipulations at a high level of French government using a failed writer, who wrote an acclaimed book 15 years before. With the excellent André Dusollier doing the manipulating and Melvil Poupaud as the writer. It loses steam in the second half but it's a very French and witty approach to people and ideas that reminded me of the terrific 2006 NYFF film POISON FRIENDS (Emmanuel Bourdrieu).

BANG GANG (A MODERN LOVE STORY)/BANG GANG (UNE HISTOIRE D'AMOUR MODERNE) (EVA HUSSON 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34424#post34424)

I guess this has been done before; sunny middle class summer teenage sex orgies? At a house where the parents are away? But Eva Husson, in this first feature, does it with taste and enthusiasm, as if Gus Van Sant, Sofia Coppola, and Larry Clark hadn't been there before, and maybe she does it better. A more cheerful, sociable movie than earlier versions. With beautiful cinematography by a Danish AFI colleague of the director. Up-and-comer Finnegan Oldfield in the lead.

A DECENT MAN/JE NE SUIS PAS UN SALAUD (Emmanuel Finkiel 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34425#post34425)

The intense Nicolas Duvauchelle stars in the story of Eddy, a working class guy with anger issues and a drinking problem who gets into bad trouble when he fingers an innocent and hard working young Arab guy after he's been stabbed. Leads up to a scene of violence that will trouble those who experienced the November Paris attacks. A powerful, relentless film that unfortunately doesn't teach us anything.

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Chris Knipp
02-22-2016, 05:38 PM
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THE STORY OF JUDAS/L'HISTOIRE DE JUDAS (Rabah Ameur-Zaïmeche 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34427#post34427)

A radical, personal rewriting of the story of the last days of Jesus shot in Algeria using largely Arab actors. Some parts may give one a fresh outlook, but it seemed amateurish and arbitrary to me. Pasolini's GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MATTHEW this is not. Some parts just seem like stalling for time while the filmmakers try to think up some dialogue.

DISORDER/MARYLAND (Anne Winocour 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34428#post34428)

This director's first film starring Vincent Lindon was a period story focused on hysteria in the 19th century. Here she's making a thriller, in the present time, but still with a subtext about mental problems. Again a powerful actor, Matthias Schoenhaerts, is in the lead, as a French soldier with all kinds of PTSD symptoms who's playing bodyguard to the wife of a Lebanese billionaire whose source of income may not be very admirable. It goes on a bit too long, but there is plenty of tension and excitement, and much of this is stylish: too bad the action in the big house wasn't tightened up more; and there is a fantasy final shot that's just a cheat.

STANDING TALL/LA TÊTE HAUTE (Emmanuelle Bercot 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34429#post34429)

Again a film that needs trimming, but we get a fulsome view of the awesome acting abilities of newcomer Rod Parasot as Malony, a juvenile delinquent with big time rage and impulse control problems, a penchant for stealing cars, a ditzy mess of a mom (Sara Forestier). He seems doomed, yet the French system seems more forgiving than some, and he has a humane judge (Catherine Deneuve) and a caring counselor (Benoît Magimel) on his side, as well as a girlfriend. Paradot is an incredible oyung actor who makes one think of the young Leo DeCaprio, whom he even somewhat resembles, and it's not surprising that he's one of this year's César nominees for Most Promising Actor (Jeune Espoir Masculin) -- along with Finnegan Oldfield (for LES COWBOYS), seen in BANG GANG in this Rendez-Vous series. Malony's gf Tess is played by Diane Rouxel, and she's a Most Promising Actress nominee.


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Chris Knipp
02-24-2016, 09:47 AM
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Benoît and his posse in The New Kid.
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GUILLAUME CLOUD-ROUSSEL, GÉRALINE MARTINEAU, RÉPHAËL GHRENASSIA, JOSHUA RACAH, JOHANNA LINDSTEDT

TWO FRIENDS/LES DEUX AMIS (Louis Garrel 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34430#post34430)

Louis Garrel, son of avant-garde great auteur Philippe Garrel, is known as an actor, particularly in the films of Christophe Honoré, for whom he has been a sort of muse. Honoré collaborated on the script of this ironic rom-com bromance starring Garrel and Vincent Macaigne as the oddly mismatched friends and Golshifteh Farahani as the beautiful, mysterious young woman they both become interested in. Beautifully photographed by Claire Mathon, so all three and the echt Paris locations all look great, not only heartthrob Garrel but the gorgeous Farahani; even soulful nerd Macaigne has alabaster skin. Music by Philippe Sarde. A promising debut.


