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E. Nina Rothe

Film. Fashion. Life.
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Favorite movies only need apply. Life is too short to write about what I didn't enjoy. 

Benicio del Toro and Mia Threapleton in a still from ‘The Phoenician Scheme’ in theaters on Friday

The Magnificent Wes Anderson: Why 'The Phoenician Scheme' is my fave since 'Grand Budapest'

E. Nina Rothe May 20, 2025

At the core of his latest film, Anderson, along with co-writer Roman Coppola and leading man Benicio de Toro, has created a wonderfully entertaining antihero of contradictions: European yet eerily Trumpian, bigger than life yet soft spoken, bearing many passports yet without a fixed address, a self professed diplomat who carries a crate of hand-grenades — just in case they are needed. And more often than not, they are.

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In Film Festivals, Film, review Tags Wes Anderson, Benicio del Toro, Universal, Focus Features, Middle East, The Phoenician Scheme, Cannes Film Festival, Competition, Benedict Cumberbatch, Fouad Malouf, Milena Canonero, Adam Stockhausen, Jasper Sharp, Alexandre Desplat, Cartier, Prada, Dunhill, Juman Malouf, Studio Babelsberg, Tom Hanks, Riz Ahmed, Bryan Cranston, Jeffrey Wright, Mathieu Amalric, Scarlett Johansson, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Bill Murray, Michael Cera, Mia Threapleton, Roman Coppola
Comment

Tom Cruise must need a nap after 'Mission: Impossible -- The Final Reckoning'

E. Nina Rothe May 15, 2025

He runs across London, dives to the depth of the Baltic Sea, flies through the South African sky, most of the time outside an airplane, and never misses a beat — and I was exhausted just watching him do it all…

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In Film Festivals, Film, review Tags Tom Cruise, Mission Impossible The Final Reckoning, Paramount, festival de cannes, Cannes Film Festival, Christopher McQuarrie, Philip Seymour Hoffman, AI, The Entity, Pom Klementief, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg, Esai Morales, Gabriel, Ashley Atwell, Angela Bassett, Richard L. Gelfond, IMAX, Shea Whigham, Cineum, Lucy Tulugarjuk, Katy M. O’Brian, Rolf Saxon, Ethan Hunt, MI films
Comment

A still from ‘Yalla Parkour!’ by Areeb Zuaiter

There are eight DFI-supported titles in this year's Berlinale lineup

E. Nina Rothe January 23, 2025

And at least one in each section too, including Competition and the new Perspectives for first time features.

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In Film, Film Festivals, Features Tags Berlinale, DFI, Doha Film Institute, Palestine, Competition, Critics' Week, Forum Expanded, Generation Kplus, Berlinale Special, Perspectives, Critics Week, Fatma Hassan Alremaihi, Yunan, Ameer Fakher Eldin, Syria, Ukraine, Hanna Schygulla, Ancestral Visions of the Future, Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese, Lesotho, Mohamed Rashad, The Settlement, Egypt, My Armenian Phantoms, Armenia, Tamara Stepanyan, Vigen Stepanyan, The Botanist, China, Jing Yi, Kazakhstan, Xinjiang, Yalla Parkour!, Areeb Zuaiter, Khartoum, Sudan, Anas Saeed, Rawia Alhag, Ibrahim Snoopy, Timeea Mohamed Ahmed, Phil Cox, East of Noon, Hala Elkoussi, JJ Lin (Jianjie Lin), Hippopotami, Sundance, Cannes Film Festival
Comment

Karim Aïnouz's 'Firebrand' will be in UK cinemas starting September 6th courtesy of MetFilm

E. Nina Rothe July 9, 2024

And not a moment too soon if you ask me!

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In Film, Features Tags Firebrand, Karim Ainouz, MetFilm Distribution, MetFilm Group, Jude Law, Alicia Vikander, Katherine Parr, King Henry VIII, Elizabeth Fremantle, Queen's Gambit, Simon Russell Beale, Eddie Marsan, Ruby Bentall, Bryony Hannah, Sam Riley, UK, Ireland, Carolyn Marks Blackwood, Gabrielle Tana, Ralph Fiennes, Philomena, Madame Satã, The Invisible Life, Motel Destino, Cannes Film Festival, Firebrand Trailer
Comment

My hacks for learning to love Yorgos Lanthimos' 'Kinds of Kindness' -- a quick review

E. Nina Rothe June 30, 2024

Hint: it’s a film all about reinvention, rebirth but also the dynamics of control.

