The Frame

from the pen of Jandy Stone

Posts Tagged ‘film-France’

#92: Amelie

By Jandy • Oct 8th, 2008 • Category: Column: Watching the Lists

Amelie Poulain lives and works in Montmartre, but doesn’t connect very deeply with other people. It’s delightful, and it remains one of the two or three best introductions to foreign films for the subtitle-phobic. But it’s a gateway drug to world cinema, and if you like it, move on to the harder stuff.



Les bonnes femmes

By Jandy • Jul 22nd, 2008 • Category: Capsule Reviews

This is Claude Chabrol’s first feature, following four Parisian shop girls as they go about their daily lives. It’s not one of his best-known films, and it feels like a first film – like he’s still feeling out the best ways to do things – but I ended up finding it rather compelling. At first [...]



Masculin Feminin

By Jandy • Jul 22nd, 2008 • Category: Capsule Reviews

A stylistic return to earlier films like Band of Outsiders, but thematically tending toward Godard’s eventual political turn in 1968. Paul (Léaud) is a student and frequent protestor against the Vietnam War; meanwhile, he cautiously (almost indifferently, though his indifference is probably a pose) romances Chantal Goya. I enjoyed the film, as I always enjoy [...]



Made in USA

By Jandy • Jul 22nd, 2008 • Category: Capsule Reviews

In which Jean-Luc Godard tries to meld Pierrot le fou’s visual and narrative style with an overtly political story. Anna Karina is looking for her boyfriend, Richard P—, who has disappeared under suspicious circumstances, perhaps the victim of a political intrigue. Along the way, she’s thrust into a world like “a Disney film starring Humphrey [...]



The Diving Bell and the Butterfly

By Jandy • Mar 29th, 2008 • Category: Film Reviews

This film of great beauty and sensitivity, but without sentimentality, chronicles the experiences of Jean-Dominque Bauby after a paralyzing stroke. Perfect direction and cinematography makes it one of the best films of the year.