After directing the Oscar-nominated animated film “I Lost My Body,” Jérémy Clapin now finds himself making his first live-action feature.
Clapin writes and directs the drama “Meanwhile on Earth,” which stars newcomer Megan Northam as a girl who grieves her missing astronaut brother. However, all may not be as it seems.
The official synopsis reads: “Elsa (Northam), along with her family, is struggling following the disappearance of her brother Franck, an astronaut who vanished during his first mission. While stargazing one night, Elsa is shocked to receive contact from Franck, but her joy is short-lived when she learns of the dark and troubling forces behind Franck’s reappearance, forcing her to confront the lengths she will go for the brother she once feared was gone forever.”
The film is produced by Marc du Pontavice and will be distributed by Metrograph Pictures. Rising outfit Metrograph is making a splash this year...
Clapin writes and directs the drama “Meanwhile on Earth,” which stars newcomer Megan Northam as a girl who grieves her missing astronaut brother. However, all may not be as it seems.
The official synopsis reads: “Elsa (Northam), along with her family, is struggling following the disappearance of her brother Franck, an astronaut who vanished during his first mission. While stargazing one night, Elsa is shocked to receive contact from Franck, but her joy is short-lived when she learns of the dark and troubling forces behind Franck’s reappearance, forcing her to confront the lengths she will go for the brother she once feared was gone forever.”
The film is produced by Marc du Pontavice and will be distributed by Metrograph Pictures. Rising outfit Metrograph is making a splash this year...
- 7/17/2024
- by Samantha Bergeson
- Indiewire
Out with the old, in with the new! As Netflix begins cleaning house for both a new month and a new, several of its biggest titles will sadly have to say goodbye. January 2024 will be your last month to watch several modern classics, including Jordan Peele’s culture-changing horror debut “Get Out,” the Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone-starred “La La Land,” and “Poor Things” director Yorgos Lanthimos’ Greek tragedy retelling “The Killing of a Sacred Deer.”
Now’s your last chance to watch everything before they’re gone— get started with The Streamable’s Top 5 picks for everything leaving Netflix in January and see everything that will be removed from the platform throughout the month below!
Sign Up $6.99+ / month netflix.com What are the 5 Best Shows and Movies Leaving Netflix in January 2024? “BlacKkKlansman” | Friday, Jan. 5
Ron Stallworth’s memoir about infiltrating the local Ku Klux Klan chapter after being...
Now’s your last chance to watch everything before they’re gone— get started with The Streamable’s Top 5 picks for everything leaving Netflix in January and see everything that will be removed from the platform throughout the month below!
Sign Up $6.99+ / month netflix.com What are the 5 Best Shows and Movies Leaving Netflix in January 2024? “BlacKkKlansman” | Friday, Jan. 5
Ron Stallworth’s memoir about infiltrating the local Ku Klux Klan chapter after being...
- 12/18/2023
- by Ashley Steves
- The Streamable
Petites Review — Petites (2022) Film Review from the 75th Annual Locarno Film Festival, a movie written and directed by Julie Lerat-Gersant, starring Romane Bohringer, Lauréna Thellier, Pili Groyne, Victoire Du Bois, Bilel Chegrani, and Wood Victory. The denial of medical care is a human rights violation, full stop, yet conservatives and misogynists alike still love to split [...]
Continue reading: Film Review: Petites: A Complex Look At Reproductive Rights and Unplanned Motherhood [Locarno 2022]...
Continue reading: Film Review: Petites: A Complex Look At Reproductive Rights and Unplanned Motherhood [Locarno 2022]...
- 8/21/2022
- by Jacob Mouradian
- Film-Book
Italy’s Satine Film has picked up Julie Lerat-Gersant’s Locarno Film Festival title “Little Ones” about teen pregnancy, Variety has learned in Locarno. In the past, the company has also released such titles as “Beasts of the Southern Wild” and Golden Bear winner “There Is No Evil.”
“We aim to discover and introduce visionary and courageous cinematographic voices from all over the world,” said Claudia Bedogni, Satine Film’s founder and managing director.
