Tag Archives: french

‘Drive’: The Reviews Are In!

Critics enjoy film’s intensity and performances, especially Ryan Gosling’s. By Kara Warner Ryan Gosling and Carey Mulligan in “Drive” Photo: FilmDistrict What do you get when you cast pretty, popular, Oscar-nominated actor Ryan Gosling in a violent action thriller, directed by gritty director Nicholas Refn, featuring a stirring performance by celebrated writer/director/comedian Albert Brooks? A critically acclaimed potential award candidate, that’s what. “Drive” is the story of an intense, introverted driver-for-hire (Gosling) who is an automobile stuntman for Hollywood pictures by day and a getaway man for armed crooks by night. All is going relatively well until Gosling’s driver becomes involved with his neighbor Irene (Carey Mulligan) and offers to help her estranged ex-convict husband, who wants to rid himself of unpaid debts to a group of dangerous criminals (one of whom is Brooks). Naturally, things get heated and really violent. With a 95 percent fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes , most critics are enjoying the violent intensity of the film and the performances. So let’s dig a little deeper into the “Drive” reviews : Gosling As Gritty Action Star “Ryan Gosling’s incarnation of the hauntingly lonely Driver is a beautifully realized, complete performance. He understands not just the psychology of the character, but how he fits into the tone and pacing of the film as a whole; he and Refn seem to be partnering as director and actor, the way Laura Dern partners with David Lynch or Julianne Moore with Todd Haynes. I’ve read that Gosling first approached Refn, gave him the James Sallis novel this is based on and proposed turning it into a film. If true, this indicates two promising things about Gosling’s future: He has both good taste and a keen sense of what projects he should take on as an actor. Here, this almost excessively beautiful performer is in complete control of his own considerable magnetism. In a role that could have flattered his vanity and allowed for all manner of ostentatious brooding, Gosling instead quietly dives into the emotional black hole at Driver’s center, and takes us along for the ride.” — Dana Stevens, Slate.com The Direction “Refn, a Danish director whose previous films include ‘Bronson’ and ‘Valhalla Rising,’ is known for his love of blood, and when the plot of ‘Drive’ quickens he finds plenty of chances to indulge in his penchant for lurid, stylized violence. But even his most fetishized flourishes are tempered here, not just with the tender love story between Irene and Driver but with Refn’s newfound restraint (one pivotal murderous episode occurs entirely in shadow).” — Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post The Violence “Less user-friendly is the film’s disturbing violence. ‘Drive’ doesn’t spend a lot of time on mayhem, but what does get put on screen is intense, unsettling and increasingly grotesque and graphic as the film goes on. For fans of director Refn, known among chaos aficionados for made-in-Europe violent fare like ‘The Pusher’ trilogy and ‘Bronson,’ this is bloody business as usual. But the mayhem here so clashes with the high style and traditionalism of the rest of the film that when the bloodletting goes into overdrive, so to speak, it throws you out of the picture, diluting the mood rather than enhancing it.” — Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times The Final Word, Pro-Con Style “There will be those who’ll say they liked this movie better when it was ‘Thief,’ Jean-Pierre Melville’s ‘Le Samoura

DJ Mehdi Death Details Emerge

Producer fell 7 meters when a skylight shattered during a birthday party at his apartment. By Gil Kaufman DJ Mehdi Photo: Getty Images Some details emerged on Wednesday (September 14) about the shocking death of French electro producer DJ Mehdi . The popular DJ (born Mehdi Fav

Secretary General Tuiloma Neroni Slade Picture

Leaders of the Small Island States, Head of Delegation from Tokelau Aliki Faipule Foua Toloa, Prisident of French Polynesia Oscar Temaru, Head of Delegation of Wallis and Futuna Michel Jean Jean, President of the Republic Of Naura, Marcus Stephen Prime Minster of of the Cook Island Henry Puna, Prime Minister of Tuvalu Willie Telavi, Premier of Niue Toke Tufukia Talangi and (Front row L-R) President of Kiribati Anote Tong ,Secretary General Tuiloma Neroni Slade, President of the Marshall Islands