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In Film, review Tags Kinds of Kindness, Yorgos Lanthimos, Emma Stone, Willem Dafoe, film, cinema, Cannes Film Festival, Yorgos Stefanakos, Jesse Plemons, Hong Chau, Louisiana, Baby Snack Box, Greek cinema, Eurythmics, Sweet Dreams Are Made of This
Comment

Sophia Loren in a frame from the film ‘L’oro di Napoli’ by Vittorio De Sica

Vittorio De Sica's classic 'L'oro di Napoli' is pre-opening film of 81st Venice Film Fest

E. Nina Rothe June 18, 2024

The Pre-opening film will screen on Tuesday August 27th of the 81st Venice International Film Festival of La Biennale di Venezia, on the 50th anniversary of the death of Vittorio De Sica and the 70th anniversary of the film.

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In Film, Film Festivals Tags L'oro di Napoli, Vittorio De Sica, Napoli, Neorealism, Italian cinema, 811st Venice Film Festival, Venice International Film Festival of La Biennale di Venezia, Sophia Loren, Alberto Barbera, Lido di Venezia, Carlo Lizzani, Storia del cinema italiano, Cinecittà, Aurelio e Luigi De Laurentiis, Filmauro Srl, 4K restauration, Martin Scorsese, My Voyage to Italy, New York, Paolo Stoppa, Silvana Mangano, Cannes Film Festival, Nastro d'argento prize, Giuseppe Marotta, Cesare Zavattini, Carlo Ponti and Dino De Laurentiis, Sora, Lazio, Marriage Italian Style, Yesterday Today and Tomorrow, Bicycle Thieves, The Gold of Naples, Eduardo De Filippo, Totò
Comment

'Being Maria' Cannes Review: A problematic woman or simply someone who dared to call it like it is?

E. Nina Rothe May 22, 2024

Cinematic, albeit scandalous history was made in 1972 when Bernardo Bertolucci’s ‘Last Tango in Paris’ was first screened. Now French filmmaker Jessica Palud, with the help of a book written by Maria Schneider’s cousin, retells the story to finally bring out the heroine in a woman who simply stood up for herself. And, as is often the case for strong women, lost.

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In Film, review, Film Festivals Tags Maria, Being Maria, Maria Schneider, Cannes Film Festival, festival de cannes, Matt Dillor, Matt Dillon, Marlon Brando, Giuseppe Maggio, Bernardo Bertolucci, Vanessa Schneider, Laurette Polmanss, Jessica Palud, Sébastien Buchmann, Studio Canal, Cannes Premiere, Thierry Frémaux, Last Tango in Paris, sexual harassment, Anamaria Vartolomei, Daniel Gélin, My Cousin Maria Schneider: A Memoir, Molly Ringwald, Paris, French cinema, Yvan Attal, Guy Ferrandis, Les Films de Mina
Comment

'The Glassworker' presentation in Cannes: Witnessing Pakistani cinema history unfold

E. Nina Rothe May 21, 2024

Pakistan may not yet be known for great 2D hand-painted animation, but the Riaz cousins plan to change all that, come this year’s world premiere of ‘The Glassworker’ at the prestigious Annecy Festival in June.

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In Film, Features Tags The Glassworker, Annecy Festival, Pakistan, Animation, Studio Ghibli, anime, Joyland, Saim Sadiz, Cannes Film Festival, Festival de Cannes, In Flames, Zarrar Kahn, Queer Palm, Usman Riaz, Apoorva Bakshi, Delhi Crime, Art Malik, Sacha Dhawan, Anjli Mohindra, Tony Jayawardena, Khizer Riaz, Mano Studios, Hayao Miyazaki
Comment

‘Megalopolis’photo courtesy of: American Zoetrope and Mihai Malaimare Jr.