“The film struck me with its gentle but secure narration and captivating, emotional performances. It’s one of these rare gems where you feel tremendous empathy for the characters as if you were there with them, sharing the same sorrows and dilemmas,” she added. The company is hoping to encourage young audiences to watch the film. “We have done the same with Stéphane Demoustier’s ‘The Girl With a Bracelet,’ also acquired in Locarno, and it...
“We aim to discover and introduce visionary and courageous cinematographic voices from all over the world,” said Claudia Bedogni, Satine Film’s founder and managing director.
“The film struck me with its gentle but secure narration and captivating, emotional performances. It’s one of these rare gems where you feel tremendous empathy for the characters as if you were there with them, sharing the same sorrows and dilemmas,” she added. The company is hoping to encourage young audiences to watch the film. “We have done the same with Stéphane Demoustier’s ‘The Girl With a Bracelet,’ also acquired in Locarno, and it...
- 8/9/2022
- by Marta Balaga
- Variety Film + TV
The actor will share centre stage with Zar Amir Ebrahimi in Guillaume Renusson’s first feature film, a Baxter Films and Les Films Velvet production set to be sold by WTFilms. Halted after a week of shooting back in March on account of the strict lockdown implemented across France, filming on Guillaume Renusson’s first full-length work Les Survivants finally resumed on Monday 11 January. Shining bright in the cast are Denis Ménochet (recently nominated for the 2020 Best Supporting Role César for By The Grace of God; also well-received in Only The Animals) and French-Iranian actress Zar Amir Ebrahimi who are joined by Victoire Du Bois, Oscar Copp and Italy’s Luca Terracciano. Written by Guillaume Renusson and Clément Peny, the story (which won the Audience Award for Best Screenplay for a First Feature Film at Angers’ European First Film Festival) revolves around Samuel who, in...
Despite strong reviews from critics and a lot of viewers singing its praises, Netflix unfortunately cancelled horror series Marianne after just one season earlier this year. And what a shame that is.
Led by Victoire du Bois in the role of Emma, it followed a successful and well-known horror writer who begins to notice that the characters she creates for her novels are now causing chaos in the real world. The chilling first season brought us a haunting story that satisfied on nearly every level, leaving the door open for another run in the process. But alas, it wasn’t meant to be.
However, recently it seems that the series has found a new audience, with tons of people just discovering it and finding that they’d been missing out on one of Netflix’s scariest shows. And below, you can see but a sample of their reactions to the terrifying journey.
Led by Victoire du Bois in the role of Emma, it followed a successful and well-known horror writer who begins to notice that the characters she creates for her novels are now causing chaos in the real world. The chilling first season brought us a haunting story that satisfied on nearly every level, leaving the door open for another run in the process. But alas, it wasn’t meant to be.
However, recently it seems that the series has found a new audience, with tons of people just discovering it and finding that they’d been missing out on one of Netflix’s scariest shows. And below, you can see but a sample of their reactions to the terrifying journey.
- 12/29/2020
- by Matt Joseph
- We Got This Covered
Despite glowing reviews from critics and positive viewer reception, Netflix has chosen to cancel their new horror series Marianne after only one season.
The French show was led by Victoire du Bois in the role of Emma, a successful and well-known horror author who begins to notice that the evil spirit – a character she created that often haunts her nightmares – is now causing chaos in the real world. The chilling horror of Marianne‘s first season melded well with glimmers of humor and excellent character development, and those who made it through the entirety of its haunting story were left with plenty to talk about.
Though the show ended with enough ambiguity to warrant another season. writer and director Samuel Bodin didn’t mince words when sharing the unfortunate cancellation news. In an Instagram post, he had this to say to fans:
There won’t be a second season for Marianne.
The French show was led by Victoire du Bois in the role of Emma, a successful and well-known horror author who begins to notice that the evil spirit – a character she created that often haunts her nightmares – is now causing chaos in the real world. The chilling horror of Marianne‘s first season melded well with glimmers of humor and excellent character development, and those who made it through the entirety of its haunting story were left with plenty to talk about.
Though the show ended with enough ambiguity to warrant another season. writer and director Samuel Bodin didn’t mince words when sharing the unfortunate cancellation news. In an Instagram post, he had this to say to fans:
There won’t be a second season for Marianne.
