Quentin Tarantino Is Back With New Film ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD Starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt And Margot Robbie

Quentin Tarantino’s ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD visits 1969 Los Angeles, where everything is changing, as TV star Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his longtime stunt double Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt) make their way around an industry they hardly recognize anymore. The ninth film from the writer-director features a large ensemble cast and multiple storylines in a tribute to the final moments of Hollywood’s golden age.

In case you missed it, check out the first trailer for the film.

I can’t wait for this look back at Old School Hollywood from two-time Oscar winner Tarantino. You can see movie stars from decades ago starring in this – James Dean, Steve McQueen and James Cagney, just to name a few. Tarantino has had a long-term love affair with Hollywood. His eighth film, The Hateful Eight (2015), was released in its roadshow version in 70 mm film format, with opening “overture” and halfway-point intermission. The money shot of the trailer comes at the 43 second mark which shows the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood, which  has since become the ArcLight Theatre.

Look for the motion picture to open in cinemas July 26, 2019.


Explosive Third JOHN WICK 3 Trailer Stars Keanu Reeves, Halle Berry And Ian McShane

JOHN WICK 3 opens in theaters May 17 and today, Lionsgate has released the third trailer for the upcoming film.

In this third installment of the adrenaline-fueled action franchise, super-assassin John Wick (Keanu Reeves) returns with a $14 million price tag on his head and an army of bounty-hunting killers on his trail. After killing a member of the shadowy international assassin’s guild, the High Table, John Wick is excommunicado, but the world’s most ruthless hit men and women await his every turn.

From director Chad Stahelski, the film stars Keanu Reeves, Halle Berry, Laurence Fishburne, Mark Dacascos, Asia Kate Dillon, Lance Reddick, Saïd Taghmaoui, Jerome Flynn, Jason Mantzoukas, Tobias Segal, Boban Marjanovic, with Anjelica Huston, and Ian McShane.

“All of this for what? A puppy?”.
“It wasn’t just a puppy.”

The last words of the trailer for John Wick III pretty much sum up the trilogy. Keanu Reeves is back as John Wick, retired assassin extraordinaire, a man of such lethal prowess as to be revered and admired in this parallel, crazy world. From the looks of it, this third installment has all of the things that made the first two great, plus Halle Berry, AND ninjas on motorcycles. Lawrence Fishburne also reprises his role (good to see these two together again in a non-Matrix movie). The violence has been dialed up to 11, and the fight scenes in the trailer seem even better than that first two movies. It will be a great Friday night popcorn binge kind of movie, that’s for sure.

It’s hard to call John Wick a hero in the conventional sense, since he was…you know, a hitman.  He gave it up to be with the love of his life, and as is explained to us in the first movie, he was given an impossible job in order to win his freedom, and he did so in such a spectacular fashion that even the crime boss who sent him recalls the errand with awe for the man who essentially insured the rise of his empire that night by killing all of the rivals.  And then, of course, after the wife dies (shown in flashbacks in the first movie), he receives a puppy that she had arranged for him to get upon her death, to keep his heart from hardening. And then, in an act of greed and stupidity, a punk breaks into Wick’s house, to steal his car keys for the sweet car, beating up Wick, and killing the puppy, setting off a Hellstorm of bullets and death that has lasted 3 movies now.  The first two take place over the course of a couple of days, and from what we can tell in this trailer for the third movie, the timetable picks up minutes after the second movie ends.

A glorious ballet of violence and destruction, and to keep it up, John Wick only needs one thing:

“Guns.  LOTS of guns.”

I’ll be in line to see it as soon as it’s possible to do so.

By Marc Butterfield

THE IGUANA WITH THE TONGUE OF FIRE Available on Blu-ray April 9th From Arrow Video

   
THE IGUANA WITH THE TONGUE OF FIRE will be available on Blu-ray April 9th From Arrow Video


One of several animal-in-the-title cash-ins released in the wake of Dario Argento s box-office smash The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, The Iguana with the Tongue of Fire is a gloriously excessive giallo that boasts a rogues gallery of perverse characters; violent, fetishized murders, and one of the genre s most nonsensical, red-herring laden plots (which sees almost every incidental character hinted at potentially being the killer).


