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#Philippe Rousselot
starxcxboy · 3 months
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— Big Fish (2003), directed by Tim Burton, based on the novel by Daniel Wallace.
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cappedinamber · 1 year
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Mary Reilly (1996)
Directed by Stephen Frears
Cinematography by Philippe Rousselot
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absencesrepetees · 2 years
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planet of the apes (tim burton, 2001)
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cinesludge · 10 months
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Movie #61 of 2023: Beast
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ruthmedia2 · 2 years
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Beast (15)
Beast (15) Director: Baltasar Kormákur Runtime: 92 minutes Cast: Idris Elba, Sharlto Copley, Iyana Halley, Leah Sava Jeffries Synopsis: A father and his two teenage daughters find themselves hunted by a massive rogue lion intent on proving that the Savanna has but one apex predator. URL:https://youtu.be/oQMc7Sq36mI Icelandic actor, theatre and film director, Baltasar Kormákur [101 Reykjavík…
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genevieveetguy · 2 years
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Histoires d’A., Marielle Issartel and Charles Belmont (1974)
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facesofcinema · 2 years
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Sherlock Holmes (2009)
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le-journal-catalan · 1 year
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Saint-Estève : Le salon des minéraux, fossiles, bijoux et bien-être
Voici la 5ème édition du salon des minéraux, fossiles et bijoux les 11 et 12 février 2023 à l’espace St Mamet de St Estève.A cette occasion, pour la 1ère année, Philippe Thevenot crée un espace bien-être d’une vingtaine de stands. Tout au long du salon, des conférences auront lieu pour présenter les activités de chacun. Les samedi et dimanche après-midi, à partir de 15h, Brigitte Rousselot,…
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vibe-stash · 1 year
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Dangerous Liaisons (1988)
Director: Stephen Frears DOP: Philippe Rousselot Production Design: Stuart Craig
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vietgiorgio · 1 year
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"I thought, she's even lonelier than me. She loves as though she is seeking revenge."
Queen Margot (1994)
Director: Patrice Chéreau
Cinematography: Philippe Rousselot
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cappedinamber · 1 year
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Beast (2022)
Directed by Baltasar Kormákur
Cinematography by Philippe Rousselot
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nine-frames · 2 years
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“What's your name, Mr. Postman?“
Diva, 1981.
Dir. Jean-Jacques Beineix | Writ. Jean-Jacques Beineix &  Jean Van Hamme | DOP Philippe Rousselot
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centroshotcinema · 8 months
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🎞️The Big Fish (2003) 🎥Tim Burton 📷Philippe Rousselot
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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Michelle Pfeiffer and John Malkovich in Dangerous Liaisons (Stephen Frears, 1988) Cast: Glenn Close, John Malkovich, Michelle Pfeiffer, Swoosie Kurtz, Keanu Reeves, Mildred Natwick, Uma Thurman, Peter Capaldi. Screenplay: Christopher Hampton, based on his play and a novel by Choderlos de Laclos. Cinematography: Philippe Rousselot. Production design: Stuart Craig. Film editing: Mick Audsley. Music: George Fenton. 
"Wicked" is a word that has lost a good deal of its pejorative quality, and not just in Boston where it became slang meaning "excellent." There's an attractive quality to wickedness that's lacking in words like "evil." Which is not to say that the wicked pair of the Marquise de Marteuil (Glenn Close) and the Vicomte de Valmont (John Malkovich) aren't reprehensible, but that they fascinate us with their sly wit and determined pursuit of their aims. Close in particular makes the marquise so delicious that there's a considerable shock when she self-destructs upon the failure of her plans, and perhaps the audience even has a glimmer of pity for her final comeuppance. The choice of Malkovich to play Valmont was controversial: He's an actor known for eccentric roles, not the type for a suave seducer. And yet he gives Valmont a snake-like fascination -- so snaky that at one point he even hisses at Swoosie Kurtz's Madame de Volanges -- that makes his conquests of Uma Thurman's Cécile and Michelle Pfeiffer's Madame de Tourvel plausible. He also brings out the vulnerable side of Valmont, so that we find it credible that this implacably rakish figure could find himself undone by this conquest of Madame de Tourvel. But then again, who wouldn't find themselves undone by Michelle Pfeiffer, then at the early peak of her career? In casting Dangerous Liaisons, Stephen Frears followed the lead of Milos Forman, who cast Amadeus (1984) with American actors instead of the British ones usually called on for costume dramas set in Europe, a move that shocked some critics -- especially the British. (The exception in Dangerous Liaisons is Peter Capaldi as Valmont's henchman Azolan, and his Scottish accent stands out oddly.) The irony here is that Forman was at work on his own version of the Choderlos de Laclos novel, called Valmont (1989), which was doomed by being released a year after Frears's film. Dangerous Liaisons won Oscars for Christopher Hampton's screenplay, Stuart Craig's art direction and Gérard James's set decoration, and for James Acheson's costumes. Close and Pfeiffer were nominees, as was George Fenton for a score that blended nicely with excerpts from Vivaldi, Handel, Bach, and Gluck.
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