- 3/5/2020
- by Billy Givens
- We Got This Covered
It takes a little while to meet the main character of French animator Jérémy Clapin’s extraordinary, dreamlike I Lost My Body; first, we get to know our protagonist’s previous owner. That would be Naoufel (voiced by Hakim Faris — or Dev Patel if you opt for the dubbed alternative, though trust us when we say that you’ll want the original-recipe version), a young Franco-Arabic man in Paris. Soon, via flashbacks, we’ll watch him go from a happy, sound-obsessed child to a sullen twentysomething scarred by tragedy; he...
- 11/12/2019
- by David Fear
- Rollingstone.com
Sneak Peek the award winning animated feature "I Lost My Body", directed by Jérémy Clapin, streaming on Netflix November 15, 2019:
"...'Naoufel', a young man in love with 'Gabrielle', is unaware that in another part of town, a severed hand escapes from a dissection lab (?!) determined to find its body again..."
Voice cast includes Hakim Faris, Victoire Du Bois and Patrick d'Assumçao.
Click the images to enlarge and Sneak Peek "I Lost My Body"...
"...'Naoufel', a young man in love with 'Gabrielle', is unaware that in another part of town, a severed hand escapes from a dissection lab (?!) determined to find its body again..."
Voice cast includes Hakim Faris, Victoire Du Bois and Patrick d'Assumçao.
Click the images to enlarge and Sneak Peek "I Lost My Body"...
- 11/8/2019
- by Unknown
- SneakPeek
In May, a French animated film about a hand debuted at this year’s Cannes Film Festival. Directed by Jérémy Clapin and co-written by Amélie screenwriter Guillaume Laurant, it became the first animated feature to win the Nespresso Grand Prize in International Critics Week. Since then, it was recognised at Annecy Animated Film Festival and more recently, this year’s London Film Festival.
I Lost My Body (original title: J’ai Perdu Mon Corps) follows a hand that ‘wakes up’ completely detached from its owner Naofel (Hakim Faris). As it ventures across the city to find its owner, it reminisces key moments of Naofel’s life and his tentative romance with librarian Gabrielle (Victoire Du Bois).
If you think that I Lost My Body is more like Thing in The Addams Family, think again. Rather than take a whimsical approach to complement its atypical protagonist, Laurant creates a narrative that...
I Lost My Body (original title: J’ai Perdu Mon Corps) follows a hand that ‘wakes up’ completely detached from its owner Naofel (Hakim Faris). As it ventures across the city to find its owner, it reminisces key moments of Naofel’s life and his tentative romance with librarian Gabrielle (Victoire Du Bois).
If you think that I Lost My Body is more like Thing in The Addams Family, think again. Rather than take a whimsical approach to complement its atypical protagonist, Laurant creates a narrative that...
- 11/5/2019
- by Katie Smith-Wong
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Dev Patel, Alia Shawkat and George Wendt have recorded the English-language dub of I Lost My Body, the French animated film that won the top prize at Cannes Critics’ Week this year.
Netflix swooped on the project’s global rights, excluding China, Benelux, Turkey, and France, following its Cannes bow. The film will have an awards-qualifying theatrical run in cinemas beginning November 15 in the U.S. and November 22 in the UK, before arriving on the platform November 29. It will also screen at the BFI London Film Festival on October 4.
Jérémy Clapin directed I Lost My Body, which follows a severed hand that escapes its unhappy fate in a Parisian laboratory and sets out to reconnect with its body. Patel is voicing pizza boy Naoufel, the owner of the hand, and Shawkat is voicing his love interest Gabrielle.
Andrew Bujalski oversaw the English dub under supervision from Clapin. The roles were...
Netflix swooped on the project’s global rights, excluding China, Benelux, Turkey, and France, following its Cannes bow. The film will have an awards-qualifying theatrical run in cinemas beginning November 15 in the U.S. and November 22 in the UK, before arriving on the platform November 29. It will also screen at the BFI London Film Festival on October 4.
Jérémy Clapin directed I Lost My Body, which follows a severed hand that escapes its unhappy fate in a Parisian laboratory and sets out to reconnect with its body. Patel is voicing pizza boy Naoufel, the owner of the hand, and Shawkat is voicing his love interest Gabrielle.
Andrew Bujalski oversaw the English dub under supervision from Clapin. The roles were...
