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‘Falcon Lake’ Captures the Vulnerability and Terror of Teenhood [CANNES REVIEW]

Those few years that stand between adolescence and the teen years are an awakening. They are consumed with overwhelming discovery and loss, as is depicted in Falcon Lake. For 13-year-old Bastien (Joseph Engal), the summer he travels to Quebec from France with his family changes everything. Tall and lean and with no cell phone access until he turns 14, Bas seems excited about his summer vacation. 

He spends his days entertaining his toddler-age brother Titi (Thomas Laperriere), playing with his Nintendo Switch, and avoiding the waters of Falcon Lake. A scary incident from his younger years makes swimming an activity he actively avoids. While Bas seems content at first to spend his days lounging under the near-constant overcast sky, he finds himself the unlikely companion of 16-year-old Chloé (Sara Montpetit), the daughter of his parents’ friend with whom they are staying. Bas and Titi are also sharing a bunkbed in Chloé’s bedroom. 

Continue reading at Showbiz Cheatsheet.

tags: Falcon Lake, Showbiz CheatSheet, Cannes Film Festival, Charlotte Le Bon, Unifrance
categories: Film/TV
Sunday 05.22.22
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

‘Everybody Loves Jeanne’ Is Witty Melancholy Perfection [CANNES REVIEW]

Romantic comedies aren’t exactly hitting the nail on the head for women over 30. Therefore, when a film gets it right, it sits with you for quite some time. As is the case with Céline Devaux’s debut feature, Everybody Loves Jeanne. Jeanne Mayar’s (Blanche Gardin) life isn’t exactly going to plan. Just as her career as an environmentalist is set to launch to the next level, a mishap with her self-powered sea cleaning machine causes all of her investors to pull out at the last minute, effectively bankrupting her. 

Now swimming in debt, she has no choice but to take her brother Simon’s (Maxence Tual) advice and travel to Lisbon, clean out their deceased mother’s massive apartment, and put it up for sale. Jeanne has been actively avoiding her childhood home and the tragic circumstances surrounding her mother’s death for the past year. Returning there is the very last thing she wants to do. 

Continue reading at Showbiz Cheatsheet.

tags: Everybody Loves Jeanne, Blanche Gardin, Céline Devaux, Cannes Film Festival, Showbiz CheatSheet, french films, Unifrance
categories: Film/TV
Saturday 05.21.22
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

In 'Becoming' Michelle Obama Reclaims Her Time

Instead Becoming, with its soundtrack sprinkled with Frank Ocean and Kendrick Lamar becomes very much about reclaiming her narrative and her time, proving that we as citizens of this country can as well.

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tags: Becoming, Michelle Obama, Netflix, chocolategirleviews, Showbiz CheatSheet
categories: Film/TV
Wednesday 05.06.20
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

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