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1-12 of 12
- This investigation, rich in archives and anecdotes, explains the reasons why the saga has become a central monument of popular culture worldwide. Among other things, the power of its message.
- For Ken Loach, cinema is a means of bringing about a different, fairer society, by awakening the viewer's conscience, provoking anger and indignation. He is the rebel artist par excellence. His very definition. His quintessence. In fact, England's Ken Loach is the most committed, celebrated and respected filmmaker of our time. The most awarded too, a member of the exclusive club of directors to have won two Palmes d'Or. His enemy, whom he fights tirelessly: English-style neoliberalism, which, from his point of view, favors the powerful and enslaves, crushes and crushes the weakest, those whom Loach has made his ardent defender. And yet, far from being confined to British society, his humanist work upsets, moves and sometimes makes people laugh all over the world - particularly in France, where he is acclaimed - thus proving its universal dimension. Like all great works... This documentary looks back on a rebellious career spanning 60 years, devoted entirely to challenging power, denouncing injustice and shining a light on the disenfranchised.
- In 1982, Steven Spielberg's seventh feature film, "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial" was released. This film about childhood and difference was going to move hundreds of millions of spectators in the world, imposing itself in its time as the biggest success of the history of the cinema. Its director had not imagined it as a commercial film, but as an intimate work, inspired by his own wounds, telling the story of a young boy's extraordinary friendship with a creature as lost as himself. By its extraordinary power of resonance, E.T. changed its author as well as his career, and marked the imagination of the whole world for several decades.
- The year 2023 marks both the hundredth anniversary of the publication of "Le Diable au corps" by Grasset and the early death of its author, Raymond Radiguet, at the age of 20, from typhoid fever, which helped to establish the novel as a literary myth. It depicts a guilty love, frowned upon by the morals of the time, between a young married woman, Martha, and a 15-year-old boy, Francis. The action takes place during the First World War. Marthe takes advantage of her husband's absence at the front to satisfy her desire for the teenager with an ambiguous personality. Published only five years after the end of the war, the novel shocked critics and public opinion.
- Immersion in the world of cartoonist Jacques Ferrandez on the occasion of his adaptation into a comic strip of Jean Giono's novel "Le Chant du monde".