Set in Dublin (a rather surprising giallo setting), Iguana opens audaciously with an acid-throwing, razor-wielding maniac brutally slaying a woman in her own home. The victim s mangled corpse is discovered in a limousine owned by Swiss Ambassador Sobiesky (Anton Diffring, Where Eagles Dare) and a police investigation is launched, but when the murdering continues and the ambassador claims diplomatic immunity, tough ex-cop John Norton (Luigi Pistilli, A Bay of Blood) is brought in to find the killer…


Benefitting from a sumptuous score by Stelvio Cipriani (Nightmare City, Death Walks on High Heels) and exuberant supporting performances from Valentina Cortese (The Possessed, Thieves’ Highway) and Dagmar Lassander (The Frightened Woman, The Black Cat), The Iguana with the Tongue of Fire is a luridly over-the-top latter-day entry in the filmography of acclaimed director Riccardo Freda (Caltiki The Immortal Monster, Murder Obsession). An archetypal giallo from the genre s heyday, Freda s film is presented here in a stunning new restoration with a host of newly produced extras.


SPECIAL EDITION CONTENTS

  • New 2K restoration from the original 35mm camera negative
  • High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation
  • Uncompressed mono 1.0 LPCM audio
  • Original English and Italian soundtracks, titles and credits
  • Newly translated English subtitles for the Italian soundtrack
  • Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing for the English soundtrack
  • New audio commentary by giallo connoisseurs Adrian J. Smith and David Flint
  • Of Chameleons and Iguanas, a newly filmed video appreciation by the cultural critic and academic Richard Dyer
  • Considering Cipriani, a new appreciation of the composer Stelvio Cipriani and his score to The Iguana with the Tongue of Fire by DJ and soundtrack collector Lovely Jon
  • The Cutting Game, a new interview with Iguana s assistant editor Bruno Micheli
  • The Red Queen of Hearts, a career-spanning interview with the actress Dagmar Lassander
  • Original Italian and international theatrical trailers
  • Image gallery
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Graham Humphreys
  • Collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by Andreas Ehrenreich

Keira Knightley in BERLIN, I LOVE YOU Arrives on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital April 9th


An impressive ensemble cast shines against an unlikely backdrop in the romantic comedy, Berlin, I Love You, arriving on Blu-ray™ (plus Digital), DVD, and Digital April 9 from Lionsgate.

An impressive ensemble cast shines against an unlikely backdrop in the romantic comedy, Berlin, I Love You, arriving on Blu-ray™ (plus Digital), DVD, and Digital April 9 from Lionsgate. This film is currently available On Demand. This heartwarming anthology contains 10 romantic stories set against the backdrop of the German capital and stars two-time Oscar® nominee Keira Knightley (2005, Best Actress, Pride & Prejudice; 2014, Best Supporting Actress, The Imitation Game), Oscar® winner Helen Mirren (2006, Best Actress, The Queen), Luke Wilson, and Jenna Dewan. The Berlin, I Love You Blu-ray and DVD will be available for the suggested retail price of $21.99 and $19.98, respectively.

Keira Knightley, Helen Mirren, Jim Sturgess, and Diego Luna head an all-star cast in this sparkling film from the producers ofParis, Je T’Aime. Set against the vivid backdrop of Berlin, Berlin, I Love You weaves ten stories of compassion, redemption, and acceptance into a rich tapestry of life — and love.

