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Tag: French film

  • Kristin Scott Thomas Has Decided To End Her Acting Career

    Bad news has arrived for fans of French film especially, and those who have come to love the work of Kristin Scott Thomas. She is one of the most talented actresses that has been seen in recent years, but has now decided to end her career.

    Kristin Scott Thomas is an actress who has been seen in a handful of American films, but she is primarily known for her work in French films.

    She recently announced that she will be quitting as an actress, although she does have a handful of films that are still scheduled to come out in the near future. She reached a point last year for the first time in her life where she felt that she could not go on any longer.

    In a recent interview with The Guardian, Kristin Scott Thomas said “I realized I’ve done the things I know how to do so many times in different languages, and I just suddenly thought, I can’t do it any more. I’m bored by it. So I’m stopping. The kinds of films that I do are usually quite rapidly put together, and it always seems to be a little bit of a shambles. I like filming, but what I don’t like is having to rearrange things and rewrite scenes. I just can’t be bothered.”

    The actress is a native of England, but after having spent the majority of her life living in Paris, she feels that she is more French than British. The multilingual actress has had success in both languages, and may be known best to American audiences for her roles in The Horse Whisperer and The English Patient. Her role in The English Patient also earned her an Academy Award nomination.

    She was recently seen playing Ryan Gosling’s mother in the intense and disturbing film Only God Forgives, which was released in the summer of 2013. Thomas has been seen in numerous films throughout her career, which began in 1984 with a miniseries called Mistral’s Daughter.

    In the past 30 years, she has made 65 films, touching on two languages, and a variety of subjects. While she has had a lengthy and successful career, she is only 53, and has plenty of time to return to film if she chooses to later on.

    After appearing in an average of more than two films per year throughout her career, Kristin Scott Thomas has considered herself a workaholic, and now jokes that she is a “recovering actress.”

    Her latest, The Invisible Woman, is coming to theaters soon, and she has two more films that are in post-production, with one in pre-production. Some of her notable French films include Tell No One, I’ve Loved You So Long, and Love Crime.

    In the latter part of her career, Kristin Scott Thomas has had bigger roles in small French films, while continuing her career in English films with smaller roles. She will be taking a break indefinitely, but perhaps fans can hold out some hope that she will return to the cinema eventually.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • French Director, Patrice Chereau Dead at 68

    Notable screenwriter and actor, Patrice Chereau, died on Monday in Paris, France due to complications of lung cancer. He was 68 years old.

    Chereau was widely known for his role as the French director of opera, and served as a dominant figure in the French film industry for more than 40 years. He played a significant role in more than 20 French films throughout the tenure of his entire career. He also directed 9 operas, and 10 theatrical productions over a 38 year span.

    In 1975, Chereau penned his first film production script for “The Flesh of the Orchid.” His 1984 screenplay, “The Wounded Man” was also another plausible production he was lauded for. He received a Cesar award in honor of his directional role in the play.

    Some of his most prominent film and theatrical productions were “Queen Margot” and “Those Who Love Me Can Take the Train.” His “Queen Margot” production garnered two honorary prizes in the 1994 Cannes Film Festival and was nominated for an Oscar for Costume Design. The Cannes Film Festival commemorated “Queen Margot” this year, debuting a newly restored version of film.

    In 2001, Chereau embarked into new film territory with his production “Intimacy.” The sexually charged film marked yet another successful milestone in Chereau’s career as it was his first and only English-language film production. The film went on to win a Berlin Film Festival award for Best Film.

    Chereau’s latest work was a theatrical production of Richard Strauss’ “Elektra.” The New York Times reports that “Elektra” premiered at the Aux-en-Provence earlier this summer, and is slated to open at the Metropolitian Opera House in 2016.

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    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Google Play and YouTube Rent Movies to the French

    YouTube (and Google France) announced today on the YouTube blog that starting today it is making movies available for rent to French Google Play users. Partners in the new offering include independent French studios Cinéma(s) à la Demande, EuropaCorp, M6 Video / SND, Under The Milky Way, UniversCiné and Wild Side, and also major companies Disney Europe, NBC Universal and Sony Pictures Home Entertainment France.

    As the site launches, hundreds of movies — including full-length features from Google/YouTube’s studio partners — will be available for French viewers, with more to come in the following months. Available films range from recent blockbusters like Titin and Twilight Chapitre 4 to artsier stuff li Le Bal Des Actrices and La Grotte Des Rêves Perdus. Films will be available for streaming and download to androids and tablets, both in standard and in high definition.

    I don’t know if pricing is really as competitive as Google claims, but the cost of renting a standard def new release will start at €3.99, and library titles will start at €2.99. Users can get high definition versions for a euro more.

    Viewers will have 30 days to start watching the movies they rent, and once they’ve started the film, they’ll have 48 hours to finish.

  • François Truffaut Google Doodle Celebrates Film Makers Life

    François Truffaut Google Doodle Celebrates Film Makers Life

    Ireland gets a fancy slide show Google Doodle celebrating famed film maker Francois Truffaut.

    For those unaware, Francois Truffaut was one of the founders of the French New Wave movement. He made classic films such as Les Quatre Cents Coups and Jules et Jim. He passed away in 1984 at the age of 52 due to a brain tumor.

    He won the Oscar for Best Foreign Film in 1973 with La Nuit Americaine (Day for Night). He was a big fan of Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg. He was even invited to star in a lead role in Close Encounters of the Third Kind.

    The Google Doodle on the front page, as mentioned before, is a slideshow with three different doodles depicting different parts of Truffaut’s career.

    Check out the slide show at the Irish version of Google or see the individual images below.

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    francoislady