- 9/30/2019
- by Tom Grater
- Deadline Film + TV
Netflix scooped up global rights to Cannes Critics’ Week Award winner “I Lost My Body,” from Xilam Animation, after its premiere at the festival. Now, the streaming giant has tapped Dev Patel, Alia Shawkat, and George Wendt to lead the English-language cast of French director Jérémy Clapin’s animated feature debut, in which young love and childhood memories intertwine as a severed hand crosses Paris in search of its owner.
Additionally, filmmaker Andrew Bujalski has been named the Creative Lead of the English dub under the supervision of director Clapin. Patel, Shawkat, and Wendt will take on the voice roles from the original French voiceover cast led by Hakim Faris, Victoire Du Bois, and Patrick d’Assumçao.
The film’s official synopsis reads: “In a Parisian laboratory, a severed hand escapes its unhappy fate and sets out to reconnect with its body in this Cannes Critics’ Week selection. During a hair-raising escapade across the city,...
Additionally, filmmaker Andrew Bujalski has been named the Creative Lead of the English dub under the supervision of director Clapin. Patel, Shawkat, and Wendt will take on the voice roles from the original French voiceover cast led by Hakim Faris, Victoire Du Bois, and Patrick d’Assumçao.
The film’s official synopsis reads: “In a Parisian laboratory, a severed hand escapes its unhappy fate and sets out to reconnect with its body in this Cannes Critics’ Week selection. During a hair-raising escapade across the city,...
- 9/30/2019
- by Tambay Obenson
- Indiewire
Why does Netflix insist on never letting me sleep through the night? First it fueled my nightmares with freaky TV series like The Haunting of Hill House and Slasher, and now the streaming giant has decided to drop a spooky new horror show just in time for Friday the 13th: Marianne. So, is it worth a watch? And what's it about?
First things first: it's a French series split into eight equally terrifying episodes and stars Victoire Du Bois in the lead. She plays Emma, a famous horror novelist who uses a nightmarish witch, Marianne, who haunted her dreams as a child for inspiration in her latest book. Unfortunately, during a trip back to her seaside childhood home, Emma discovers that Marianne - as well as other demons in her stories - might be legit, since people in her hometown have reported interactions with the evil spirit who "enters your soul.
First things first: it's a French series split into eight equally terrifying episodes and stars Victoire Du Bois in the lead. She plays Emma, a famous horror novelist who uses a nightmarish witch, Marianne, who haunted her dreams as a child for inspiration in her latest book. Unfortunately, during a trip back to her seaside childhood home, Emma discovers that Marianne - as well as other demons in her stories - might be legit, since people in her hometown have reported interactions with the evil spirit who "enters your soul.
- 9/18/2019
- by Quinn Keaney
- Popsugar.com
At the 2014 Cartoon Movie co-production forum in Lyon, France, I sat in on a pitch session for the strangest animated feature imaginable. This particular film, an artsy — and, fittingly, hand-drawn — indie titled “J’ai perdu mon corps” (or “I Lost My Body”), would be told from the point of view of a severed hand, separated under ambiguous circumstances, and the epic quest to reunite with its owner. I left Cartoon Movie intrigued but also feeling reasonably certain that this defiantly unconventional project would never see the light of day.
Flash forward five years, and “I Lost My Body” not only exists but screened to great acclaim at the Cannes Film Festival, where it was acquired by Netflix and won the top prize in Critics’ Week. In its finished form, director Jérémy Clapin’s peculiar undertaking is even stranger than it sounded to me half a decade earlier, and yet, there’s...
Flash forward five years, and “I Lost My Body” not only exists but screened to great acclaim at the Cannes Film Festival, where it was acquired by Netflix and won the top prize in Critics’ Week. In its finished form, director Jérémy Clapin’s peculiar undertaking is even stranger than it sounded to me half a decade earlier, and yet, there’s...
- 6/14/2019
- by Peter Debruge
- Variety Film + TV
Netflix acquired the worldwide rights to two films that played at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, Mati Diop’s “Atlantics,” which played in competition, and Jérémy Clapin’s animated film “I Lost My Body,” which won the top prize from the Cannes Critics’ Week sidebar of the festival, the streamer announced Saturday.
