Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
film
Actor
Extreme
Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
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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.

Cannes Review: Hlynur Palmason’s ‘Godland’ - deadline.com - Iceland - Denmark - city Copenhagen - county Lucas
deadline.com
27.05.2022 / 19:35

Cannes Review: Hlynur Palmason’s ‘Godland’

Lucas’ bishop warns him of the dangers before he sets out to minister to a remote community of Icelanders in Cannes Un Certain Regard title Godland. “It’s easy to go mad there,” he explains at his Copenhagen dining table, steadily chewing his way through the fabulous feast in front of him. Iceland, where the sun never sets on summer nights, where the weather is extreme, the landscape broodingly monumental: just remember the apostles, “a group of lonely men,” the bishop advises as he wipes his mouth. Lucas (Elliott Crosset Hove) is not eating; one glance tells you he’s a priest of an ascetic bent.

Cannes Review: Michelle Williams In Kelly Reichardt’s ‘Showing Up’ - deadline.com - state Oregon - county Williams
deadline.com
27.05.2022 / 18:49

Cannes Review: Michelle Williams In Kelly Reichardt’s ‘Showing Up’

Kelly Reichardt has been making minimal Americana since the early 1990s, mostly around the state of Oregon where she lives and mostly about her favored awkward squad: quiet square pegs who don’t quite fit the round holes society provides. In this ongoing quest she has found many collaborators, but none more attuned to her recessive brand of naturalism than Michelle Williams.

‘Close’ Is A Exquisite Tale Of Childhood Heartbreak [Cannes Review] - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
27.05.2022 / 01:33

‘Close’ Is A Exquisite Tale Of Childhood Heartbreak [Cannes Review]

CANNES – Lukas Dhont’s second feature, “Close,” starts off where most love stories end, and, in that respect, it begins with almost euphoric joy. Leo (Eden Dambrine) and Remi (Gustav De Waele) are the best of friends.

Cannes Review: Saeed Roustaee’s ‘Leila’s Brothers’ - deadline.com - Iran - city Tehran
deadline.com
25.05.2022 / 19:25

Cannes Review: Saeed Roustaee’s ‘Leila’s Brothers’

They all hate each other, Leila (the magnificent Taraneh Alidoosti) tells her brother Alireza (Navid Mohammad Zadeh) when he returns to the family home. It is a rare visit; he works in an industrial plant somewhere on the other side of Iran. He isn’t going to tell his family that he has been laid off with the promise of pay that has never materialized; in the Tehran family that crowds Saeed Roustaee’s long and absorbing clan drama Leila’s Brothers, he is supposed to be the properly functioning son.

‘Forever Young’ Review: Valeria Bruni Tedeschi’s Tempestuous Romance Is Passionate, But Remote [Cannes] - theplaylist.net - France
theplaylist.net
25.05.2022 / 18:49

‘Forever Young’ Review: Valeria Bruni Tedeschi’s Tempestuous Romance Is Passionate, But Remote [Cannes]

Based on her own time spent in the acting school Les Amandiers, Valeria Bruni Tedeschi’s “Forever Young” aims to recreate a very specific time and place both in her life and in France, more than it cares to inform her audience about what, exactly, was so special about this school. Funded in the 1980s by Patrice Chéreau, a successful and daring director of theatre, opera and film, Les Amandiers did not last very long but for a few years it was considered to be one of the most exciting places in France and even Europe for young actors to develop their crafts, and for directors to find new talent.

‘Forever Young’ Review: An Overwrought Souvenir of a Actress’s Coming of Age - variety.com - France
variety.com
24.05.2022 / 23:47

‘Forever Young’ Review: An Overwrought Souvenir of a Actress’s Coming of Age

Jessica Kiang There are no more potential-killing words of creative advice than “write what you know.” Certainly it’s a shame that when donning her screenwriter chapeau, Valeria Bruni Tedeschi — a fine actress and a director with a deft, light touch, especially with breezy character comedy — seems to have taken them so to heart. Once again she goes back to the autobiographical well for her latest directorial trifle, “Forever Young,” which she co-writes alongside Agnès De Sacy and regular collaborator Noémie Lvovsky.Once again the result is set in a rarefied world of which Bruni Tedeschi has intimate knowledge: this time the 1980s acting school run by the late French theater, opera and film director Patrice Chéreau.

Valeria Bruni Tedeschi on Mixing Personal Memory And Fiction in ‘Forever Young’ - variety.com - France
variety.com
23.05.2022 / 21:29

Valeria Bruni Tedeschi on Mixing Personal Memory And Fiction in ‘Forever Young’

Nick Vivarelli International CorrespondentWhen Italian-French actress and director Valeria Bruni Tedeschi was in her twenties she had the formative experience of attending the prestigious acting school at the Théâtre des Amandiers in Nanterre, France, led by late great auteur Patrice Chéreau. Her fifth directorial effort, “Forever Young,” which is in competition in Cannes, is a tribute to that time and, ultimately, to any young person’s passion for the theatre. Tedeschi spoke to Variety in Cannes about how she mixed remembrances and re-invention to make this film.