THE NEW KID/LE NOUVEAU (Rudi Rosenberg 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34431#post34431)

In his charming feature debut as a director Rosenberg has managed to capture the mad laughter and good times of the still innocent young teenager in this story of a boy who has to find his way in a new school against the bullying and mockery of the "in" crowd boys. He falls in with a trio of freaks and geeks and, temporarily, but a beautiful Swedish girl who breaks his heart. The New Kid does't have to plumb depths because it's concerned with those, for what for teenagers are those [/I] all-important surfaces. "Les ados [teenagers] will love this and their parents too" wrote one French reviewer.

WINTER SONG/CHANT D'HIVER (Otar Iosseliani 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34432#post34432)

I didn't make much sense out of this (though I've seen two other Iosseliani films and a cocumentary about him), so let me quote from an experienced critic for the #2 trade journal: "Sauntering gracefully into his ninth decade, Georgian-French writer-director Otar Iosseliani delivers another of his whimsically droll confections with Winter Song (Chant d'hiver). A beguiling, episodic, low-key comedy that favors visual gags over dialogue and tone over plot, it will amply satisfy the octogenarian's established coterie of admirers without recruiting any new additions to their ranks." -- Neil Young, Hollywood Reporter.


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Chris Knipp
02-27-2016, 09:04 AM
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LOLO (Julie Delpy 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34435#post34435)

Mom (Delpy) gets a new boyfriend (Danny Boon) so live-in teenage son (Vincent Lacoste), who has a creepy oedipal attachment, does all he can to drive the many away. Some find this hilarious.

SUMMERTIME/LA BELLE SAISON (Catherine Corsini 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34436#post34436)

Set in 1971 when women's lib was a big thing, an older Parisian activist/teacher (the radiant Cécile de France) and an earthy Limousin farm girl (Izîa Higelin, a revelation) fall madly in love and try to pureue their affair back at the farm when the farmer dad has a stroke. Moving (slightly) tragic story of a passionate lesbian affair with bold nudity and fine performances. Noémie Lvovsky is superb as the farm girl's conservative mother.

THE APACHES/DES APACHES (Nessim Amaouche 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34438#post34438)

Atmosphere and sociological detail can't save this lifeless story of an illigittimate loner brought into his father's Berber clan in Paris to enable a business deal. Amaouche himself is unappealing and remote as the protagonist, André Dusollier able as usual as the lawyer middleman. Confusing flashbacks and with the same actress inexplicably playing the deceased mother and the girlfriend.

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Chris Knipp
02-27-2016, 09:26 AM
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MY KING/MON ROI (Maïwen 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34439#post34439)

Turbulent marriage played to the hilt by Emmanuelle Bercot, who won the Cannes Best Actress award and Vincent Cassel. Full of messy, over-the-top scenes and with an obnoxious macho creep (Cassel) his wife ought to have gotten away from but slavishly admires. He himself says he's "the king of assholes." I found him, and this film, insufferable when I first saw it in Paris. Admittedly, the acting is good, especially Bercot's, if you think excessive, pushed melodrama is good actingg. Louis Garrel plays Bercot's character's brother, the only reasonable person on the scene.

DARK INCLUSION/DIAMONT NOIR (Arthur Harari 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34440#post34440)

A well-constructed and engrossing drama of a black sheep of an Antwerp diamond business family who reenters it to get revenge against what he believes was grievous mistreatment of his recently deceased dad. Ingenious mixture of a coming-of-age and Rififi-type crime story with a surprising finals. Canadian-French actor Niels Schneider escapes from his pretty-boy casting in the central role of Pier, the would-be avenger who finds himself unexpectedly accepted and essential.

PARISIENNE/PEUR DE RIEN (Danielle Arbid 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34441#post34441)

Manal Issa is luminous and irresistible as Lina, the teflon-coated and beautiful 18-year-old Lebanese girl trying to make her way in Paris without her family and with a doubtful residency permit. She goes through jobs, friends, politics, university studies, music, and three boyfriends, returns home to Beirut, goes back to Paris. It's all good. The story lacks teeth (it's all a bit too easy) but Arbid provides dense, rich material and a string of engaging characters. Enjoyable.