For “Atlantics,” Netflix acquired worldwide rights excluding China, Benelux, Switzerland, Russia and France, but it has subscription video on demand (SVoD) rights for 36 months following its theatrical release in France, Benelux and Switzerland. For “I Lost My Body, Netflix acquired worldwide excluding China, Benelux, Turkey and France, but also has SVoD rights for 36 months following its theatrical in France, an individual with knowledge told TheWrap.
Diop’s “Atlantics” played in competition and, on Saturday, was awarded the Grand Prix prize from the jury led by Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu. Diop made her feature directorial debut on the film...
For “Atlantics,” Netflix acquired worldwide rights excluding China, Benelux, Switzerland, Russia and France, but it has subscription video on demand (SVoD) rights for 36 months following its theatrical release in France, Benelux and Switzerland. For “I Lost My Body, Netflix acquired worldwide excluding China, Benelux, Turkey and France, but also has SVoD rights for 36 months following its theatrical in France, an individual with knowledge told TheWrap.
Diop’s “Atlantics” played in competition and, on Saturday, was awarded the Grand Prix prize from the jury led by Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu. Diop made her feature directorial debut on the film...
- 5/25/2019
- by Brian Welk
- The Wrap
Netflix has scooped up the global rights to Cannes Grand Prix Winner Atlantics from female director Mati Diop and the Cannes Critics’ Week Award Winner I Lost My Body from Xilam Animation. That pic reps director Jérémy Clapin’s Animated Feature Debut.
For Atlantics, the deal doesn’t include China, Benelux, Switzerland, Russia, France, while I Lost My Body excludes China, Benelux, Turkey, France. Atlantics was sold by Fionnuala Jamison at mk2 films. I Lost My Body was sold by Carole Baraton at Charades
Atlantics reps Diop’s feature directorial debut and takes place in Dakar along the Atlantic Coast. Seventeen-year-old Ada is in love with Souleiman, a young construction worker. But she has been promised to another man. One night, Souleiman and his co-workers leave the country by sea, in hopes of a better future. Several days later, a fire ruins Ada’s wedding and a mysterious fever starts to spread.
For Atlantics, the deal doesn’t include China, Benelux, Switzerland, Russia, France, while I Lost My Body excludes China, Benelux, Turkey, France. Atlantics was sold by Fionnuala Jamison at mk2 films. I Lost My Body was sold by Carole Baraton at Charades
Atlantics reps Diop’s feature directorial debut and takes place in Dakar along the Atlantic Coast. Seventeen-year-old Ada is in love with Souleiman, a young construction worker. But she has been promised to another man. One night, Souleiman and his co-workers leave the country by sea, in hopes of a better future. Several days later, a fire ruins Ada’s wedding and a mysterious fever starts to spread.
- 5/25/2019
- by Anthony D'Alessandro
- Deadline Film + TV
Both deals cover the world excluding France and several other territories.
Netflix made its presence felt on closing night in Cannes, swooping on most of the world on both Mati Diop’s Cannes Grand Prix winner Atlantics and Jérémy Clapin’s Critics’ Week winner I Lost My Body.
The streaming titan made a noise with the late pick-ups, despite its deliberate absence from Competition with its original films due to the strictures of French media chronology laws.
Both deals were for the world excluding France, unsurprisingly, as well as China and Benelux. The Atlantics deal also excluded Switzerland and Russia.
Netflix made its presence felt on closing night in Cannes, swooping on most of the world on both Mati Diop’s Cannes Grand Prix winner Atlantics and Jérémy Clapin’s Critics’ Week winner I Lost My Body.
The streaming titan made a noise with the late pick-ups, despite its deliberate absence from Competition with its original films due to the strictures of French media chronology laws.
Both deals were for the world excluding France, unsurprisingly, as well as China and Benelux. The Atlantics deal also excluded Switzerland and Russia.
- 5/25/2019
- by Jeremy Kay
- ScreenDaily
A hand-drawn hand stars in French director Jérémy Clapin’s engrossingly lyrical debut, “I Lost My Body,” a life-affirming work of graphic poetry that stands as the sole animated selection at Cannes’ Critics’ Week, where it world-premiered on Friday. Inventively adapted from Guillaume Laurant’s 2006 novel, “Happy Hand,” this bona fide treasure is sure to leave its melancholic fingerprints all over the viewer’s soul.
