The film ably captures the energy of a quirky children’s book.
The film is firmly grounded in the economic and social terrain of contemporary France.
A mixed bag for a career masterpiece, this Blu-ray gets some things wrong in terms of authoring.
Operatic and droll, the film wears its period compositions and magisterial length lightly.
Apocalyptic amour fou corrupts the earth in Happy End, Arnaud and Jean-Marie Larrieu’s adaptation of Dominique Noguez’s 1991 novel about love, loss, and nuclear bombs over Moscow.
A sweet tale of a man learning to care about others, The Grocer’s Son is still simpleminded on a very fundamental level.
Honoré is committed to exploring winding avenues of contemporary romance.
The film is an astonishingly anti-dramatic take on the children of the failed May ‘68 revolution.
The film is a joyous mash note to the events of May ‘68.