Nouvelles Du Monde

“Les films à ne pas manquer selon les critiques : Le Jeune imam, Burning Days, Beau a peur, La Marginale, Showing up, Temps mort, L’Amitié”

“Les films à ne pas manquer selon les critiques : Le Jeune imam, Burning Days, Beau a peur, La Marginale, Showing up, Temps mort, L’Amitié”

Avec : Charlotte Lipinska (Vogue), Xavier Leherpeur (7ème Obsession), Pierre Murat (Télérama) et Jean-Marc Lalanne (Inrockuptibles)

“Le Jeune imam” by Kim Chapiron

In “Le Jeune imam,” co-written with Ladj Ly, a mother (Hady Berthe) sends her teenage son, Ali (Abdulah Sissoko), to Mali to get him back on the right path of the Quran. Ten years later, Ali returns to France and becomes the progressive and 2.0 imam of the city.

“Burning Days” by Emin Alper

In “Burning Days” by Turkish director Emin Alper, an idealistic young prosecutor, Emre (Selahattin Paşalı), arrives in a small corrupt town in central Anatolia. He soon falls into the trap set by those whose interests and privileges are threatened.

“Beau is Afraid” by Ari Aster

In “Beau is Afraid,” Joaquin Phoenix’s character, Beau Wassermann, must fly to visit his mother to commemorate his father’s death. However, things keep getting in his way: his apartment is invaded by homeless people, he’s stabbed on the street, hit by a car, and more.

Lire aussi  Nobel Muratov : « Échangez des prisonniers politiques et pas seulement des soldats ! »

“The Marginale” by Franck Cimière

In “The Marginale,” Corinne Masiero plays Michèle, a homeless woman living at Orly airport, who comes across a fortune in a bag and decides to use the money to go to Portugal to find her son.

“Showing Up” by Kelly Reichardt

In “Showing Up,” Michelle Williams’ character, Lizzie, a sculptor in Portland, deals with small problems leading up to her exhibition, such as a broken boiler, rescuing a wounded pigeon, and her depressed brother.

“Dead Time” by Eve Duchemin

In “Dead Time,” directed by Eve Duchemin, three prisoners are granted a 48-hour release. Bonnard (Karim Leklou) reunites with his family and a distant father. Colin (Jarod Cousyns) returns to a neighborhood where his mother no longer wants to see him. And Hamousin (Issaka Sawadogo) applies for a parking attendant position that would mean his permanent freedom.

“Friendship” by Alain Cavalier

In “Friendship,” the filmmaker visits three old friends at their homes: Boris Bergman, songwriter for Baschung and “Vertige de l’amour,” Maurice Bernart, producer of “Thérèse” in 1986, and Thierry Labelle, the courier who acted in “Libera Me.”
#Jeune #imam #Burning #Days #Beau #Afraid #Marginale #Showing #Temps #mort..
publish_date]

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

ADVERTISEMENT