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Secretary General Tuiloma Neroni Slade Picture

Je Veux Parody: Gérard Depardieu Spoofs Plane Peeing Incident in New Video

Gérard Depardieu may not have the bladder control he used to , but at least his sense of humor is as intact as ever. The French screen legend appears in a new parody video with his Asterix and Obelix: On Her Majesty’s Secret Service co-star Edouard Baer, featuring the duo in character as the famous comic-book Gauls and Depardieu battling valiantly for lavatory privileges. It’s all in French, but hey. Having to pee is a universal language all its own.

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Je Veux Parody: Gérard Depardieu Spoofs Plane Peeing Incident in New Video

REVIEW: Kristin Scott Thomas and Ludivine Sagnier Play Workplace Power Games in Love Crime

An executive and an underling are working late in a plushly appointed living room at the start of Love Crime , a twisty French drama about office competition and revenge that’s the final film from director Alain Corneau, who passed away last year. The exec treats the other employee in a way that would send any real-world worker running off to gather evidence for a sexual harassment lawsuit — invading the young woman’s personal space, telling her how pretty she looks when she smiles, leaning into her throat to smell traces of her perfume.

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REVIEW: Kristin Scott Thomas and Ludivine Sagnier Play Workplace Power Games in Love Crime

It’s a Good Old Fashioned Orgy of Boobs

A Good Old Fashioned Orgy opens, and star Angela Sarafyan delivers with orgy-licious boobs. The French biopic Gainsbourg has model Laetitia Casta’s castanets, and on Blu-Ray, Final Destination 3 has Crystal Lowe and Chelan Simmons nude .

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It’s a Good Old Fashioned Orgy of Boobs

Darren Aronofsky Told a Bad Joke, and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Happy September! Also in this edition of The Broadsheet: The Hunger Games has a Web site! (Sort of?) … Hollywood eyes a summer box-office record … The Church of Scientology goes to all-out war with The New Yorker … A fest favorite is coming to theaters … and more…

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Darren Aronofsky Told a Bad Joke, and 6 Other Stories You’ll Be Talking About Today

Cher is Angry

“lovelies! Chaz is Being Viciously Attacked on Blogs & Message boards about being on DWTS ! This is Still America right ? It took guts 2 do it. Can u guys check out sites & give him your support? BTW …Mothers don’t stop Getting angry with stupid bigots who fk with their children!” Now you know. [ @cher via WSJ , AP ]

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Cher is Angry

1988 George Lucas Would Totally Hate 2011 George Lucas

Back in 1988, in testimony before Congress, one of Hollywood’s most successful, beloved and influential filmmaker-moguls expressed deep concern for a disturbing trend sweeping the movie industry. “People who alter or destroy works of art and our cultural heritage for profit or as an exercise of power are barbarians,” this filmmaker said, “and if the laws of the United States continue to condone this behavior, history will surely classify us as a barbaric society.” Damn straight, George Lucas .

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1988 George Lucas Would Totally Hate 2011 George Lucas

REVIEW: Overstyled Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life Fumbles Singer-Songwriter’s Myth

The bold, relatively brief life of Serge Gainsbourg, the French singer, songwriter and svengali who died in 1991, is twice removed from the story told by Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life . First-time writer and director Joann Sfar has said that polishing the fine points of that life — ceding to biographical “truth” — was of no interest to him. A top-flight fan and best-selling comic book artist, Sfar was intent on avoiding the brash outlines of a biopic in favor of a certain sort of homage, the tender evocation of style and personality in place of strict chronology and narrative arc. A parallel determination to inhabit his hero’s life with an intensely personal, interpretive gusto bends the film back into a more conventional shape; the big moments play out with the giddy gratification of fan fiction. Both abstract and very specific, Sfar’s inspirations abound such that they frequently overshadow those of his subject.

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REVIEW: Overstyled Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life Fumbles Singer-Songwriter’s Myth