First trailer: Francis Ford Coppola's 'Megalopolis' looks sensational

E. Nina Rothe May 7, 2024

The maestro of cinema reinvents something magical and draws us to his latest masterpiece like moths to a flame. Can’t wait to get burned!

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In Film, Interviews Tags American Zoetrope, Megalopolis, Francis Ford Coppola, Adam Driver, Mihai Malaimare Jr., Harold Lloyd, Orson Welles, The Stranger, Cannes Film Festival, New Rome, Modern America, Giancarlo Esposito, Nathalie Emmanuel, Aubrey Plaza, Shia LaBeouf, Jon Voight, Laurence Fishburne, Talia Shire, Jason Schwartzman, Kathryn Hunter, Grace VanderWaal, Chloe Fineman, James Remar, D.B. Sweeney, Dustin Hoffman, Fred Roos, Barry Hirsch, Michael Bederman, Anahid Nazarian, Barrie Osborne, Darren Demetre
Comment

Re-evaluating the power of cinema: Amos Gitai's 'Shikun' at Berlinale

E. Nina Rothe April 9, 2024

If you’d asked me a year ago did I believe cinema could change the world, I would have answered you with an enthusiastic “yes!” Now? Read on to find out…

Read More
In Features, Film, review, Interviews, Film Festivals Tags Amos Gitai, Irene Jacob, Berlinale, Shikun, Eugene Ionesco, Israel, Palestine, Benjamin Netanyahu, Alexei Kochetkov, Paris, Tel Aviv, Louis Sclavis, Hebrew, Haaretz, Ramallah, West Bank, Gaza, Mahmood Darwish, Umberto Eco, Think of Others, Rhinoceros, Hamas, Wag the Dog, Adlon Kempinski, October 7th 2023, Cannes, Gene Wilder, Zero Mostel, Ely Landau, Hollywood, No Other Land, Yuval Abraham, Basel Adra, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal, Panorama Audience Award winner, documentary, Berlinale Special, Cannes Film Festival, Thierry Fremaux, Variety, Elsa Keslassy, cinema with a conscience
Comment

Yorgos Lanthimos’ next 'Kinds of Kindness' debuts teaser trailer

E. Nina Rothe March 28, 2024

And there is buzz the film might world premiere in Cannes — fingers crossed!

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In Film Tags Yorgos Lanthimos, Kinds of Kindness, Cannes Film Festival, Emma Stone, Willem Dafoe, Efthimis Filippou, Poor Things, Searchlight Pictures, Jesse Plemons, Margaret Qualley, Hong Chau, Joe Alwyn, Mamoudou Athie, Hunter Schafer, Ed Guiney, Andrew Lowe, Kasia Malipan, Dodge Challenger, Eurythmics, Sweet Dreams Are Made of This, The Favourite, Robbie Ryan, Jennifer Johnson, Jerskin Fendrix, Yorgos Mavropsaridis, Anthony Gasparro
Comment

My issues with 'Killers of the Flower Moon' and what I liked about it

E. Nina Rothe January 3, 2024

I have to say, for a film I immediately disliked, it has stayed with me for a looooong time.

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In Film, review Tags Martin Scorsese, Killers of the Flower Moon, Ama, John Ford, Michael Cimino, Lily Gladstone, Robert De Niro, Leonardo DiCaprio, Qumra, Jacqueline West, Apple pictures, Osage Nation, Indigenous Americans, The Guardina, The Guardian, Devery Jacobs, David Smith, David Grann, Burning Woman Designs, Cannes Film Festival
Comment
Trieste Film Festival

The Trieste Film Festival turns 30 this year and in this edition teaches us the trouble with walls

E. Nina Rothe January 17, 2019

The Italian city of Trieste has always had its own particular history. From its Austro-Hungarian and Slovenian influences, to its proximity to the Croatian border, its people have enjoyed a special status. At the end of the 19th Century, Trieste had more Slovenian inhabitants than Slovenia's capital of Ljubljana and at the start of the 20th, great luminaries and intellectuals like James Joyce, Italo Svevo, Sigmund Freud, Zofka Kveder, Dragotin Kette, Ivan Cankar, Scipio Slataper, and Umberto Saba frequented the bustling cosmopolitan city.

