Ouvir, Pensar e Bloggar

Quantas vezes das nossas viagens reais para as longamente imaginadas ...

e quantas dessas tiveram origem nas vivências de outros. Eis que por breves momentos estas são mais nossas do que de quem as viveu.

Quantas conversas e histórias temos vontade de registar e contar e quantas dessas temos necessidade de voltar a contar só porque nos fazem sentir bem ou mais atentos ou ainda vivos.

Quantas musicas se entranham na alma quando estamos dispostos a ouvir.

É por tudo isto que a "TocadoLado" poderá estar aqui

Immortals

Maio, Junho e Julho

Biography.com Born on This Day

Canto do Tomás

O espaço para a animação dedicado ao meu filho: Film Trailers by Filmtrailer.com

O Oráculo - The Extraordinary Adventures of Adèle Blanc-Sec

França - La fille du puisatier

Petit pains et baguettes:

UK - West is West

O que existe de novo na ilha:
Film Trailers by Filmtrailer.com

Espanha - Bienvenidos al Sul

Tão perto e tão longe de nós o cinema dos nuestros irmanos
Pelicula de cine por Filmtrailer.com

Itália - Manuale d'Amore 3

O gosto a mar desta terra banhada pelo mediterrâneo:
Trailer fornito da Filmtrailer.com

As apostas do Tocadolado (1) - X-men first class

A aposta num certo tipo de cinema e de encantamento:

As apostas do Tocadolado (2) - Season of the Witch

Promessas revelações e outras contradições:
Film Trailers by Filmtrailer.com

domingo, 9 de junho de 2013

The Lady Official Trailer #2 - Luc Besson Movie (2012) HD

Aung San Suu Kyi
Aung San Suu Kyi (Photo credit: Cabinet Office)


The story of pro-democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi and the academic and writer Michael Aris; a true story of love set against political turmoil.

Por vezes a vida real é a melhor história, sé esta não é a razão para ir ver este filme então deveremos ir ver simplesmente para manter os pés na terra.




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Mince Alors ! Bande Annonce



Estou curioso por saber quem irá fazer o remake americano...

"Mince Alors ! Bande Annonce du film de et avec Charlotte De Turckheim. Avec Victoria Abril, Lola Dewaere, Pascal Legiitimus... Nina est jeune, jolie et ronde. Malheureusement son mari Gaspard préfère largement les minces... Surtout depuis qu'ils se sont installés à Paris pour monter leur ligne de maillot de bain ultra pointue. Pour tenter de le séduire à nouveau, Nina accepte à contrecoeur le cadeau empoisonné de son mari : une cure d'amaigrissement à Brides-les-Bains... "
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quarta-feira, 13 de fevereiro de 2013

Camille Claudel 1915: Berlin Review

Camille Claudel 1915 Still - H 2013

The Bottom Line

An unsettling portrait of the artist as a mad woman, anchored by a riveting lead performance.

Venue

Berlin Film Festival (Competition)

Director-Screenwriter

Bruno Dumont

Cast

Juliette Binoche, Jean-Luc Vincent, Robert Leroy

Juliette Binoche stars in Bruno Dumont's disturbing portrayal of the French sculptress' days of confinement and quest for a normal life.

BERLIN -- Those familiar with Bruno Dumont’s work can walk into his movies expecting horrific violence, exquisite landscapes, lengthy existential silences, and plenty of grunting sex between French townies in serious need of dental care. So it was all the more intriguing when he took on a project called Camille Claudel 1915, about the tragically gifted turn-of-the-century sculptress, whose long affair with Auguste Rodin eventually drove her to the madhouse, where she would remain until dying from malnutrition-related causes at the height of the Second World War.

Despite the notable lack of sex and violence, this latest effort from the Gallic doom-and-gloom minimalist is very much in line with his oeuvre, offering up a condensed portrait of Claudel’s internment that’s at once grueling and meditative, as well as deeply disturbing in its use of actual handicapped people as supporting cast members. It’s also Dumont’s first film to feature a major star, and Juliette Binoche’s portrayal of the ill-fated artist is a study of restraint peppered with brief outbursts of emotion -- a riveting performance in an imposing, at times off-putting micro-biopic that’s unlikely to augment the auteur’s dedicated fan base.