CAST

Dianna Agron                          The FamilyI Am Number Four, TV’s “Glee”

Emily Beecham                      Hail, Caesar!Daphne 

Alexander Black                     A Hologram for the King, TV’s “NCIS: Los Angeles”

Rafaëlle Cohen                       Beauty and the Beast

Jenna Dewan                          Step UpThe Jerk Theory, TV’s “World of Dance”

Hannelore Elsner                    No Place to GoCherry Blossoms, TV’s “Lady Cop”

Veronica Ferres                      Salt and FirePay the Ghost 

Michelangelo Fortuzzi            TV’s “Pinocchio,” Im Niemandsland 

Nolan Funk                             Amazon’s “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” TV’s “Glee”

Toni Garrn                              Head Full of Honey, Amazon’s “You Are Wanted”

Lili Gattyán                              DoughEden

Liam Gross                             Feature Film Debut

Sibel Kekilli                             When We Leave, TV’s “Game of Thrones”

Carlo Kitzlinger                       Innenkind7500

Keira Knightley                        Pirates of the Caribbeanfranchise, Pride & PrejudiceAtonement

Charlotte Le Bon                     The Hundred-Foot Journey, TV’s “Calls”

Diego Luna                              Rogue One: A Star Wars StoryIf Beale Street Could Talk

Helen Mirren                           REDThe QueenHitchcock

Phoebe Nicholls                     Transformers: The Last Knight, TV’s “Downton Abbey”

Max Raabe                             Let My People Go!, Maybe … Maybe Not

Iwan Rheon                             TV’s “Game Of Thrones,” TV’s “Family Guy”

Katja Riemann                        RosenstrasseBanditsTalk of the Town 

Mickey Rourke                       The WrestlerIron Man 2, TV’s “Dice”

Carol Schuler                          TV’s “Homeland”

Robert Stadlober                     Summer StormEnemy at the Gates

Jim Sturgess                           TV’s “Hard Sun,” TV’s “Feed the Beast”

Jake Weber                             Dawn of the Dead, Netflix’s “13 Reasons Why”

Luke Wilson                            Old SchoolIdiocracyThe Royal Tenenbaums

Laila Maria Witt                       Dendrologium, TV’s “Einstein”

Sam Worthington in MAN ON A LEDGE Arrives on 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack plus Blu-ray and Digital April 9th from Lionsgate.

An all-star cast in an intense action-thriller comes home when Man on a Ledge arrives on 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack (plus Blu-ray and Digital) April 9 from Lionsgate.

An all-star cast in an intense action-thriller comes home whenMan on a Ledge arrives on 4K Ultra HD™ Combo Pack (plus Blu-ray™ and Digital) April 9 from Lionsgate. Starring Sam Worthington, Elizabeth Banks, Jamie Bell, and Anthony Mackie, the film has been called “a heart-pounding adrenaline rush” by Fox-TV. Experience four times the resolution of full HD with the 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack, which includes Dolby Vision® HDR, bringing entertainment to life through ultra-vivid picture quality. When compared to a standard picture, Dolby Vision can deliver spectacular colors never before seen on a screen, highlights that are up to 40 times brighter, and blacks that are 10 times darker. Additionally, the 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack and Blu-ray feature Dolby Atmos® audio mixed specifically for the home, to place and move audio anywhere in the room, including overhead. Available for the very first time in this absolutely stunning format, the Man on a Ledge 4K Ultra HD Combo Pack will include a featurette and trailer commentary by Elizabeth Banks and will be available for the suggested retail price of $22.99.

In the film critics call a “white-knuckle action thriller (Mose Persico, CTV Montreal),” ex-cop Nick Cassidy (Sam Worthington) escapes from prison to plan the ultimate heist; steal a $40 million diamond from cutthroat businessman David Englander (Ed Harris), and in the process prove his own innocence. From the ledge of the famous Roosevelt Hotel with the whole world watching, Cassidy plays a clever game of cat and mouse with the NYPD while his dutiful brother Joey (Jamie Bell) races against the clock to extract the diamond and clear his brother’s name.