To me, it has always been a city with a foot deeply planted in its Italian roots yet the other striding towards its Eastern European culture. A bridge city overlooking a port, filled with people of different ethnicities and speaking several languages and dialects. A utopia for the perfect world, a place where everyone truly, and mostly could get along. And have gotten along.

We have so much to learn from the city of Trieste these days.

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In Film, Film Festivals Tags Trieste Film Festival, Trieste, Italia, cinema, Isabelle Adjani, Possession, Andrzej Żuławski, Berlin wall, Dogman, Matteo Garrone, Paul Thomas Anderson, Phantom Thread, Donbass, Sergej Loznica, Cannes Film Festival, The White Crow, Ralph Fiennes, Cairo International Film Festival, Rudolf Nureyev, Andre Singer, Werner Herzog, Meeting Gorbachev, Michail Gorbačëv, Soviet Union, James Joyce, Italo Svevo, Sigmund Freud, Scipio Slataper, Umberto Saba, Marcello Fonte, Dominique Issermann
Comment
Behnaz Jafari and Jafar Panahi in a still from ‘3 Faces’

Behnaz Jafari and Jafar Panahi in a still from ‘3 Faces’

Three women on '3 Faces': Jafar Panahi's latest oeuvre at the inaugural Iranian Film Festival NY

E. Nina Rothe January 3, 2019

Filmmaker Jafar Panahi has been banned by the Iranian government from making movies, for an unbelievably long while. Yet he continues undeterred in churning out one masterpiece after another. All shot in different locations, each time featuring a new cast of characters, Panahi’s films have continued undisturbed to be staples at international film festivals.

Those of us who know and love his distinct brand of filmmaking, where within his kind and well thought out delivery he still manages to packs a big punch, also follow him on social media. His Instagram alone is a pleasure for those who wish to witness a bit of his genius on a nearly daily basis. And in fact, it was his presence on social media that inspired his latest work — ‘3 Faces’. The film premiered in Cannes earlier this year and will be featured at the 1st Iranian Film Festival New York at the IFC Center in early January 2019.

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In Film, Interviews Tags Jafar Panahi, 3 Faces, Cannes Film Festival, Festival de Cannes, Instagram, Iranian Film Festival of NY, IFC Center, Iran, Iranian cinema, Behnaz Jafari, Marziyeh Rezaei, Mastaneh Mohajer, NYC, President Rouhani
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Marcello Fonte in Matteo Garrone’s ‘Dogman’, photo by Greta De Lazzaris

Marcello Fonte in Matteo Garrone’s ‘Dogman’, photo by Greta De Lazzaris

London Film Festival is all going to the Italians... Italian filmmakers that is!

E. Nina Rothe October 3, 2018

Back in February during Berlinale, at the very start of this strange yet fateful year, I watched Laura Bispoli’s ‘Daughter of Mine’ and fell back in love with Italian cinema. I was then satisfied further in Cannes, where I got to watch three more fantastic Italian films — which included Matteo Garrone’s ‘Dogman’ and Alice Rohrwacher’s ‘Happy as Lazzaro’. Then Venice rolled around and there was ‘What You Gonna Do When the World’s on Fire?’ by Roberto Minervini and my personal, patriotic soul burst with pride.

Well, London audiences will soon be able to experience all of these titles in one place along with a selection that will include Laura Luchetti’s ‘Twin Flower’, Luca Guadagnino’s ‘Suspiria’ and Eduardo De Angelis’ ‘The Vice of Hope’. They are all part of the BFI’s London Film Festival Italian selection of cinematic picks from our peninsula.

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In Film, Interviews Tags BFI London Film Festival, Daughter of Mine, Figlia Mia, Alice Rohrwacher, Alba Rohrwacher, Cannes Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, Happy as Lazzaro, Lazzaro Felice, Matteo Garrone, Dogman, Marcello Fonte, Foreign Language Oscar, Adriano Tardiolo, Berlinale, Valeria Golino, Sara Casu, Luca Guadagnino, Suspiria, Eduardo De Angelis, The Vice of Hope, Italian cinema, Roberto Minervini, What You Gonna Do When the World's on Fire?, Osho, Bhagwan, Rajneesh, neo-sannyasins, LFF, Laura Bispuri
Comment
Searching For Saraswati

'Searching for Saraswati': How to claim a river, or build a wall, to unite a country

E. Nina Rothe July 8, 2018

A couple of days ago I woke up to a quote by beloved Mexican artist and all around cool woman Frida Kahlo on Twitter -- it was her birth day: "I do not think the banks of a river suffer because they let the river flow.." It seemed significant in my life because it was the day I'd received from two wondrous filmmakers their latest work, 'Searching for Saraswati' -- a NY Times Op-Docs 20-minute documentary supported by the Sundance Institute and the MacArthur Foundation on the rediscovery of the mythical Saraswati river in Northern India.

