Jealousy (La Jalousie) Distrib Films Reviewed for Shockya by Harvey Karten. Data-based on Rotten Tomatoes Grade: B Director: Philippe Garrel Screenplay: Philippe Garrel, Caroline Deruas, Arlette Langmann, Marc Cholodenko Cast: Louis Garrel, Anna Mouglalis, Rebecca Convenant, Olga Milshtein, Esther Garrel, Manon Kneuse, Julien Lucas Screened at: Review 1, NYC, 8/11/14 Opens: August 15, 2014 In the Broadway musical “My Fair Lady,” Henry Higgins notes, “The French don’t care what they do, actually, so long as they pronounce it properly.” We do, in fact, have the impression that what’s taken with some seriousness here in the States is treated more casually across the Atlantic. Bar pickups, for example. We may think [ Read More ]
The post Jealousy Movie Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post Jealousy Movie Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 8/17/2014
- by Harvey Karten
- ShockYa
In this weekend’s specialty box-office debuts, IFC Films hopes to replicate the critical and commercial success of Michael Winterbottom’s first amusing little travelogue/talker of a feature, The Trip, with a semi-sequel, The Trip To Italy. The second Trip again stars Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon; the entertainingly garrulous pair on yet another jaunt across restaurants, countryside and philosophy. The latest Trip will bow in NYC and La this weekend after a successful Australian run earlier this summer (or their winter).
Frank, a British-Irish-American drama from Magnolia Pictures featuring Michael Fassbender that had runs at Sundance and SXSW, bows in only one U.S. theater this weekend. Frank centers on an eccentric band, giving Fassy fans a chance to hear the Oscar-nominated actor sing, albeit from behind a mask (he’s not bad, actually).
Other notable new films include Philippe Garrel‘s Jealousy, which Distrib Films will expand...
Frank, a British-Irish-American drama from Magnolia Pictures featuring Michael Fassbender that had runs at Sundance and SXSW, bows in only one U.S. theater this weekend. Frank centers on an eccentric band, giving Fassy fans a chance to hear the Oscar-nominated actor sing, albeit from behind a mask (he’s not bad, actually).
Other notable new films include Philippe Garrel‘s Jealousy, which Distrib Films will expand...
- 8/15/2014
- by Brian Brooks
- Deadline
Distrib Films announced that it has picked up the U.S. rights to Philippe Garrel’s black and white, meta-like dramedy. A true family affair, Jealousy sees the Garrel clan in full force; Louis toplines again and a supporting perf from sis Esther Garrel (Bertrand Bonello’s House of Tolerance) in a text that is close to Philippe’s own personal family history. A summer theatrical release is planned.
Gist: Written by Philippe Garrel, Caroline Deruas, Marc Cholodenko and Arlette Langmann, Louis (Louis Garrel) leaves his wife Clothilde (Rebecca Convenant) and daughter Charlotte (Olga Milshtein) for a theater actress Claudia (Anna Mouglalis). Though she can’t get any work and they struggle to make money, their passion carries them through. However, it’s not long before the outside world creeps back in.
Worth Noting: This received film fest showings at the Venice and New York Film Festival.
Do We Care?...
Gist: Written by Philippe Garrel, Caroline Deruas, Marc Cholodenko and Arlette Langmann, Louis (Louis Garrel) leaves his wife Clothilde (Rebecca Convenant) and daughter Charlotte (Olga Milshtein) for a theater actress Claudia (Anna Mouglalis). Though she can’t get any work and they struggle to make money, their passion carries them through. However, it’s not long before the outside world creeps back in.
Worth Noting: This received film fest showings at the Venice and New York Film Festival.
Do We Care?...
- 4/8/2014
- by Eric Lavallee
- IONCINEMA.com
As with any year, some people have begun arguing that 2013 was a bad year for film, because of the expected glut of effects-heavy blockbusters that litter the multiplexes each summer, or because there was a lack of auteur-driven storytelling for the majority of the year. Though it is indeed frustrating that studios hold their more prestigious films until the last month or two of this or any year, 2013 was an excellent year for film. You shouldn’t have to look first to Sound on Sight’s list of the 30 best films of 2013 for proof, but you should add it to the pile, no doubt. We asked our film writers to provide their personal lists of the 15 best films of the year; everyone’s number-one pick got 15 points allocated, everyone’s number-two pick got 14 points, and so on. (As you’ll see, the point values for each of the 30 films is included here.
- 12/28/2013
- by Josh Spiegel
- SoundOnSight
La Jalousie
Written by Marc Cholodenko and Caroline Deuras-Garrel
Directed by Philippe Garrel
France, 2013
Note. This review contains spoilers.
Jealousy is a strange thing. It can make people crazy. It can make people do things they never thought possible. Philippe Garrel’s new film La jalousie engages with the idea that we all have our own limits when it comes to love. The film follows Louis, played by the director’s own son, Louis Garrel, a stage actor in his early thirties who has recently left his wife and young daughter to live with another woman. Set in present-day Paris, the story examines the trials and tribulations of what the heart wants and how it breaks, over and over again.
The idea behind La jalousie came from Garrel’s childhood recollections of his father’s romantic relationships. Shot in striking black and white, the film truly does feel like an intimate matter,...
Written by Marc Cholodenko and Caroline Deuras-Garrel
Directed by Philippe Garrel
France, 2013
Note. This review contains spoilers.
Jealousy is a strange thing. It can make people crazy. It can make people do things they never thought possible. Philippe Garrel’s new film La jalousie engages with the idea that we all have our own limits when it comes to love. The film follows Louis, played by the director’s own son, Louis Garrel, a stage actor in his early thirties who has recently left his wife and young daughter to live with another woman. Set in present-day Paris, the story examines the trials and tribulations of what the heart wants and how it breaks, over and over again.
The idea behind La jalousie came from Garrel’s childhood recollections of his father’s romantic relationships. Shot in striking black and white, the film truly does feel like an intimate matter,...
- 10/24/2013
- by Trish Ferris
- SoundOnSight
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