Thursday, February 10, 2022
RENDEZ-VOUS WITH FRENCH CINEMA 2022
UNIFRANCE AND
FILM AT LINCOLN CENTER
present
THE 27th RENDEZ-VOUS WITH FRENCH CINEMA
MARCH 3–13,
2022
Opening Night
Claire Denis's Fire starring
Juliette Binoche,
with Denis and Binoche in person
With 23 major films including films by
legendary
filmmakers,
Mathieu Amalric,
Jacques Audiard, Arnaud Desplechin,
& Emmanuel
Carrère,
& brilliant
debut features from
Charline Bourgeois-Tacquet, Vincent Maël Cardona, Emilie Carpentier, Vincent Le
Port and Constance Meyer
Among those confirmed to appear in person
at the festival are:
Mathieu Amalric, Jacques Audiard, Antoine
Barraud,
Philippe Béziat, Juliette Binoche, Charline
Bourgeois-Tacquet,
Leyla Bouzid, Vincent Maël Cardona, Emilie
Carpentier,
Emmanuel Carrère, Claire Denis, Arnaud
Desplechin,
Eric Dumont, Déborah Lukumuena, Aurélia
Georges,
Axelle Ropert & …
The 2022 Opening Night selection is Claire Denis’s Fire, featuring screen legend Juliette Binoche as Sara, navigating the reemergence of her ex-lover François (Grégoire Colin), who coincidentally contacts her partner Jean (Vincent Lindon) for a business proposition. The melancholic drama showcases Denis’s characteristic knack for capturing the intimate sensuality of everyday life, bolstered by a gorgeous score from regular collaborators Tindersticks.
*** *** ***
"In March 2020, Rendez-Vous with French Cinema was the last big film event in NYC before everything shut down. Two years later, it feels great to say that we are back with an in-person festival and more than 20 French filmmakers and talent, including exciting new voices and returning favorites, in attendance.” -- Daniela Elstner, Executive Director of Unifrance.
*** *** ***
Highlights of the 23-film lineup include
- Authentik, Audrey Estrougo’s crowd-pleasing and galvanizing biopic of rap duo Suprême NTM, offering a dynamic reconstruction of a moment in hip-hop’s global explosion;
- Emmanuel Carrère’s Between Two Worlds, taking inspiration from investigative journalist Florence Aubenas’s 2010 best-selling nonfiction book The Night Cleaner and a longtime passion project for star Juliette Binoche;
- Deception, master filmmaker Arnaud Desplechin’s adaptation of Philip Roth’s classic novel encompassing a fusion of rigorous intellectual discourse and fervid emotionality;
- Rendez-Vous regular Christophe Honoré’s Guermantes, cunningly shot and wonderfully imagined by Honoré’s theatrical community despite the production’s debilitating COVID delays;
- Hold Me Tight, Mathieu’s Amalric’s daringly fluid portrait of one woman’s fractured psyche;
- Antoine Barraud’s third narrative feature Madeleine Collins, equal parts drama and thriller, starring Virginie Efira (Paul Verhoeven’s Benedetta);
- Our Men, starring director and Rendez-Vous regular Louis Garrel and directed by Rachel Lang, drawing upon her own background as an officer in the French army reserves;
- Paris, 13th District, Palme d’Or–winner Jacques Audiard’s exploration of casual sex, webcams, and relationships in an unsparing but nonjudgmental portrait of young Parisians; and much more.
This year’s lineup also features a number of highly anticipated debut features, including
- Charline Bourgeois-Tacquet’s Anaïs in Love, which premiered in the Critics’ Week section at last year’s Cannes;
- Vincent Le Port’s Bruno Reidal, Confessions of a Murderer, a cold and unnervingly charged portrait of a sexually driven killer;
- Emilie Carpentier’s The Horizon, following disaffected teenagers discovering a sense of purpose in political engagement;
- Magnetic Beats, Vincent Maël Cardona’s heady, emotionally rich reconstruction of an intense moment of social and cultural change and a Directors’ Fortnight selection at last year’s Cannes; and
- Constance Meyer’s Robust, featuring Gérard Depardieu and a premise reminiscent of the unlikely friendship in 2012’s Rendez-Vous selection The Intouchables, but with a drier sense of humor that’s all its own.
Free talks include
- a sit-down with filmmakers Claire Denis and official Guest of Honor at this year’s Rendez-Vous Jim Jarmusch, in an extended conversation about their decades-spanning careers;
- Juliette Binoche and Déborah Lukumuena, meeting to discuss their professional trajectories and creative influences; and
- “Working the image : a French-American look at cinematography,” a special panel organized in partnership with French In Motion and the Gotham Film & Media Institute and bringing together French and American filmmakers and cinematographers to discuss their varied inspirations, creative philosophies, and artistic practices.
Moviegoers will have the opportunity to vote for their favorite film in the lineup with the third annual Rendez-Vous Audience Award.