4K ULTRA HD / BLU-RAY SPECIAL FEATURES

  • “TheLedge” Featurette
  • Trailer with Commentary by Elizabeth Banks

CAST

Sam Worthington                    AvatarThe ShackEverest

Elizabeth Banks                      The Hunger GamesPitch Perfect

Jamie Bell                               TV’s “TURN: Washington’s Spies”, SnowpiercerFantastic Four

Anthony Mackie                      AvengersThe Hate U GiveDetroit

WAMG Giveaway – Win THE MAN WHO KILLED HITLER AND THEN THE BIGFOOT Starring Sam Elliott on DVD


RLJE Films (NASDAQ: RLJE) will release the action/thriller THE MAN WHO KILLED HITLER AND THEN THE BIGFOOT on DVD and Blu-ray on April 2, 2019. Written by Robert D. Krzykowski, who is making his directorial debut, the film stars Academy Award Nominee Sam Elliott (A Star is BornThe Hero), Aidan Turner (“Poldark”), Ron Livingston (Office SpaceTully), Caitlin FitzGerald (“Masters of Sex”), Larry Miller (Pretty Woman) and Ellar Coltrane (Boyhood). RLJE Films will release THE MAN WHO KILLED HITLER AND THEN THEBIGFOOT on DVD for an SRP of $29.96 and Blu-ray for an SRP of $29.97.


Now you can win the Win the DVD of THE MAN WHO KILLED HITLER AND THEN THE BIGFOOT. We Are Movie Geeks has two copies to give away. All you have to do is leave a comment below  telling us what your favorite movie starring Sam Elliott is. (mine’s LIFEGUARD). It’s so easy!

1. YOU MUST BE A US RESIDENT. PRIZE WILL ONLY BE SHIPPED TO US ADDRESSES.  NO P.O. BOXES.  NO DUPLICATE ADDRESSES.

2. WINNER WILL BE CHOSEN FROM ALL QUALIFYING ENTRIES.

THE MAN WHO KILLED HITLER AND THEN THE BIGFOOT follows the epic adventures of an American legend that no one has ever heard of.  Since WWII, Calvin Barr (Sam Elliott) has lived with the secret that he was responsible for the assassination of Adolf Hitler. Now, decades later, the US government has called on him again for a new top-secret mission. Bigfoot has been living deep in the Canadian wilderness and is carrying a deadly plague that is now threatening to spread to the general population. Relying on the same skills that he honed during the war, Calvin must set out to save the free world yet again.


THE MAN WHO KILLED HITLER AND THEN THE BIGFOOT DVD and Blu-ray include the following bonus features:

  • The Making of THE MAN WHO KILLED HITLER AND THEN THEBIGFOOT
  • Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Robert D. Krzykowski
  • Deleted Scenes
  • Elsie Hooper Short Film
  • Concept Art Gallery
  • Composer Joe Kraemer Interview

Alain Resnais’ MELO Available on Blu-ray April 9th From Arrow Academy

 
Alain Resnais’ MELO (1986) will be  available on Blu-ray April 9th From Arrow Academy

Master director Alain Resnais (Last Year At Marienbad) blurs the line between cinematic technique and theatrical artifice in his acclaimed Mélo, adapted from Henri Bernstein s classic play about a doomed love triangle in 1920s Paris.


Pierre (Pierre Arditi, Love Unto Death) and Marcel (André Dussollier, A Good Marriage) are both celebrated concert violinists and lifelong friends, in spite of their differing temperaments. Pierre is modest, sensitive and content with his lot; Marcel is hungry, driven, and pursues a solo career that takes him to the four corners of the world. After years apart, the two friends reunite when Pierre invites Marcel to his home for dinner. It is then that Marcel first meets Pierre s wife Romaine (Sabine Azéma, Cosmos), sparking a passionate affair that can only end in tragedy before the curtain falls.


As thrillingly intimate on film as it was on the stage, Mélo s César award-winning cast and inventive direction are highlighted in a stunning new restoration, revealing a hidden gem in Resnais celebrated body of work waiting to be rediscovered.