The film’s title refers to what its protagonist, a severed right hand, would note as its current predicament. Separated from the body of Naoufel (Hakim Faris), an orphaned young man who feels adrift, the sentient extremity escapes the lab where it has been kept since a grim accident caused the detachment.
Suffering from what’s best explained as reverse phantom limb syndrome, the hand aches to reunite with its rightful owner. Clapin, working from a place of utmost earnestness, depicts its voyage through Paris,...
The film’s title refers to what its protagonist, a severed right hand, would note as its current predicament. Separated from the body of Naoufel (Hakim Faris), an orphaned young man who feels adrift, the sentient extremity escapes the lab where it has been kept since a grim accident caused the detachment.
Suffering from what’s best explained as reverse phantom limb syndrome, the hand aches to reunite with its rightful owner. Clapin, working from a place of utmost earnestness, depicts its voyage through Paris,...
- 5/17/2019
- by Carlos Aguilar
- The Wrap
Luca Guadagnino’s Call Me By Your Name appears to be well on its way to box office and awards success, having earned both this year’s best opening weekend among limited releases and a Best Picture award from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. The film is about an affair between Elio (Timothée Chalamet), a precocious teenager, and Oliver (Armie Hammer), the graduate student who comes to Italy to assist Elio’s father in the summer of 1983. Like 2015’s A Bigger Splash, Guadagnino’s latest features lots of pretty images of beautiful people doing luxurious things, but, as Manohla Dargis contends at The New York Times, it has more than that to offer:Even so, the lyricism seduces as does fragile, ecstatic Elio. “Call Me by Your Name” is less a coming-of-age story, a tale of innocence and loss, than one about coming into sensibility. In that way, it is...
- 12/14/2017
- MUBI
Title: Call Me by Your Name Director: Luca Guadagnino Script: James Ivory Cast: Timothée Chalamet, Armie Hammer, Michael Stuhlbarg, Amira Casar, Esther Garrel, Victoire Du Bois, Vanda Capriolo, Antonio Rimoldi, Elena Bucci, Marco Sgrosso, André Aciman, Peter Spears. Italian director, Luca Guadagnino returns to the big screen with a profound coming-of-age story. It is the […]
The post Call Me By Your Name Movie Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post Call Me By Your Name Movie Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 11/16/2017
- by Chiara Spagnoli Gabardi
- ShockYa
It has been a really good time for Trailers lately. The latest in this seemingly endless line of promising looks at potential Oscar fare is Call Me By Your Name, which was the talk of the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year. The flick could very well be the independent title of 2017, prestige wise. If nothing else, it appears like a powerful and untraditional romance. My hunch is that voters will absolutely eat it up. There’s a lot to like here, to say the least. We’ll be showing you the Trailer to the film at the end of the piece, but first, let us go ahead and dig into it a little bit. The movie is a period romantic drama, based off of the 2007 novel of the same name. Set in Northern Italy during the summer of 1983, the story follows the enamored connection between an American expatriate named...
- 8/3/2017
- by Joey Magidson
- Hollywoodnews.com
"Is there anything you don't know?" Sony Pictures Classics has finally released the first official trailer for Call Me By Your Name, Italian director Luca Guadagnino's assured masterpiece that first premiered at the Sundance Film Festival this year to rave reviews. The film stars Timothée Chalamet, in one of the best performances all year, as a boy living in Italy with his American-Italian family. An older American man, played by Armie Hammer, comes to stay at their house for the summer, and the two slowly fall in love over the course of a summer full of music, food, and romance. The full cast includes Michael Stuhlbarg, Amira Casar, Esther Garrel, Victoire Du Bois, and Vanda Capriolo. I've seen the film twice and it's easily one of my Top 10 films of the year, no question. I wrote in my glowing Sundance review that it's "an utterly sublime cinematic experience that left me floored.