If it weren’t for the very Dumont-ian decision -- via his typically concentrated use of close-ups -- to focus on the other asylum patients in detail, the movie could have perhaps traveled further than the filmmaker's recent Outside Satan or Hadewijch, which have found less favor in art houses compared with early works like Humanite or The Life of Jesus.

After all, D.P.-turned-director Bruno Nuytten’s 1988 costumer, Camille Claudel, was an international sensation, sealing Isabelle Adjani’s reputation (she was nominated for an Oscar) and resurrecting the career of a woman whose life was unjustly cut short at the age of 50, when she was confined to the Montdevergues institution in southern France, remaining there until her death 30 years later.

Yet it’s precisely Dumont’s insistence on the most unsettling side of his heroine’s predicament that makes it all the more harrowing. “I can’t stand the sight of these creatures,” Claudel yells at one point, as if echoing the knee-jerk reaction of anyone in the audience witnessing the use of severely disabled individuals on screen, especially when they’re rubbing shoulders with an A-list actress whose beauty has only deepened with the years.

And while many may wonder whether Dumont has crossed the line from art to exploitation -- in his favor, the closing credits cite several mental health associations and professionals involved in the production -- the choice ultimately serves the narrative, underlining the chasm separating Claudel from the other patients, and the fact that she clearly never should have been interned at all, at least in such a facility.

Inspired by correspondence between the artist and her younger brother, Paul (theatre actor Jean-Luc Vincent), himself a famous poet and dramaturge, the story begins where Nuytten’s version ended, picking up with Claudel after she’s already been at the asylum for two years, and focusing on the short period leading up to Paul’s visit -- one which carries with it the hope of family affection and, possibly, Camille’s release.

The opening reels trail Mademoiselle Claudel, as she’s referred to, throughout the medieval corridors and solemn grounds of the cloistered hospital, which cinematographer Guillaume Deffontaines(Pirate TV) captures in meticulously lit widescreen compositions, whose natural gray-blue color palette recalls the paintings of Johannes Vermeer -- an influence emphasized by the black-and-white tile floors and dark wood decors (courtesy of Riton Dupire-Clement), as well as the heavy robes (by Alexandra Charles and Brigitte Massay-Sersour) worn by the nursing staff.

Keeping to herself while observing the other inmates with a mix of curiosity, disgust and, at times, affection, Camille seems to be more or less in her right mind -- that is besides her fear of being poisoned by her former lover, Rodin. When his name is mentioned during an interview with the clinic’s psychiatrist (Robert Leroy), it sets Claudel off on a mad rant which shows that, while she may not necessarily be insane, she’s very, very pissed off at her ex, even if it’s been 20 years since she broke off the affair (when the sculptor refused to leave his wife.)

Like many scenes in the movie, the camera remains glued to Binoche throughout her monologue -- this technique reaches its apotheosis in a late sequence where the lens pushes in so close to her face, it might as well be in 3D -- revealing Camille’s constant struggle to contain feelings that are forever on the verge of destroying her. It’s a strong feat of directing and acting, one which confirms Binoche’s dedication to difficult and elaborate roles that tend to highlight her maturity, rather than hide it.

The second part of the narrative switches point-of-view to focus on Paul while he journeys to the asylum and waxes poetic about God, nature and his idol Arthur Rimbaud (several texts by Claudelfrere were used in the script). If such scenes are less convincing as a whole, they allow Dumont to meditate on the poet’s Catholic mysticism -- plus a really nifty vintage automobile -- taking us away from the hellish quotidian of Montdevergues toward more lofty reflections.

But Paul’s metaphysical detour only serves to underscore Camille’s physical captivity once the two come together in the film’s final act. And while the closing sequences are in some ways inconclusive, even open-ended in a way that Dumont’s films usually aren’t, there’s no second-guessing a fate that history has already sealed.

Production companies: 3B Productions

Cast: Juliette Binoche, Jean-Luc Vincent, Robert Leroy

Director: Bruno Dumont

Screenwriter: Bruno Dumont, freely inspired by correspondence between Camille and Paul Claudel

Producers: Jean Brehat, Rachid Bouchareb, Muriel Merlin

Director of photography: Guillaume Deffontaines

Production designer: Riton Dupire-Clement

Costume designers: Alexandra Charles, Brigitte Massay-Sersour

Editors: Bruno Dumont, Basile Belkhiri

Sales Agent: Wild Bunch

No rating, 95 minutes

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/camille-claudel-1915-berlin-review-420879

 


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