SPECIAL EDITION CONTENTS

  • Brand new 2K restoration of the film
  • High Definition Blu-Ray (1080p) presentation
  • Original 2.0 Stereo soundtrack
  • Optional English subtitles
  • Newly-filmed introduction by critic Jonathan Romney
  • Archive interview with director Alain Resnais
  • Archive interview with producer Marin Karmitz
  • Archive interviews with actors Pierre Arditi and André Dussolier
  • Archive interview with script supervisor Sylvette Baudrot
  • Archive interview with set designer Jacques Saulnier
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • Reversible sleeve featuring original artwork
  • FIRST PRESSING ONLY: Illustrated collector s booklet featuring new writing on the film by Bilge Ebiri

Meet Christina Hendricks, Keanu Reeves and Ally Maki In Brand New TOY STORY 4 Trailer

The toys hit the road in “Toy Story 4” alongside friends—new and old—foes and, of course, Forky. Filmmakers welcomed Christina Hendricks, Keanu Reeves and Ally Maki to the toy box today, revealing the three new characters they help bring to life.

Check out the new trailer now.

Among the new faces is GABBY GABBY, an adorable, talking pull-string doll from the 1950s. But unfortunately for her, a manufacturing defect in her pull-string voice box has left her sounding anything but adorable. She has spent more than 60 years forgotten in the depths of a jam-packed antique store—her only companions are a band of voiceless ventriloquist dummies. Gabby Gabby knows someone will want her if only she can find a working voice box to repair hers.

Gabby Gabby is voiced by Christina Hendricks. “It became obvious right away that Christina was the perfect actress to play Gabby Gabby,” says director Josh Cooley. “She has the ability to sound inviting and friendly, then subtly become cold and terrifying in just a few words. It still gives me chills when I see Gabby’s introduction in the film. Also, Christina told me that she preferred playing with ventriloquist dummies over dolls as a kid. That’s when I knew it was meant to be.”

DUKE CABOOM is a 1970s toy based on Canada’s greatest stuntman. Riding his powerful Caboom stunt-cycle, Duke is always prepared to show off his stunt poses with confidence and swagger. However, Woody learns quickly that Duke has an Achilles heel: He has never been able to do the awesome stunts advertised in his own toy commercial. For years, Duke has been sitting in an antique store, constantly reliving the failures of his tragic past.

Duke Caboom is voiced by another great Canadian, Keanu Reeves. “The first time Josh [Cooley] and I talked with Keanu about the role, Keanu became Duke Caboom,” says producer Jonas Rivera. “Keanu was asking great questions that dug deep to find the soul of the character. At one point he stood up on the table in the middle of Pixar’s atrium and struck poses while proclaiming victory. It was so funny. It’s all in the movie and it’s all Keanu.”

GIGGLE MCDIMPLES is a miniature plastic doll from the 1980s Giggle McDimples toy line. Giggle is Bo Peep’s best friend. Small enough to perch on Bo’s shoulder, Giggle is Bo’s confidant, supporter and advisor. “Giggle is Bo’s Jiminy Cricket—we’re able to get insight on Bo through their relationship together,” says Cooley. “Giggle is definitely the smallest toy in the Toy Story universe. She’s been stepped on, vacuumed up, and probably put up a kid’s nose in her time.”

Ally Maki voices the tiny character. “Giggle McDimples literally pops on the screen because of Ally’s personality and infectious energy,” says Cooley. “Nobody can laugh like Ally Maki.”

BENSON is a classic, antique ventriloquist dummy, and Gabby Gabby’s right hand. He leads a small group of ventriloquist dummies that serve as Gabby’s henchmen. With no person to give them a voice, these silent toys patrol the antique store with a looming quietness that is inherently unsettling.

“The dummies are, by far, some of the creepiest characters we’ve ever created,” says producer Mark Nielsen. “Our animators really leaned into the truth in materials for how our ventriloquist dummies move. Dummies’ bodies are soft with no structure, so our dummies’ arms just dangle and their legs bend backwards. Throw in their fixed expressions with their wide eyes and big hinged jaws and they’re nightmare material—in the best way possible.”