- 8/1/2017
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
"I am planted within you. I am alone with you." IFC Films has debuted an official Us trailer for the French drama From the Land of the Moon, which first premiered at the Cannes Film Festival last year (not this year). This romantic story from filmmaker Nicole Garcia stars Marion Cotillard as a French woman from a small village in the South of France who falls in love with a man she meets in the Alps. Set right at the end of World War II, she is married to a man she doesn't really love, only to find the man she really loves when she goes to a clinic in the mountains to heal her kidney stones. The full cast includes Louis Garrel, Alex Brendemühl, Brigitte Roüan, Victoire Du Bois. From the looks of it, this seems to be a very sensual, sultry thriller about a woman being allowed to be with her true love. Is that so much to ...
- 6/21/2017
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
After receiving critical acclaim at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, Luca Guadagnino’s Italian masterpiece, “Call Me by Your Name,” will screen at Berlinale. Based on André Aciman’s beloved 2007 novel of the same name, the drama chronicles a romance between a 17-year old boy and a handsome American intern who is staying at his parents’ cliffside mansion on the Italian Riviera.
In a new clip shared by Berlinale’s website, audiences witness the young man, Elio’s (Timothée Chalamet), first interaction with Oliver (Armie Hammer). Oliver is seen arriving to the Perlman estate and greeted by Mr. Perlman (Michael Stuhlbarg) and his wife. Elio is then called down and takes Oliver’s bags to his room.
In the beginning Elio is somewhat distant towards Oliver until then the two begin to spend more time together. Per the website’s film description, “Elio begins to make tentative overtures towards...
In a new clip shared by Berlinale’s website, audiences witness the young man, Elio’s (Timothée Chalamet), first interaction with Oliver (Armie Hammer). Oliver is seen arriving to the Perlman estate and greeted by Mr. Perlman (Michael Stuhlbarg) and his wife. Elio is then called down and takes Oliver’s bags to his room.
In the beginning Elio is somewhat distant towards Oliver until then the two begin to spend more time together. Per the website’s film description, “Elio begins to make tentative overtures towards...
- 2/10/2017
- by Liz Calvario
- Indiewire
Call Me By Your Name Review Call Me By Your Name (2017), Film Review from the 33rd Annual Sundance Film Festival, a movie directed by Luca Guadagnino, starring Armie Hammer, Timothée Chalamet, Michael Stuhlbarg, Amira Casar, Esther Garrel, and Victoire du Bois. As the sleeper hit of this year’s Sundance Film Festival, Call Me By Your Name landed softly to critical acclaim that spread rapidly among the […]...
- 2/9/2017
- by Drew Stelter
- Film-Book
Berlin’s Panorama lineup also includes new films from Us, China and Brazil.
Berlin’s Panorama strand is now complete following the addition of 24 additional titles.
A total of 51 works from 43 countries have been chosen for screening in the section, including 21 in Panorama Dokumente and 29 feature films in the main programme and Panorama Special. 36 of these films will be getting their world premieres at the Berlinale.
The German production Tiger Girl by Jakob Lass will open this year’s edition of Panorama Special at Berlin’s Zoo Palast cinema, along with the previously announced Brazilian production Vazante.
Among newly confirmed films are UK Sundance title God’s Own Country, Luca Guadagnino’s Call Me By Your Name, Cate Shortland’s Berlin Syndrome, feminist fairy tale The Misandrists by Berlinale regular Bruce Labruce, Erik Poppe’s The King’s Choice and Belgian-French-Lebanese co-production Insyriated which stars Hiam Abbass as a woman trapped in an apartment during war.[p...
Berlin’s Panorama strand is now complete following the addition of 24 additional titles.
A total of 51 works from 43 countries have been chosen for screening in the section, including 21 in Panorama Dokumente and 29 feature films in the main programme and Panorama Special. 36 of these films will be getting their world premieres at the Berlinale.
The German production Tiger Girl by Jakob Lass will open this year’s edition of Panorama Special at Berlin’s Zoo Palast cinema, along with the previously announced Brazilian production Vazante.
Among newly confirmed films are UK Sundance title God’s Own Country, Luca Guadagnino’s Call Me By Your Name, Cate Shortland’s Berlin Syndrome, feminist fairy tale The Misandrists by Berlinale regular Bruce Labruce, Erik Poppe’s The King’s Choice and Belgian-French-Lebanese co-production Insyriated which stars Hiam Abbass as a woman trapped in an apartment during war.[p...
- 1/25/2017
- by andreas.wiseman@screendaily.com (Andreas Wiseman)
- ScreenDaily
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