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- Documentary about the journalists who worked in the political department of the daily Le Monde, for a five month period during the 2012 presidential campaign.
- At the age of 20, Patti Smith arrives in New York and upsets the codes of rock, poetry, and genre. She has become a living legend without ever leaving the sidelines. A poet, actress, and musician. Also militant. An artist with a thousand lives, now 74 years old. The documentary follows the course of Patti Smith's life. Childhood first, and the artist who says: "I wanted to be someone special. I felt distant. Not just from other children, I felt far from the whole world. I spent my childhood in think I was an alien. " Little Patti grew up in rural New Jersey and received a religious education from her Jehovah's Witness mother. But Patti Smith leaves the movement, which does not suit her artistic inclinations.
- The diamond patterns of the Harlequin costume are alive, they are mammalian cells; the monkey and the pink poodle from the film "Clair de Femme", directed by Costa-Gavras, dance together: the diversity is there.
- The two decades following the Russian revolution are marked by a gang of young people who profoundly influenced Russian Cinema. This artistic revolution was led by directors, actors, technicians and poets. They are the characters and voices of our film. The Soviet Actress, Ada Voistik, and its camrades tell us the story of this unique period, through the images of soviet fic-tional works produced between 1917 and 1934. We can thus catch a glimpse of their fight for a new society, where creative freedom was of utmost im-portance. A utopia which will be brought down by an authoritarian power impacting cinema as much as the rest of society.
- Promenades entre chien et loup (Walk with shadows, a filmfantasie from Germany) is a quest. A travel back into the country of my childhood, into the past of my familly. A questionning in order to understand what has marked my country and it's people.
- "To show how the people who consort with oil live, the way in which they work, of which they take advantage or of which they suffer from this natural blessing of their ground. Oil has its place in the financial pages of our newspapers, and seldom the people who live in the shade of the large machine to produce energy. When the journalist Serge Enderlin and the photograph Paolo Woods # whose trip is responsible for this film # had achieved their journey and brought back their work. It seemed obvious to me that their subject # oil # was at the center of the beam of preoccupations of today. Oil fascinates as much as it disgusts. Probably because behind it, numerous themes are outlined and this agitates our society: war in Iraq, misery, fortune, ecology, pollution... The film enters upon these themes, putting the people who live near black gold on the foreground."
- Acclaimed French filmmaker Romain Goupil chronicles the daily life of the family of Abbas ad Roubay, a former member of Saddam's Republican Guard who now struggles to make a living as a deliveryman, and his wife Yasmine and their children.
- A young French dancer arrives in mid 19th century Saint Petersburg.Realizing his performing days are numbered, he becomes a choreographer, about to change the future of ballet.
- Sharon and Sharona Galsulkar are the last educators of their Indian Jewish community, the Bene Israel, which has been residing in the Bombay region for 2000 years and is now disappearing. Genuinely Zionists and concerned by their daughters' future, they are also committed to their community's needs. Whose education will they sacrifice?
- For more than a year now, Béatrice Soulé has been filming the progress of "The Battle of Little Big Horn", Ousmane Sow's new sculpture. Just as she filmed the rebirth of the four Indian chiefs who triumphed over General Custer's Seventh Cavalry, she also filmed the materials and the tiles of the house Sow recently had built in Dakar. This house, which he considers a work in its own right, takes the symbolic form of a sphinx. For the Dakar exhibition, Soulé went from a private to public vision, from close-up to general shot, as she filmed the transport of the works, their installation, and their departure for the "Pont des Arts" in Paris to join the Noubas, Masaïs, Zulus and Peuls.
- An irritating mother, a hypocritical girlfriend, a sadistic brother in law, brutal guards, a cop for a father in law: here are some of the people who live in the village of Crison. You really want to kick their asses, even your girlfriend's, Isabelle. But you have to save the village from More, who rules the place with his disgusting thugs.
- 2015–8.1 (7)TV EpisodeMost of Johannes Vermeer's paintings, when it comes to characters, show women of Delft in a home environment. The artist nevertheless made three exceptions making a man the object of his interest., one of which is "The Astronomer" about a a scientist of his time at his table. This remarkable picture is a valuable reflection of the extraordinary scientific and cultural expansion in the United Provinces in the seventeenth century.
- 2015– 26mTV EpisodeEverything you always wanted to know about one of the most famous paintings of art history. You will learn, among other things, why it is called "The Night Watch" whereas it is daytime, who are the militiamen represented, why the painting is so huge, why although the subject was treated several times in the Dutch Golden Age, only Rembrandt's work can be regarded as a masterpiece.
- 2015– 26mTV EpisodeOn his way to Portugal, then allied with the English, Emperor Napoleon stopped in Spain and aroused the anger of the patriots by deposing the king and replacing him with his brother Joseph. From 1808 to 1814, the Spaniards rose up against the French invaders, starting on May 2, 1808, when they attacked the stagecoaches in charge of exfiltrating the royal children to France. When the king of Spain, restored to his throne, commissioned Goya to paint a picture commemorating the heroic struggle of the people, the painter chose the violent confrontation of May 2, in which he expressed all the violence of the assault on the emperor's troops.
- 2015– 26mTV EpisodeDegas, one of the leaders of the uncompromising Impressionists, chose in 1877 a daring genre scene, close to the photographic snapshot. What he shows us are prostitutes on the terrace of a café on the Grands Boulevards, one of whom is tapping her fingernail against her tooth, seemingly saying "not just that" about a customer's lack of generosity. Zola's naturalism here joins the theme of urban life, a major theme examined by all the Impressionists. In any case, the painting is miles away from the neoclassicism in vogue at the time, at the (claimed) risk of disconcerting the bourgeois.
- 2015– 26mTV EpisodeBorn in Venice in 1721, trained by his famous uncle Canaletto, the famous landscape painter Bernardo Bellotto did not stick to the City of the Doges. He was rather the rolling stone kind, traveling from one European court to another (Dresden, Vienna, Munich). In 1764, he accepted an invitation from Poland's newly elected King Stanislaus Augustus Poniatowski later (from 1768) to become his court painter in Warsaw.. Happy to work in Poland at he service of an enlightened monarch he settled down and remained there for 16 years, until his death. This is where, in 1773, he painted an intriguing "veduta" of the Polish capital and the environs of the Castle entitled "A View of Warsaw from the Royal Castle".
- 2015– 27mTV Episode
- 2015–TV Episode
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- 2015–7.2 (5)TV Episode
- 2015–7.2 (5)TV Episode
- 2015–TV Episode
- 2015– 27mTV Episode
- 2015–TV Episode
- 2015–8.2 (6)TV Episode