LEADING THE WAY — In Disney•Pixar’s “Toy Story 4,” Bonnie’s beloved new craft-project-turned-toy, Forky, declares himself trash and not a toy, so Woody takes it upon himself to show Forky why he should embrace being a toy.
©2019 Disney•Pixar. All Rights Reserved.

Woody (voice of Tom Hanks) has always been confident about his place in the world, and that his priority is taking care of his kid, whether that’s Andy or Bonnie. So when Bonnie’s beloved new craft-project-turned-toy, Forky (voice of Tony Hale), declares himself as “trash” and not a toy, Woody takes it upon himself to show Forky why he should embrace being a toy. But when Bonnie takes the whole gang on her family’s road trip excursion, Woody ends up on an unexpected detour that includes a reunion with his long-lost friend Bo Peep (voice of Annie Potts). After years of being on her own, Bo’s adventurous spirit and life on the road belie her delicate porcelain exterior. As Woody and Bo realize they’re worlds apart when it comes to life as a toy, they soon come to find that’s the least of their worries.

Directed by Josh Cooley (“Riley’s First Date?”), and produced by Jonas Rivera (“Inside Out,” “Up”) and Mark Nielsen (associate producer “Inside Out”), Disney·Pixar’s “Toy Story 4” ventures to U.S. theaters on June 21, 2019.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PixarToyStory/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/toystory

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ToyStory/

Walter Huston in THE STAR WITNESS (1931) Available on DVD From Warner Archives


Great news for fans of Walter Huston! THE STAR WITNESS (1931) is currently available on DVD From Warner Archives. Ordering information can be found HERE


THE STAR WITNESS is a gripping crime thriller by way of courtroom drama in this early talkie directed by cinema titan “Wild Bill” William A. Wellman. The Leeds family (mother Abby, father George and their four children) have just sat down for dinner with Abby’s father, Civil War veteran Grandpa Summerill (Charles `Chic’ Sale) when shots are fired outside, down the street. Gangster Maxey Campo has gunned down two men in cold blood and he makes his getaway through the Leeds’ family house, assaulting feisty Grandpa along the way. Crusading District Attorney Whitlock (Walter Huston) is elated at first, having an entire family of witnesses ready to do their civic duty and testify against the racketeers running rampant in the city. Maxey, however, isn’t finished with the Leeds and unleashes his forces of fear and intimidation against them, leaving Grandpa as the one patriot to stand against crime.


This gripping crime thriller by way of courtroom drama is directed by cinema titan, “Wild Bill” William A. Wellman. The Leeds family (mother Abby, father George, and their four children) have just sat down for dinner with Abby’s father, Civil War veteran Grandpa Summerill (Chic Sale) when shots are fired outside down the street. Gangster Maxey Campo has gunned down two men in cold blood and he makes his getaway through the Leeds family house, assaulting feisty Grandpa along the way. Crusading District Attorney Whitlock (Walter Huston) is elated at first, with an entire family of witnesses ready to do their civic duty and testify against the racketeers running rampant in the city. Maxey, however, isn’t finished with the Leeds and unleashes his forces of fear and intimidation against them, leaving Grandpa as the one patriot to stand against crime.

 

Cinema St. Louis’ CLASSIC FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL Continues This Weekend with L’ARGENT and More at Washington University


Cinema St. Louis presents the 11th Annual Robert Classic French Film Festival which takes place  March 8-10, 15-17, and 22-24, 2019. The location this year is Washington University’s Brown Hall Auditorium, Forsyth & Skinker boulevards. 

The 11th Annual Robert Classic French Film Festival — presented by TV5MONDE and produced by Cinema St. Louis — celebrates St. Louis’ Gallic heritage and France’s cinematic legacy. The featured films span the decades from the 1930s through the 1990s, offering a revealing overview of French cinema. The fest annually includes significant restorations, and this year features seven such works: Pierre Schoendoerffer “The 317th Platoon,” Marcel Pagnol’s “The Baker’s Wife,” Olivier Assayas’ “Cold Water,” Jacques Becker’s “The Hole,” Jacques Rivette’s “The Nun,” Agnés Varda’s “One Sings, the Other Doesn’t,” and   Diane Kurys’ “Peppermint Soda.” The schedule is rounded out by Robert Bresson’s final film, “L’argent,” and two 1969 films celebrating their 50th anniversaries: Luis Buñuel’s “The Milky Way” and Eric Rohmer’s “My Night at Maud’s.” This year’s edition of the fest is held at Washington University’s Brown Hall Auditorium.

