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#andré turpin
lamiaprigione · 1 year
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Mommy (2014)
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genevieveetguy · 10 months
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The Nature of Love (Simple comme Sylvain), Monia Chokri (2023)
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noteverticali · 3 months
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La natura dell'amore: Monia Chokri e la freschezza della monogamia femminile
Cos’è più importante: l’affinità sessuale o quella intellettuale? È questo il fulcro del terzo film diretto dalla canadese Monia Chokri, una commedia romantica divertente e consapevole, intitolata “Simple comme Sylvain” (“Semplice come Sylvain”) o “La natura dell’amore”, nella versione in italiano. Dopo averlo visto, non si può non preferire il titolo originale francese: “La natura dell’amore” è…
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se7enpixels · 8 months
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Tom at the Farm (2013) dir. Xavier Dolan
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Incendies (2010)
Director: Denis Villeneuve
Cinematographer: André Turpin
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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Kit Harington and Chris Zylka in The Death and Life of John F. Donovan (Xavier Dolan, 2018) Cast: Kit Harington, Natalie Portman, Jacob Tremblay, Susan Sarandon, Kathy Bates, Ben Schnetzer, Thandiwe Newton, Jared Keeso, Chris Zylka, Amara Karan, Emily Hampshire, Michael Gambon. Screenplay: Xavier Dolan, Jacob Tierney. Cinematography: André Turpin. Production design: Anne Pritchard, Colombe Raby. Film editing: Mathieu Denis, Xavier Dolan. Music: Gabriel Yared. I had read some of the reviews, noted the abysmal 21% ranking on Rotten Tomatoes, and knew that The Death & Life of John F. Donovan had barely been released in the United States. But how bad could a movie that featured three best actress Oscar winners as well as such celebrated performers as Thandiwe Newton and Michael Gambon really be? Maybe this was a case of a film that simply went over people's heads and will be rediscovered in a few years to become a cult film. Well, no. This is not an unappreciated gem. It's a mess of a movie about the perils of celebrity, with an embarrassingly off-the-mark treatment of life in the closet, and some uncomfortable echoes of real celebrity secret lives that only add queasiness to the mix. The denouement of the film is sheer hackery: There are two Big Speeches, one by Kathy Bates and the other by Gambon (in a kind of wise old man ex machina appearance), that are supposed somehow to resolve the film's theme, but are only anti-climactic. Is it well-acted? Yes. Kit Harington hasn't quite escaped the aura of Jon Snow in the film, partly because the title role calls on him to be a hugely successful TV star, but he has a looseness and natural delivery that he was never allowed in the fantasy confines of Game of Thrones. Jacob Tremblay, as the young, starstruck fan who becomes a pen pal with Donovan, shows that he really is the capable child actor that Room (Lenny Abrahamson, 2015) suggested he was. Natalie Portman and Susan Sarandon do what they can with badly written roles. It's said that writer-director Xavier Dolan's original cut of the film was four hours long, and that the trimming to the current two-hour length involved jettisoning the work of yet another major actress, Jessica Chastain, so it's possible that some of the incoherence of the film stems from desperate editing. But nothing about the movie really makes me want to watch the director's original cut.
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sistahscifi · 2 years
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Loved these signed paperback editions of Wake. Each copy comes with a QR code to a complimentary audiodrama adaption of the book! We are in stock! Link in bio: @sistahscifi | www.sistahscifi.com. Reposted from @wilsonmoralesfilm Check out audiodrama adaption of Wake by Dr. Rebecca Hall and written by Tyler English-Beckwith @tyleronline Starring DeWanda Wise @dewandawise, WAKE is an imaginative tour-de-force that tells the powerful story of women-led slave revolts, and chronicles scholar Dr. Rebecca Hall’s efforts to uncover the truth about these women warriors who, until now, have been left out of the historical record. Originally published as part graphic novel and part memoir, Podium Audio (@podiumaudio) acquired the exclusive global audio rights to WAKE, the graphic novel named one of the Best Books of 2021 by NPR (@npr). Over the last year, Podium Audio has developed this work into a feature-length audio play in partnership with critically acclaimed playwright and television writer Tyler English-Beckwith. Full cast includes DeWanda Wise, Chanté Adams (@chante_adams), Jerrie Johnson (@TheJerrieJohnson), Fọlákẹ́ Olówófôyekù (@thefolake), Katherine McNamara (@Kat.McNamara), Bahni Turpin (@prospertunia), Rhian Rees, Karen Malina White, Román Zaragoza (@RománZaragoza), Alex Ubokudom (@AlexUbokudom), John Clarence Stewart, Blake Cooper Griffin, Tim DeKay, Kate Steele, André Sogliuzzo and Matthew Wolf. Original music composed by Jace Clayton (AKA DJ / Rupture @DJRupture) Reposted from @comfycozyup Day 4 #readsoullit unexpected fave #wake surprise me last year. This was an amazing graphic Novel #bookstagram #BlackAugust #graphicnovel #history #nonfiction #reading #WakeGraphicNovel #RebeccaHall #sistahscifi @wakecomicbook @simonandschuster (at Sistah Scifi) https://www.instagram.com/p/Cg8DlSPpPpc/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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lostgoonie1980 · 2 years