This year’s festival will also feature the inaugural Best Emerging Filmmaker Award, a new initiative to bring attention to the unique cinematic point of view of emerging filmmakers and their interpretation of France’s new and diverse identities.
Six students pursuing film and French studies degrees from NYC
colleges will be invited to participate in the jury and to choose their
favorite first or second feature from this year’s Rendez-Vous slate. Each jury
member will receive a free all-access pass to view every screening in the
festival. The jury-awarded film will be announced shortly after the end of the
festival alongside the Rendez-Vous Audience Award.
To further encourage young people to be part
of Rendez-Vous, two free school screenings of The Horizon will
be organized on March 10 and 11, with director Emilie Carpentier in attendance
for a post-screening discussion with middle-, high-school, and college
students.
Rendez-Vous with French Cinema is sponsored by
TV5 Monde, Villa Albertine, The Taub Family Selections, AFC and FIAF.
Member ticket presale for Rendez-Vous with
French Cinema begins on February 15 at noon, with tickets for the general
public available starting February 18 at noon. Tickets are $17; $13 for
students, seniors (62+), and persons with disabilities; and $12 for Film at
Lincoln Center members. Opening Night tickets for Claire Denis’ Fire are
$25 and $20 for all Film at Lincoln Center members. Students can see more and
save with the purchase of the $35 Student All-Access Pass.
Tickets to the free talks will be distributed
at the corresponding box office on a first-come, first-served basis beginning
one hour prior to the event start. Please note that the line may form in
advance. Limit one ticket per person, subject to availability.
FILMS & DESCRIPTIONS
All films screen in the Walter Reade Theater (165 W. 65th St.) unless
otherwise noted
Opening Night
Fire / Avec amour et acharnement
Claire Denis, 2021, France, 116m
French with English subtitles
The legendary Claire
Denis delivers an understated yet psychologically vivid romantic drama,
co-written with her Let the Sunshine In collaborator Christine
Angot. On her way to work one day, Sara (Juliette Binoche) spies her ex-lover
François (Grégoire Colin) outside of the metro; shortly thereafter, by a
seeming coincidence, François gets in touch with Jean (Vincent Lindon), his old
friend—and Sara’s partner—to propose they go into business together on a new
venture. François’s unexpected reemergence in their lives, and the emotional
destabilization that comes with it, propel this finely wrought and melancholic
narrative, with Denis’s characteristic knack for capturing the intimate
sensuality of everyday life on full display, bolstered by a typically gorgeous
score from regular collaborators Tindersticks. An IFC Films release.
Thursday,
March 3, 6:30pm (Introduced by Claire Denis and Juliette Binoche)
Thursday, March 3, 9:15pm
Anaïs in Love / Les Amours d'Anaïs
Charline Bourgeois-Tacquet, 2021, France, 98m
English and French with English subtitles
Behind on her rent,
contemplating breaking up with her boyfriend, and struggling to complete her
thesis, thirtysomething Anaïs (Anaïs Demoustier) is in a manic search for
stability. An affair with middle-aged publisher Daniel (Denis Podalydès, also
in this year’s Rendez-Vous selection Deception) seems like a dead
end until Anaïs discovers the literary work of his formidable partner Emilie
(Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi). Writer-director Charline Bourgeois-Tacquet’s
effervescent feature debut (which premiered in the Critics’ Week section at
last year’s Cannes) draws in part upon her background in publishing to ground a
tale of self-discovery as literate and delightful as it is unexpected, keeping
both Anaïs and viewers off-balance until the very final, cliché-shattering
final shot. A Magnolia Pictures release.
Sunday,
March 6, 12:45pm (Q&A with Charline Bourgeois-Tacquet)
Friday, March 11, 3:30pm
Authentik / Suprêmes
Audrey Estrougo, 2021, France, 112m
French with English subtitles
Doing for French rap duo
Suprême NTM what Straight Outta Compton did for N.W.A., Audrey
Estrougo’s crowd-pleasing and galvanizing biopic kicks off in 1989. A
collaboration that begins on a whim between two friends takes off after an
electrifying debut performance unexpectedly thrusts JoeyStarr (Théo Christine)
and Kool Shen (Sandor Funtek) into the spotlight. The pair court controversy as
their music increasingly speaks to their marginalized community’s struggles,
building to a head when their single “Police” attracts official outrage. A
dynamic reconstruction of a moment in hip-hop’s global explosion, Estrougo
takes viewers back to a key moment in French society when long-dismissed voices
started, quite literally, to be heard in a new way.
Tuesday,
March 8, 6:00pm (Q&A with director of photography Eric Dumont)
Friday, March 11, 1:00pm
Between Two Worlds / Le Quai de Ouistreham
Emmanuel Carrère, 2021, France, 106m
French with English subtitles
Famed journalist
Marianne Winckler (Juliette Binoche) goes undercover to investigate the
exploitation of cleaning people in the north of France, eventually landing a
job on a ferry. As she learns more about the plight of these workers on the
margins, Marianne grows closer to her new comrades—while simultaneously
beginning to harbor concerns that she’ll be complicit in their exploitation
when she returns to Paris and writes a book about her experiences. A longtime
passion project for star Binoche, Between Two Worlds takes
inspiration from investigative journalist Florence Aubenas’s 2010 best-selling
nonfiction book The Night Cleaner; the writer would only agree to
let it be adapted by the great French novelist Emmanuel Carrère, who co-wrote
and directed this feature—his first since 2005’s acclaimed La Moustache.