Every program features introductions and discussions by film or French scholars and critics. The discussions will place the works in the contexts of both film and French history and provide close analyses.

TV5MONDE serves as the presenting sponsor. The global French-language entertainment network, TV5MONDE presents up to 300 films and dramas every year. Title-sponsor support is provided by the Jane M. & Bruce P. Robert Charitable Foundation, and additional support is provided by Arts & Education Council, American Association of Teachers of French, Alliance Française de Saint Louis, Centre Francophone at Webster University, Les Amis, Missouri Arts Council, Regional Arts Commission, Ann Repetto, Washington University’s Film & Media Studies, and Whitaker Foundation.


The fest continues this Friday March 22nd with L’ARGENT at 7:30. With an introduction and post-film discussion by Colin Burnett, interim chair and associate professor of Film & Media Studies at Washington U. and author of “The Invention of Robert Bresson: The Auteur and His Market” (2017). Ticket information can be found HERE.

In his ruthlessly clear-eyed final film, French master Robert Bresson pushed his unique blend of spiritual rumination and formal rigor to a new level of astringency. Transposing a Tolstoy novella to contemporary Paris, “L’argent” follows a counterfeit bill as it originates as a prop in a schoolboy prank, then circulates among the corrupt and the virtuous alike before landing with a young truck driver and leading him to incarceration and violence. With brutal economy, Bresson constructs his unforgiving vision of original sin out of starkly perceived details, rooting his characters in a dehumanizing material world that withholds any hope of transcendence.

The New Yorker’s Anthony Lane says of “L’argent”: “It is as swift and wintry as a sudden frost. As often with Bresson, the actors are mostly nonprofessionals, and they move through the series of terrible events like stoics and sleepwalkers, lacking the will to fight fate. A schoolboy pays for a picture frame with a forged note, which enters the social system as if it were a virus, and leads in the end to a feverish killing spree, in which not even the saintly are spared. Yet Bresson — who was eighty-two years old when the film came out, and clearly in no mood for mellowing — frames the acts of wickedness, both great and small, with a terrifying calm. Prepare to be haunted by his closeups of objects: a wallet, a ladle, a bowl of hot coffee, an axe. They might almost be guilty themselves.”


The Series continues Saturday March 23rd with PEPPERMINT SODA at 5:00pm. With an introduction and post-film discussion by Jean-Louis Pautrot, professor of French and international studies at Saint Louis University.  Ticket information can be found HERE

In the vein of such classic coming-of-age classics as François Truffaut’s “The 400 Blows,” Diane Kurys’ “Peppermint Soda” captures a particular moment in the tumultuous life and development of young people. Anne (Eléonore Klarwein) and Frederique (Odile Michel) are sisters entering their teen years in 1963 France, torn between divorced parents and struggling with the confines of their strict school. Along the way, they undergo an awakening both political and romantic. Kurys’ celebrated film revels in the comedy and tragedy of the seemingly mundane, weaving a complex tapestry of everyday existence that also touches on the universal.

Robert Abele in the LA Times writes: “Aspiring filmmakers struggling with how to be specific yet universal — especially when it comes to material steeped in autobiography — should do themselves a favor and get to know French filmmaker Diane Kurys’ wonderfully unsentimental, captivating 1977 debut, ‘Peppermint Soda,’ which chronicles a year in the life of two teenage sisters, children of divorce, and was drawn from Kurys’ own girlhood…. The film is a kinetic slideshow of incipient maturity’s roiling promise that Kurys makes both era-vivid (hello early ’60s) and timelessly appealing (hello grades, teachers, parents, boys, freedom and politics). Especially for audiences who took to Bo Burnham’s summer indie hit ‘Eighth Grade,’ a heart-stopping time capsule about an outcast middle schooler, the tart, clear-eyed observations and swerving realities in Kurys’ coming-of-age classic make for a fitting hands-across-the-generations companion piece.”


