Rebecca Zlotowski on intertextuality in An Easy Girl (Une Fille Facile): “It’s a reproduction of the prologue of the summer tale by Éric Rohmer, the beginning of La Collectionneuse is Haydée Politoff, the main actress on the beach, shot exactly the same.” Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
There is nothing easy about being an easy girl in Rebecca Zlotowski’s An Easy Girl (Une Fille Facile), co-written with Teddy Lussi-Modeste, shot by Georges Lechaptois, which is a highlight of Rendez-Vous with French Cinema.
Naïma (Mina Farid), Sofia (Zahia Dehar), Philippe (Benoît Magimel), and Andres (Nuno Lopes) in An Easy Girl (Une Fille Facile)
Naïma (Mina Farid) has just turned 16. She lives in Cannes with her mother who works as a maid in one of the fancy hotels. When her older bombshell cousin Sofia (Zahia Dehar) visits for the summer, a new chapter begins in her life. Naima is in awe...
There is nothing easy about being an easy girl in Rebecca Zlotowski’s An Easy Girl (Une Fille Facile), co-written with Teddy Lussi-Modeste, shot by Georges Lechaptois, which is a highlight of Rendez-Vous with French Cinema.
Naïma (Mina Farid), Sofia (Zahia Dehar), Philippe (Benoît Magimel), and Andres (Nuno Lopes) in An Easy Girl (Une Fille Facile)
Naïma (Mina Farid) has just turned 16. She lives in Cannes with her mother who works as a maid in one of the fancy hotels. When her older bombshell cousin Sofia (Zahia Dehar) visits for the summer, a new chapter begins in her life. Naima is in awe...
- 3/13/2020
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
In the 1990s, novelist and political activist Nadja Tesich looked back on her days in Paris, specifically the day in the mid-1960s when Eric Rohmer asked her to work with him on Nadja à Paris. Meantime, at the Av Club, Mike D'Angelo picks a scene from Love in the Afternoon, a montage featuring actresses Rohmer had worked with: Françoise Fabian, Béatrice Romand, Marie-Christine Barrault, Haydée Politoff, Laurence De Monaghan and Aurora Cornu. And for Artinfo, Craig Hubert talks with Corina Copp about her first book, titled after and inspired by Rohmer's 1986 film, The Green Ray. » - David Hudson...
- 5/4/2015
- Fandor: Keyframe
In the 1990s, novelist and political activist Nadja Tesich looked back on her days in Paris, specifically the day in the mid-1960s when Eric Rohmer asked her to work with him on Nadja à Paris. Meantime, at the Av Club, Mike D'Angelo picks a scene from Love in the Afternoon, a montage featuring actresses Rohmer had worked with: Françoise Fabian, Béatrice Romand, Marie-Christine Barrault, Haydée Politoff, Laurence De Monaghan and Aurora Cornu. And for Artinfo, Craig Hubert talks with Corina Copp about her first book, titled after and inspired by Rohmer's 1986 film, The Green Ray. » - David Hudson...
- 5/4/2015
- Keyframe
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