Alice Winocour
France
Berlin
film
love
Citi
Alice Winocour
France
Berlin
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Kelly Ripa explains recent absence from LIVE! with cheeky pictures from unexpected location - hellomagazine.com - France
hellomagazine.com
13.06.2022 / 23:01

Kelly Ripa explains recent absence from LIVE! with cheeky pictures from unexpected location

Kelly Ripa has been loyal to her hosting duties on Live! With Kelly and Ryan since day one, but she's also not one to deny herself a break!MORE: Kelly Ripa makes dazzling return to TV in gorgeous Barbie pink outfitHer co-host Ryan Seacrest recently announced that Ali Wentworth would be co-hosting in place of Kelly, and the star's latest pictures – which are as adorable as it gets – finally reveal where she  had gone off to.The morning show host just returned from spending a well-deserved vacation in Paris, France, alongside her husband, Mark Consuelos.WATCH: Kelly shares heartfelt clips from her son's graduationMORE: Kelly Ripa joined by LIVE! co-host Ryan Seacrest for new ABC showShe took to Instagram to share glimpses of her time away, fitting into the city of love perfectly with a series of loved-up pictures and selfies with Mark revealing their exciting plans.The host teased that she was celebrating something special, captioning her Instagram Stories with: "Scenes from a weekend in Paris celebration."Some of the pictures saw her donning glamorous dresses ready for a night out, snuggling next to her husband with a view of the Seine river behind them, as well as one where she's posing in sunglasses and he is adoringly looking at her. Kelly and Mark enjoy the Parisian sightsIt seems the two had a big night out, attending a cabaret show at the iconic Paradis Latin Cabaret on Paris' Left Bank.MORE: Kelly Ripa gives fans long-awaited career newsMORE: Kelly Ripa celebrates son Michael Consuelos' milestone birthday on the airFor the exciting night out, Kelly donned a flirty, figure-hugging halter dress with pearl and diamond appliqués, a feather trim, and a sweet bow on its collar.

Charades Strikes Deals on ‘Forever Young,’ Valeria Bruni Tedeschi’s Cannes Competition Film (EXCLUSIVE) - variety.com - Australia - Spain - France - Brazil - Paris - Sweden - Italy - Russia - Austria - Germany - Portugal - Greece - Finland - county Wells - Israel - Charlotte, county Wells
variety.com
03.06.2022 / 18:23

Charades Strikes Deals on ‘Forever Young,’ Valeria Bruni Tedeschi’s Cannes Competition Film (EXCLUSIVE)

Elsa Keslassy International CorrespondentParis-based sales company Charades has closed a raft of deals on “Forever Young,” Valeria Bruni Tedeschi’s film which competed at Cannes and earned a warm critical welcome. “Forever Young” opens at the end of the 1980s in Paris and follows a young troupe of comedians who have just have been admitted to Les Amandiers, the prestigious theater school headed by Patrice Chéreau. Bruni Tedeschi wrote the script alongside Agnès De Sacy and regular collaborator Noémie Lvovsky.

‘Coda’ Producer Pathé Strikes Raft Of Deals On Cannes Slate Including ‘Masquerade’, ‘Paris Memories’ & Penélope Cruz Starrer ‘L’Immensitá’ - deadline.com - Australia - Spain - France - New Zealand - Italy - Canada - Austria - Germany - Belgium - Portugal - Switzerland - Greece - Poland - Rome - Turkey - Israel - Taiwan
deadline.com
01.06.2022 / 13:45

‘Coda’ Producer Pathé Strikes Raft Of Deals On Cannes Slate Including ‘Masquerade’, ‘Paris Memories’ & Penélope Cruz Starrer ‘L’Immensitá’

EXCLUSIVE: Coda producer Pathé has concluded a raft of sales on its Cannes slate including for starry French drama Masquerade, Directors’ Fortnight entry Paris Memories and Penelope Cruz title L’Immensita.

Cannes Review: Leonor Serraille’s ‘Mother And Son’ - deadline.com - France - Ivory Coast
deadline.com
27.05.2022 / 21:52

Cannes Review: Leonor Serraille’s ‘Mother And Son’

When his mother spoke, Ernest remembers, everything sounded important. “I cling to her light,” he tells us in voiceover, an adult remembering how that felt. The Ernest he is recalling is just a little boy (Milan Doucansi), snuggled against Rose (Annabelle Lengronne, a wonderfully vivid presence), with his grave and clever older brother Jean (Sidy Fofana) sitting opposite on a train taking them from Cote d’Ivoire to a new French life.