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246. Cosmos (Cosmos, 1996), dir. Jennifer Alleyn, Manon Briand, Marie-Julie Dallaire, Arto Paragamian, André Turpin & Denis Villeneuve
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maxbrodbeckfilmblog · 2 months
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The Man who Fell in Love with the Sky: Visual References
Here is a selection of my biggest inspirations, in order of relevance. (Visually not thematically)
The Wind Rises The Wind Rises (Miyazaki, 2013) - Atashi Okui
Kiki’s Delivery Service (Miyazaki, 1989) - Shigeo Sugimura
The Last Black Man In San Francisco (Talbot, 2019) - Adam Newport-Berra
Badlands (Malick, 1973) - Tak Fujimoto, Stevan Larner & Brian Probyn
The Worst Person In The World (Trier, 2021) - Kasper Tuxen
Past Lives (Song, 2023) - Shabier Kirchner
Memories of Murder (Bong, 2003) - Kim Hyung-ku
Mirror (Tarkovsky, 1975) - Georgi Rerberg
Close (Dhont, 2022) - Frank van den Eeden
Mommy (Dolan, 2014) - André Turpin
The Tree of Life (Malick, 2011) - Emmanuel Lubezki
Call Me By Your Name (Guadagino, 2017) - Sayombhu Mukdeeprom
Saltburn (Fennell, 2023) - Linus Sandgren
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1hundred1hundred30 · 11 months
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93. Film - It’s Only The End Of The World (Juste la fin du monde)
Year - 2016 Director - Xavier Dolan Cast - Vincent Cassel, Marion Cotillard, Léa Seydoux Cinematographer - André Turpin Rating - 3/10 For fans of - Tom At The Farm, I Killed My Mother
What it is.
A terminally ill writer has an emotional reunion with his estranged family, navigating the complex dynamics and lingering regrets in their final moments together
What rates it.
I found this movie boring since the predictable family dynamics didn't surprise me. Although Cassel's performance in the final argument scene was strong, it might have been impressive to me because I love when he plays an unhinged brute.
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cinemamonamore · 4 years
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Tom at the Farm (2013) dir. Xavier Dolan
Cinematography: André Turpin
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From Matthias & Maxime, by Xavier Dolan
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kompostaste · 3 years
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August 32nd on Earth (1998)
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se7enpixels · 8 months
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Tom at the Farm (2013) dir. Xavier Dolan
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Incendies (2010)
Director: Denis Villeneuve
Cinematographer: André Turpin
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byneddiedingo · 2 years
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August 32nd on Earth (Denis Villeneuve, 1998)
Cast: Pascale Bussières, Alexis Martin, Evelyne Rompré, Emmanuel Bilodeau, Richard S. Hamilton, Serge Thériault, Ivan Smith, Joanne Côté, R. Craig Costin. Screenplay: Denis Villeneuve. Cinematography: André Turpin. Art direction: Jean Babin. Film editing: Sophie Leblond. Music: Natalie Boileau, Robert Charlebois, Pierre Desrochers, Jean Leloup.
August 32nd on Earth begins with one of its protagonists in an automobile accident and ends with the other in a coma. In between, it's some kind of romantic comedy. This confusion of tones is obviously intentional, clearly indicated by the title of the film, which sets your expectations askew the way the reference to clocks striking 13 in the first sentence of George Orwell's 1984 does. Simone (Pascale Bussières) and Philippe (Alexis Martin) are in the throes of a midlife crisis (a premature one considering that she's 26 and he's 30). She's fed up with her job as a model, and he's thinking of dropping out of medical school. So after her automobile accident leaves her hanging upside down in the wrecked car and suffering from a concussion, she decides that it's time to have a baby. She's not particularly choosy about who the father will be, but she settles on her old friend Philippe. They're not lovers, and in fact he's presently involved with another woman. But eventually he agrees, with the stipulation that they perform the act of conception in the desert. So they fly from Montreal to Salt Lake City and hire a taxi to take them out to the salt flats. Lots of other curious stuff occurs, including the discovery of a dead body and a night spent getting drunk on mescal in a Japanese capsule hotel. Meanwhile, on-screen dates tell us it's August 33, 34, and so on until they return to Montreal and the dates switch to September. Reality begins to set in.  All of this could have been intolerably whimsical -- there are those who think it is -- but it was the first feature from writer-director Denis Villeneuve, who would go on to direct such brain-teasers as Enemy (2013) and Arrival (2016), and major films like Sicario (2015), Blade Runner 2049 (2017), and the blockbuster Dune (2021). Like his better-known films, August 32nd on Earth has striking visuals and solid performances. It's the kind of movie designed to provoke arguments about what it all means, and if that's the sort of thing you like, or if you're just interested in the early days of an important filmmaker, it's definitely worth checking out.
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