French actress, screenwriter and director Catherine Corsini's ninth feature film which she wrote with French screenwriter and director Laurette Polmanss, premiered in the Piazza Grande section at the 68th Locarno International Film Festival in 2015, was shot on locations in France and is a France-Belgium co-production which was produced by producer Elisabeth Perez. It tells the story about a French agrarian from the region of Limousin, Haute-Vienne in the commune of Limoges, France named Delphine who lives with her father named Maurice and her mother named Monique during the presidency of a French educator named Georges Pompidou (1911-1974), discovers that her friend is to marry and decides to go to Paris, France.
Distinctly and subtly directed by French filmmaker Catherine Corsini, this quietly paced fictional tale which is narrated from multiple viewpoints, draws a perspicacious portrayal of a daughter who is as aware of her own identity as she is of how it is perceived by society and her transcending encounter with a French teacher named Carole whom is in agency for the advancement of women's rights. While notable for its atmospheric milieu depictions and distinct cinematography by cinematographer Jeanne Lapoirie and production design by production designer Anna Falguères, this narrative-driven story about the concealments of obscurantism and the importance of feminization of agriculture where a character asks: "Aren't there things you feel like you can't do because you're a woman?" and declares: "My body is not a car!" was made six centuries after the Black Death claimed the life of an English 14th century Princess, born in the Tower of London, named Joan of England (1348) and the Strasbourg massacre (1349), five centuries after a law called Ewiger Landfriede or Perpetual Public Peace was ratified in the Roman Empire, more than two centuries after the French Penal Code of (1791) and the inauguration of the autocratic monarchy called the First French Empire (1804-1815) where the motto was liberty, equality, fraternity or death, and more than a century after the Treaty of London (1839), a fourteen-year-old French daughter forenamed Bernadette reported the Marian Apparitions in Lourdes (1858), the French Women's Union (1871) was calling for equal salaries, the beatification of the child of a Frenchman named Jacques and a Frenchwoman named Isabelle and an English-French 19th century poet pen named Renée Vivien (1877-1909) who was sculpted by Rodin, painted by Colette, born in London, England and lived in Paris, France wrote: "Yield up all your chagrin to eternal delight. Exhale in profound cry of suffering blight. All those events of the past, so cruel and senseless. Leave them to death, to the distance and to silence …" and ninety-five years after the decree of a decoration called the Medal of the French Family (1920).
Made seventy-one years after a French Chevalier of the Legion of Honour named Cécile Brunschvicg (1877-1946) witnessed the introduction of Women's Suffrage in the French Republic (1944), seventy years after a French resistance fighter named Germaine Tilion (1907-2008) escaped from Ravensbrück, Germany, forty-seven years after the University of Limoges (1968) and someone had written "Vive De Gaulle" on the University of Lyon (1968), forty-four years after a French author named Françoise d'Eubonne (1920-2005) who befriended a French mystic named Violette Leduc founded a group (1971) who held their meetings at École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts (1648) in Paris, France and a Swiss filmmaker named Carole Roussopoulos (1945-2009) made a documentary regarding FHAR, thirty-eight years after a Canadian singer forenamed Pauline sang a song written in 1974 by a French singer forenamed Anne-Marie called "You have no name", thirty-seven years after a French physicist and chemist named Annie Sugier started the first refuge for battered women in Clichy, Hauts-de-Seine, France, thirty-two years after the Court of Cassation (1790) in France changed an article in the French criminal code which made any intervention or operation, for no medical reason, on the external female reproductive organs a crime, fourteen-years after the About-Picard Law (2001), twelve years after a street in Paris, France was named Place de Olympe-de-Gouges (2003), nine years after a bridge in Paris, France was named Passerelle Simone-de-Beauvoir (2006), five years after an English songwriter in a song called "Cosmic Love" (2010) at the Bataclan theatre, Boulevard Voltaire, sang: "… in this twilight … so darkness I became …" a year after a Spanish-French civil servant named Anne Hidalgo became the first woman Major of Paris, ÃŽle-de-France, the same year as Transport for London made a video called "Report it to stop it" (2015), the Paris Métro a video called "Stop - It's enough" (2015) and a nineteen-year-old sister from the city of seven mountains named Aurora held a concert in Paris, France, this Sapphic interplay depicts some interrelated studies of character and contains a great and timely score by composer Grégoire Hetzel.
This gracefully romantic love-story which is set in France in the early 1970s the same year as a French citizen sealed a wire between the two towers of Notre-Dame and during the conception of the French women's liberation movement, and where the internal consummation of a human connexion rests on a being's preoccupation with other peoples' views, is impelled and reinforced by its cogent narrative structure, substantial character development, rhythmic continuity, comment by Delphine: "… I've often thought of you while following the struggle. It's amazing what you've accomplished ..." and the existing acting performances by Belgian actress Cécile de France and French singer and actress Izïa Higelin. A sustainable narrative feature.
Detail / Info
Genre : Comedy, RomanceDuration : 105 min
Release Date : 19 Aug 2015
Rating : 6.5
Writer : Catherine Corsini, Laurette Polmanss
Director : Catherine Corsini
Company : France 3 Cinéma
Movie Casts :
Izïa Higelin as Delphine, Cécile De France as Carole,Noémie Lvovsky as Monique, Laetitia Dosch as Adeline, Kevin Azais as Antoine, as







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