‘Return to Seoul’ Review: A Restless, Graceful Drama About Identity Formed Rather Than Found - variety.com - France - city Seoul
variety.com
27.05.2022 / 20:47

‘Return to Seoul’ Review: A Restless, Graceful Drama About Identity Formed Rather Than Found

Jessica Kiang In order to return somewhere, you first have to leave it. So it’s arguable whether the initial visit in Davy Chou’s strange, deep, changeable and wise “Return to Seoul” even qualifies in a meaningful sense as a return.

Cannes Review: Benoit Magimel In Albert Serra’s ‘Pacifiction’ - deadline.com - France - French Polynesia
deadline.com
26.05.2022 / 19:05

Cannes Review: Benoit Magimel In Albert Serra’s ‘Pacifiction’

Catalan artist and director Albert Serra (The Death Of Louis XIV, Liberte) returns to Cannes Film Festival Official Competition with a rarity for him, a contemporary feature film, not what we have come to expect from this filmmaker who usually works in period pieces. And even though he is not French he has made a fascinating movie all in French and set in the colorful French Polynesia island of Tahiti.

Cannes Review: Claire Denis’ ‘Stars At Noon’ - deadline.com - France - USA - county Graham
deadline.com
26.05.2022 / 02:01

Cannes Review: Claire Denis’ ‘Stars At Noon’

Given the combustible subject matter and the director’s reputation, French auteur Claire Denis has made a remarkably listless and unpersuasive film in Stars at Noon. Set during the Nicaraguan Sandanista revolution circa 1984, this adaptation of Denis Johnson’s novel published two years later centers on a couple of Americans of dubious character who misspend time in Central America before finally deciding it’s time to split when, in fact, it might be too late. This is the sort of misfire that, just because it comes from a hallowed French auteur, sometimes gets programmed in the Cannes competition even when it manifestly doesn’t deserve to be there.

Antony Starr Jokingly Pushes Chace Crawford Out of Cast Photo at 'The Boys' Paris Premiere - www.justjared.com - France
justjared.com
24.05.2022 / 09:57

Antony Starr Jokingly Pushes Chace Crawford Out of Cast Photo at 'The Boys' Paris Premiere

The third season of The Boys is almost here and the cast has launched a promo tour!

Cannes Review: Lea Mysius’ New Film ‘The Five Devils’ - deadline.com - France
deadline.com
24.05.2022 / 04:23

Cannes Review: Lea Mysius’ New Film ‘The Five Devils’

Director Léa Mysius expertly crafts a queer, witchy movie in her Directors’ Fortnite debut film, The Five Devils, which received a five-minute standing ovation at the screening I attended. Mysius takes concepts like identity, sexuality, and mysticism and creates an intricate genre film that’s part time travel, part drama, and all heart. 

Cannes Review: Vicky Krieps & Gaspard Ulliel In ‘More Than Ever’ - deadline.com - France - Norway
deadline.com
23.05.2022 / 18:39

Cannes Review: Vicky Krieps & Gaspard Ulliel In ‘More Than Ever’

Director Emily Atef’s Cannes Un Certain Regard drama More Than Ever is a careful, fastidious, Tradition of Quality film about impending death that’s easy to admire but won’t exactly pack ‘em in.

Cannes Review: Lise Akoka & Romane Gueret’s ‘The Worst Ones’ - deadline.com - France
deadline.com
23.05.2022 / 17:47

Cannes Review: Lise Akoka & Romane Gueret’s ‘The Worst Ones’

The challenges of street casting are explored in The Worst Ones (Les Pires), an Un Certain Regard drama about a film within a film. Directed by Lise Akoka and Romane Gueret, it sees a film crew hit a working class French town, with thought-provoking and sometimes darkly funny results.  
 Flemish director Gabriel (Johan Heldenbergh) is casting kids in Picasso, in the suburbs of Boulogne-Sur-Mer. His feature is about a pregnant teen and her younger brother, and he wants authentic local residents. The neighbors are surprised that he’s only casting “les pires” — what they consider to be the worst ones, or the hoodlums. But there’s raw talent in Lily (Mallory Wanecque) and hot-headed little Ryan (Timéo Mahaut).