Cannes Review: Park Chan-wook’s ‘Decision To Leave’; His First Film To Premiere At Cannes Since 2016 - deadline.com
deadline.com
23.05.2022 / 20:05

Cannes Review: Park Chan-wook’s ‘Decision To Leave’; His First Film To Premiere At Cannes Since 2016

Detective Hae-joon investigating the death of a man who fell from a mountain top. When he meets the deceased man’s wife in Park Chan-wook’s latest film in competition at Cannes, Decision To Leave.  

Cannes Review: New Quentin Dupieux Film ‘Smoking Causes Coughing’ Is An Ode To The 80s And 90s Super Sentai Shows - deadline.com
deadline.com
23.05.2022 / 08:13

Cannes Review: New Quentin Dupieux Film ‘Smoking Causes Coughing’ Is An Ode To The 80s And 90s Super Sentai Shows

Absurdist director Quentin Dupieux is back with another bat sh*t crazy film, Smoking Causes Coughing (Fumer Fait Tousser). This film centers around a group of vigilante superheroes called the Tobacco Force. Through all the madness of his, like Rubber (a serial killing car tire), Deer Skin (where a guy hears his Deer Skin jacket speaks to him), or Mandibles (a film about a giant fly), there is always a hidden message under the surface. This time around, he’s addressing cigarettes, smokers, and stress. I mean, stress can cause smoking, and smoking can cause coughing. Makes sense to me. *shrug*

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.

‘Forever Young’ Film Review: Valeria Bruni Tedeschi’s Semi-Autobiographical Tale Is Painfully Familiar - thewrap.com
thewrap.com
23.05.2022 / 02:17

‘Forever Young’ Film Review: Valeria Bruni Tedeschi’s Semi-Autobiographical Tale Is Painfully Familiar

Valeria Bruni Tedeschi’s “Forever Young” is a fictionalised account of her time at Les Amandiers, a prestigious acting school in Nanterre on the outskirts of Paris. As well as drawing on her own memories of student-dom in the mid-1980s, she and her co-writers, Noémie Nvovsky and Agnes De Sacy, interviewed other people who studied alongside her, and so their tragedy-tinged comedy drama, which is in Competition at Cannes, should have all the unruly specificity of real life.

Cannes Review: Kristoffer Borgli’s ‘Sick Of Myself’ - deadline.com - Norway - county Person
deadline.com
23.05.2022 / 01:23

Cannes Review: Kristoffer Borgli’s ‘Sick Of Myself’

Timing can be cruel. Norwegian director Kristoffer Borgli’s second feature, Sick Of Myself, has the misfortune to arrive in the Cannes Film Festival’s Un Certain Regard section in the slipstream of Ruben Östlund’s divisive but funny competition title Triangle of Sadness; the latter being a broader, sillier but much more brutal dissection of class and culture. Sick Of Myself also has to compete with the unexpected longevity of fellow countryman Joachim Trier’s hit The Worst Person In The World, which last year went from the Cannes competition all the way to the Oscars.

Cannes Review: Ethan Coen’s ‘Jerry Lee Lewis: Trouble In Mind’ - deadline.com - county Wake
deadline.com
22.05.2022 / 22:31

Cannes Review: Ethan Coen’s ‘Jerry Lee Lewis: Trouble In Mind’

For his directing debut after brother Joel’s first solo outing with The Tragedy of Macbeth, Ethan Coen has chosen a similar saga of ruthless ambition and soul-devouring guilt, telling the rise and fall — and rise again — of Jerry Lee Lewis, from farmer’s son to rock’n’roll idol.

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.

Cannes Review: Ali Abbasi’s ‘Holy Spider’ - deadline.com - Sweden - Iran
deadline.com
22.05.2022 / 19:19

Cannes Review: Ali Abbasi’s ‘Holy Spider’

Sometimes it hardly matters whether we know a story is based on truth or not. Watching Ali Abbasi’s thunderously damning Holy Spider, on the other hand, it drives a wedge into your mind knowing that a serial killer really did terrorize the Iranian holy city of Mashhad in the early 2000s, that he killed 16 street prostitutes, that there were police who conspired to help him escape and that there were people in Iran — a lot of people, he keeps assuring his family — who were on the murderer’s side. He was doing God’s work.

Gina Gammell & Riley Keough’s ‘War Pony’ Is Admirable But Overstuffed [Cannes Review] - theplaylist.net - USA - India
theplaylist.net
22.05.2022 / 16:25

Gina Gammell & Riley Keough’s ‘War Pony’ Is Admirable But Overstuffed [Cannes Review]

CANNES – It may seem obvious, but sometimes combining two compelling stories doesn’t lead to an overall more captivating film. That’s the primary takeaway from Gina Gammell and Riley Keough‘s somewhat messy “War Pony,” which debuted at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival this weekend.

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.

Cristian Mungiu Demonstrates That Racism & Xenophobia Are Universal In ‘R.M.N.’ [Cannes Review] - theplaylist.net - Ireland - Ukraine - Russia - Eu
theplaylist.net
22.05.2022 / 14:31

Cristian Mungiu Demonstrates That Racism & Xenophobia Are Universal In ‘R.M.N.’ [Cannes Review]

CANNES – We are living in yet another era of European history where old battles over the borders of nation-states are being disputed. Russia has invaded the sovereign nation of Ukraine after already annexing the province of Crimea less than a decade ago.

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