Shirley Abraham and Amit Madheshiya first appeared on my cinematic radar two years ago, when their feature 'The Cinema Travellers' premiered at the Cannes Film Festival. When I was sent a screener of the film, I ended up watching it spellbound, for its duration, never stopping or even daring to look away. And more than two years later, the images from this masterpiece -- their first feature film, if you can believe it! -- still color my consciousness. I find myself, from time to time, yearning for that feeling of wonder I had watching it for the first time, and the second time and even a third, finally on the big screen in Dubai. Truly, 'The Cinema Travellers' is a masterpiece of sensitivity and a love song by two poets of our times to the Seventh Art.

So how would the duo ever outdo themselves, I wondered, and felt a bit of nervous apprehension as I prepared to watch 'Searching for Saraswati' -- which premieres on the 10th of July on the NY Times site.

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In Film Tags Searching for Saraswati, the New York Times, The New York Times Op-Docs, Shirley Abraham, Amit Madheshiya, The Cinema Travellers, Cannes Film Festival, Frida Kahlo quote, Dubai International Film Festival, Hariana, Saraswati River, Mughalwali, India, Indian government, Sundance Institute, MacArthur Foundation
Comment
Julia Jedikowska in a still from 'Sicilian Ghost Story' by Antonio Piazza and Fabio Grassadonia

Julia Jedikowska in a still from 'Sicilian Ghost Story' by Antonio Piazza and Fabio Grassadonia

Antonio Piazza and Fabio Grassadonia on 'Sicilian Ghost Story': "It’s only this idea about love defeating all that let us do the film."

E. Nina Rothe June 2, 2018

There is nothing more savage in this world than violence perpetrated against a child. The inhumanity of striking a little girl, the cruelty of inflicting pain of any kind on a boy, those are undeniably the darkest moments for mankind.

It is within the realm of one such unbearable acts that ‘Sicilian Ghost Story’ takes place. Yet Antonio Piazza’s and Fabio Grassadonia’s follow up to their award winning, masterful ‘Salvo’ is a fantastical love story first, and a fact-inspired cautionary tale of violence second. And with those two impossible companions, love and violence, walking hand in hand, Piazza and Grassadonia have created a masterpiece.

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In Film, Interviews Tags Fabio Grassadonia, Antonio Piazza, Sicilian Ghost Story, Cannes Film Festival, Festival de Cannes, Critics Week, Semaine de la Critique, Film Society at Lincoln Center, Open Roads: New Italian Cinema 2018, Strand Releasing, NYC, Julia Jedikowska, Salvo, Romeo and Juliet, Gaetano Fernandez, Giuseppe Di Matteo, Mafia, Sicily, Leonardo Sciascia, Marco Mancassola
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Nawazuddin Siddiqui as ‘Manto’

Nawazuddin Siddiqui as ‘Manto’

“Because We Live in Unbearable Times”: Nandita Das Unveils ‘Manto’ in Cannes

E. Nina Rothe April 12, 2018

The wonder that is Indian filmmaker and actress Nandita Das first appeared on my radar through her performance in the film ‘Fire’ by Deepa Mehta. The story of two women trapped in respectively loveless marriages with brothers, who discover within each other the companion they crave, it was a film that created as much sizzle on as it did off the screen. It was passed uncut by India’s censor board which then gave into (sort of, then retracted it) religious zealots who started to burn down cinemas and attack audiences to protest its release.