‘Novembre’ Star Jean Dujardin & Director Cédric Jimenez On Portraying Paris Terror Attack Hunters: “We Didn’t Want To Turn The Police Into Heroes” – Cannes - deadline.com - France - Paris - city Sandrine
deadline.com
23.05.2022 / 15:27

‘Novembre’ Star Jean Dujardin & Director Cédric Jimenez On Portraying Paris Terror Attack Hunters: “We Didn’t Want To Turn The Police Into Heroes” – Cannes

Jean Dujardin and Cédric Jimenez, the star and director of French Paris terror attack film Novembre, have said they did not want to portray the police who caught the attackers as “heroes” but were aiming for an uber-realistic representation of a “deeply secret” department.

Cannes Review: Jean Dujardin In Cedric Jimenez’s ‘Novembre’ - deadline.com - France - Paris - city Brussels - city Sandrine
deadline.com
23.05.2022 / 02:27

Cannes Review: Jean Dujardin In Cedric Jimenez’s ‘Novembre’

Understandably, the terrorist attacks in Paris on the night of November 13, 2015 have been treated with great sensitivity by the French film industry, and the only other film in the Cannes Film Festival’s lineup this year to touch on those events — Alice Winocour’s Paris Revoir — is a lightly fictionalized drama set in the aftermath of the night 130 people were killed, most of them at a rock concert at the city’s Bataclan nightclub. Though many names have been changed, for obvious security reasons, Cedric Jimenez’s Novembre is, by contrast, a heavy-artillery just-the-facts-ma’am police procedural detailing the manhunt that followed in the next five days.

James Bond's Lea Seydoux wows in leather jeans at Cannes Film Festival - www.msn.com - Britain - France - Paris - Hungary
msn.com
23.05.2022 / 01:41

James Bond's Lea Seydoux wows in leather jeans at Cannes Film Festival

Cannes Film Festival on Sunday.  The French actress, 36, looked stunning in a black, blue and white striped short sleeved T-shirt which she paired with the black trousers.  The star added some height to her frame in a pair of towering black pointed toe heels as she attended the event in the Campari Lounge at the Palais des Festivals.

Cannes Review: Marie Perennes & Simon Depardon’s Docu ‘Feminist Riposte’ - deadline.com - France
deadline.com
22.05.2022 / 21:07

Cannes Review: Marie Perennes & Simon Depardon’s Docu ‘Feminist Riposte’

“Sexism is everywhere — so are we.” It’s just one of many slogans plastered across the streets of France in the timely documentary Feminist Riposte (Riposte Féministe) which is in the Special Screenings section at Cannes. Filmmakers Marie Perennès and Simon Depardon follow 10 groups of women around the country who are protesting about harassment, rape, femicide — and about the police response to these crimes. “Les flics” — aka the cops — are a silent force in this film, policing protests with grim faces. This is about giving a voice to the young women, recording their dialogue about the cause.

‘Paris Memories’ Review: Alice Winocour’s Heartfelt Evocation of Post-Terrorism Trauma - variety.com - France - Paris - Berlin
variety.com
22.05.2022 / 17:23

‘Paris Memories’ Review: Alice Winocour’s Heartfelt Evocation of Post-Terrorism Trauma

Guy Lodge Film CriticIt’s over six years since the November 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris that ruptured the country’s national consciousness and political agenda, but the events are only gaining currency for European filmmakers. This year’s Berlin festival brought us Isaki Lacesta’s “One Year, One Night,” an impressionistic reflection on survivor’s guilt in the long-term wake of the Bataclan nightclub massacre; at Cannes this year, Cedric Jimenez’s thriller “November” takes a more procedural approach to the aftermath.

‘Paris Memories’ Review: Alice Winocour Explores Trauma Thoughtfully (& Predictably) With Virginie Efira [Cannes] - theplaylist.net - France
theplaylist.net
22.05.2022 / 16:57

‘Paris Memories’ Review: Alice Winocour Explores Trauma Thoughtfully (& Predictably) With Virginie Efira [Cannes]

French writer/director Alice Winocour was interested in the connection between the body and the mind before it was cool. Her feature debut “Augustine” (2012) told the story of a supposedly “hysterical” woman and her doctor in 19th century France, while “Disorder” (2015) centered on a soldier-turned bodyguard suffering from PTSD.

Cannes Review: Davy Chou’s ‘Return To Seoul’ - deadline.com - France - city Seoul - North Korea
deadline.com
22.05.2022 / 14:59

Cannes Review: Davy Chou’s ‘Return To Seoul’

An adoptee explores her Korean roots in Return To Seoul, Davy Chou’s engaging drama premiering at Cannes in Un Certain Regard. Newcomer Park Ji-Min plays the magnificently complex Freddie, who was raised in France and has impetuously decided to spend a couple of weeks in the country of her birth.

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