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Chris Knipp
02-27-2016, 09:38 AM
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MUCH LOVED (Nabil Ayouch 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34442#post34442)

An amazing film, harsh and warm at the same time, depicting in hand-held semi-documentary style the lives of three Moroccan prostitutes in Marrakech who take in a pregnant country girl and make if four, plus Said, their driver-protector. Banned in Morocco and described as "a grave insult to moral values"; given (understandably) rave reviews in France. This is the 46-year-old Paris-born Moroccan filmmaker's seventh film, and we ought to know more about him.

21 NIGHTS WITH PATTIE/21 NUITS AVEC PATTIE (Jean-Marie, Arnaud Larrieu 2015 (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34443#post34443))

The Larrieu brothers, based in the warm Hautes-Pyranées region of southwestern France, follow their own path. I didn't get their Love Is the Perfect Crime with Matthieu Amalric either, but found it marginally more appealing because of its genre framework. This is a summer tale of ghosts and sex with dirty talk, flirtation, and a disappearing corpse. A good cast includes Isabelle Carré, Karin Viard, Sergi Lopez, and the ubiquitous veteran André Dusollier, his third appearance in this year's Rendez-Vous.

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Chris Knipp
03-03-2016, 06:01 PM
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The 2016 Rendez-Vous with French Cinema opens tonight!


"The 2016 Rendez-Vous is by the far the best in the many years I have been writing about it." – Stephen Holden, The New York Times (http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/03/movies/big-issues-and-yes-amour-hit-rendez-vous-with-french-cinema.html?_r=0)

It is indeed an outstanding one, as indicated by the number of films in it that were part of the recent César awards in France, as I noted.


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Chris Knipp
06-28-2016, 03:09 PM
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SUMMERTIME/
LA BELLE SAISON (Catherine Corsini) (http://www.chrisknipp.com/writing/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=3278)

US theatrical release date announced.

US theatrical release starts Friday, July 22 in New York (Film Society at Lincoln Center, IFC Center) and Los Angeles (Laemmle’s Royal). Strand Releasing.

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Chris Knipp
07-28-2016, 01:08 PM
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MY KING/MON ROI (Maïwenn 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34439#post34439)

US theatrical release upcoming: 12 Aug. 2016 Lincoln Plaza Cinemas NYC, 29 Aug. Laemmle Royal, Los Angeles. Distributed by Film Movement. It will become available to video viewers some time later and probably show up in art houses across the country.

Drama of a passionate dysfunctional relationship with a narcissistic, unreliable man recounted in flashbacks while the lady is recuperating from a ski accident, with strong performances by Vincent Cassel as the man and Emmanuelle Bercot as the dame. I am not an admirer of this movie and its Metacritic rating is only 54%. It's brought down by the powerful pan from Peter Bradshaw of the Guardian, "Mon Roi, directed and co-written by Maïwenn (that is, film-maker and actor Maïwenn Le Besco) is an unendurable confection of complacent and self-admiring nonsense: shallow, narcissistic, histrionic and fake." But some of my fellow screening-attendees were impressed and Bercot won Best Actress at Cannes for her balls-out acting, in a remarkable fest for her, because she also debuted powerfully as a director in Standing Tall/La tête haute, which led to a César for debutant teen Rod Paradot in the lead.

My King is a good one to debate, and while the AlloCiné press (critics) rating is a lousy 3.2, the viewers ranked it an admiring 4.1. Cassel's familiarity to US viewers and Bercot's growing recognition ought to draw in US viewers in some format.


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Vincent Cassel in Mon roi/My King

Chris Knipp
02-06-2017, 11:12 AM
THE GREAT GAME/LE GRAND JEU (Nicolas Pariser 2015) (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?4104-Rendez-Vous-with-French-Cinema-2016&p=34423#post34423)

This is an interesting, sophisticated French film with a great cast. It loses some of its pizazz when André Dusollier drops out of the picture, but Melvil Poupoud is always watchable. So now it's available to everybody. See below



"The Great Game," Writer/Director Nicolas Pariser's tantalizing & absorbing political thriller, will open:

February 14, 2017 on all major VOD platforms in the United States, including iTunes, Google Play, Amazon, Comcast, Charter, and Vudu from Distrib Films US

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ANDRÉ DUSOLLIER, NATALIE RICHARD, AND MELVILLE POUPAUD IN THE GREAT GAME