Fast forward twenty years and Das once again flirted with controversy with her feature directorial debut ‘Firaaq’, an unsentimental account of the impact of the Gujarat riots on the Indian Muslim population. The film left such an impact on me, I could hardly think about anything else for weeks after viewing it. I remember researching articles about the riots and I craved to go back to Ahmedabad, which I’d visited the year before I watched the film, to revisit the city with Das’ haunting vision in mind.

These days, the beautiful, smart, and wonderfully strong Das is working on a film about Saadat Hasan Manto, an Indian-Pakistani writer and playwright who once wrote this hauntingly true phrase “If you cannot bear my stories, it is because we live in unbearable times.” Prophetic, wasn’t he.

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In Film, Interviews Tags Nandita Das, Manto, Cannes18, Festival de Cannes, Cannes Film Festival, Indian cinema, Nawazuddin Siddiqui, India, Deepa Mehta, Fire, Firaaq, Gujarat Riots, Muslims, Ahmedabad, Saadat Hasan Manto, Indian-Pakistani writer, Rasika Dugal, Jean-Pierre Le Calvez, HP, Ajit Andhare, Viacom 18, Safia Manto
Comment
Mariam Al Ferjani in a still from Kaouther Ben Hania's 'Beauty and the Dogs'

Mariam Al Ferjani in a still from Kaouther Ben Hania's 'Beauty and the Dogs'

Forget Wonder Woman - I Found My Heroine Within ‘Beauty and the Dogs’ in Cannes!

E. Nina Rothe March 17, 2018

Films featuring strong women are what I crave. But I won’t buy that typical Hollywood fare, which sells the perfect package of a buff heroine dressed in a shiny costume doing stunts as the perfect woman’s film. Nope. I need a real-life wonder woman to fulfill my cravings.

In Tunisian filmmaker Kaouther Ben Hania’s latest ‘Beauty and the Dogs’, which world premiered at the Festival de Cannes in their Un Certain Regard section, I found her.

Within the role of Mariam (played to absolute perfection by first-time actress Mariam Al Ferjani), your typical run of the mill modern university girl wanting to have fun on a night out at a club event we learn she helped to organize, I discovered a heroine that transcends the Arab world — Mariam’s story takes place in Tunisia — and jumped off the screen straight into my subconscious. And remained there, juggling with my thoughts, until now.

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In Film, Interviews Tags Beauty and the Dogs, Cannes Film Festival, Festival de Cannes, rape, Hollywood heroines, Wonder Woman, Kaouther Ben Hania, Un Certain Regard, Mariam Al Ferjani, Tunisia, HuffPost, Arab world, Qumra, Doha Film Institute, DFI, Doha, Oscilloscope Laboratories, Ghanem Zrelli
Comment
Agnès Varda and JR on the road

Agnès Varda and JR on the road

'Faces, Places' in Cannes: “It’s the Miracle of Cinema!” -- Agnès Varda and JR Bring Us ‘Visages, Villages’

E. Nina Rothe February 25, 2018

“Did you like our little film?” 

Agnès Varda grabs my hand and holds it between hers as I try to exit the room where I’ve just spent the last ten minutes interviewing her and artist JR about their cinematic collaboration ‘Visages, Villages’ (’Faces, Places’) which premiered “Out of Competition” in Cannes. We may have learned in the film that the filmmaker has cute little feet, but I now know she also has lovely, kind hands.

“Of course I did! Why would I have wanted to interview you otherwise?!” I hear myself say, but almost as soon as the words come out, I realize I’m telling a half truth. Yes, I loved this film, its simple premise and grand cinematography and I relished the mutual respect the legendary 88 year-old filmmaker and the anonymous 33 year-old photographer show for each other throughout their road movie around the French countryside. To me, they are the new Beatles, the rockstars of cinema’s here and now. But I also craved to be in the presence of Varda and JR and would have come to interview them even if I hadn’t enjoyed the film as much as I did. It’s Madame Varda, after all, and JR, the artist — wrap your head around this — with a million Instagram followers! 

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In Film, Interviews Tags Faces Places, Visages Villages, Agnes Varda, JR, Cannes, Festival de Cannes, Cannes Film Festival, Oscar nominated documentary, 2018 Oscars, documentary, women filmmakers, French countryside, The Beatles, trailer, Academy Awards, cinema, Instagram, Golden Eye prize
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