The Series continues Saturday March 23rd with COLD WATER at 7:300pm. With an introduction and post-film discussion by Diane Carson, professor emerita of film at St. Louis Community College at Meramec and film critic for KDHX (88.1 FM). Ticket information can be found HERE.

An acclaimed early work by Olivier Assayas that has long remained unavailable, the deeply felt coming-of-age drama “Cold Water” at long last makes its way to U.S. theaters. Drawing from his own youthful experiences, Assayas revisits the outskirts of Paris in the early 1970s, telling the story of teenage lovers Gilles (Cyprien Fouquet) and Christine (Virginie Ledoyen), whose open rebellion against family and society threatens to tear them apart, as Christine is sent to an institution by her parents and Gilles faces an uncertain future after running into trouble at school. With a rock soundtrack that vividly evokes the period — and provides the backdrop for one of the most memorable party sequences ever committed to film — “Cold Water” is a heartbreaking immersion into the emotional tumult of adolescence.

In the New York Review of Books, Geoffrey O’Brien enthuses: “Olivier Assayas’s ‘Cold Water’ arrives belatedly to administer a jolt as bracing as its title. Originally made for French television in 1994, as part of a series of hour-long films, it was released in France at feature length the same year. The TV series, ‘Tous les garçons et les filles de leur âge’ (the title plays on Françoise Hardy’s famous ballad of teenage loneliness), enlisted a roster of directors that also included Chantal Akerman, Claire Denis, Cédric Kahn, and André Téchiné to address the theme of adolescence at any point between the 1960s and the 1990s, with only a few stipulations: to shoot in 16mm on a minimal budget, to include a party scene, and to make use of the pop music of the chosen period. That last constraint contributed both to the power of ‘Cold Water’s’ most memorable episode and to the long delay in distributing it here. A quarter of a century later, with rights finally cleared for Bob Dylan, Janis Joplin, Leonard Cohen, Nico, Alice Cooper, Donovan, and the others whose music provides not merely flavor but structure, ‘Cold Water’ can finally be recognized as a singular masterpiece on the most familiar of themes, the sufferings and misfortunes of youthful passion.”


The Series concludes Sunrday March 24th with MY NIGHT AT MAUD’S at 7:00pm. With an introduction and post-film discussion by Robert Garrick, attorney, board member of the French-preservation nonprofit Les Amis, and former contributor to the davekehr.com film blog.Ticket information can be found HERE

In the brilliantly accomplished centerpiece of Eric Rohmer’s “Moral Tales” series, Jean-Louis Trintignant plays Jean-Louis, one of the great conflicted figures of ’60s cinema. A pious Catholic engineer in his early 30s, he lives by a strict moral code in order to rationalize his world, drowning himself in mathematics and the philosophy of Pascal. After spotting the delicate, blond Françoise at Mass, he vows to make her his wife, although when he unwittingly spends the night at the apartment of the bold, brunette divorcée Maud, his rigid ethical standards are challenged. A breakout hit in the United States, “My Night at Maud’s” was one of the most influential and talked-about films of the decade.

Roger Ebert declares: “Eric Rohmer’s ‘My Night at Maud’s’ is about love, being a Roman Catholic, body language and the games people play. It is just about the best movie I’ve seen on all four subjects. It is also a refreshingly intelligent movie: not that it’s ideological or academic (far from it) but that it is thoughtful, and reveals a deep knowledge of human nature…. It is so good to see a movie where the characters have beliefs, and articulate them, and talk to each other (instead of at each other). It is so good, in fact, that you realize how hungry you’ve been for this sort of thing.”