A Cohen Media Group release.
Saturday,
March 5, 6:15pm (Q&A with Emmanuel Carrère and Juliette Binoche)
Bruno Reidal, Confessions of a Murderer /
Bruno Reidal
Vincent Le Port, 2021, France, 101m
French with English subtitles
1905: When Bruno Reidal
(Dimitri Doré), a young seminary student, confesses to the brutal murder of a
13-year-old, three doctors are tasked with determining whether or not he’s
insane. At a moment when the separation of church and state has just been
legally codified in France, determining the motivations of a future member of
the Catholic Church proves especially tricky. Under the supervision of Dr.
Alexandre Lacassagne (Jean-Luc Vincent), Bruno is tasked with writing his
memoirs to help the committee make their decision. Working from the real
Reidal’s lucid, extraordinarily detached, and analytical volume, Vincent Le
Port’s feature debut is a chilly, unnerving, and existentially charged portrait
of a sexually driven killer within a religious milieu.
Wednesday,
March 9, 1:00pm
Friday, March 11, 9:00pm
Deception / Tromperie
Arnaud Desplechin, 2021, France, 105m
French with English subtitles
“I’m a talk fetishist!”
exclaims novelist Philip (Denis Podalydès) in one of the many conversations
before, during, and after sex with his married (but not to him) partner (Léa
Seydoux). Love, Israel, regret, and mortality are all in the heady
conversational mix in the latest from master filmmaker Arnaud Desplechin (A
Christmas Tale, My Golden Days). A longtime dream project for
the co-writer and director, Deception is a faithful adaptation
of Philip Roth’s novel of the same name, whose fusion of rigorous intellectual
discourse and explosive emotionality is a perfect fit for Desplechin. The bold
chorus of voices from lovers past, present, and possibly imaginary includes a
deeply moving supporting turn from Emmanuelle Devos, the auteur’s frequent
leading lady.
Saturday,
March 5, 9:15pm (Q&A with Arnaud Desplechin)
Sunday, March 13, 3:30pm
Everything Went Fine / Tout s'est bien passé
François Ozon, 2021, France, 113m
French and German with English subtitles
After a stroke leaves
him paralyzed in one arm, 85-year-old André Bernheim (Rendez-Vous favorite
André Dussolier) demands that his eldest daughter, Emmanuèle (Sophie Marceau),
help him commit suicide. With the grudging support of her younger sister
Pascale (Géraldine Pailhas), Emmanuèle begins sorting through the complicated
processes and bureaucratic hurdles necessary to fulfill her father’s request.
Based on an autobiographical novel by Emmanuèle Bernheim, the latest film from
the ever-unpredictable, genre-hopping François Ozon is a dramatic change of
pace from last year’s nostalgic and romantic Rendez-Vous selection Summer
of 85. Unsentimental and often surprisingly funny, Everything Went
Fine offers both a look at the logistics of approaching death on one’s
own terms and a nuanced portrait of a complicated family, featuring the
legendary Charlotte Rampling (Ozon’s Under the Sand star) as
André’s estranged wife. A Cohen Media Group release.
Monday,
March 7, 6:00pm
Gallant Indies / Indes galantes
Philippe Béziat, 2020, France, 108m
English and French with English subtitles
In 2019, eight opera
singers and 30 dancers from a wide variety of artistic and demographic
backgrounds convened at Paris’s Opéra Bastille to begin work on an ambitious
new production of Les Indes galantes. The baroque composition by
Jean-Philippe Rameau is a cornerstone of French musical history, but its
beautiful melodies come alongside a host of outdated conceptions of “exotic”
locations and peoples. Philippe Béziat’s documentary captures the work of this
multifaceted troupe under the direction of artist and filmmaker Clément
Cogitore; together, they work to deliver Rameau’s opera into the 21st century
and the everyday diversity of contemporary France, integrating questions of
racism, classism, and colonialism into a radical new staging that both honors
and transforms the original text. A Distrib Films US release.
Saturday,
March 12, 6:15pm (Q&A with Philippe Béziat)
Guermantes
Christophe Honoré, 2021, France, 139m
French with English subtitles
North American Premiere
When Rendez-Vous regular
Christophe Honoré (Love Songs, On a Magical Night) began
work on a stage adaptation of Proust in spring 2020, the COVID pandemic quickly
shut it down. Rehearsals resumed that summer, but when performances were once
again canceled until fall, Honoré decided to adapt by continuing to rehearse
for the pure, communal joy of the theatrical experience—even if there would be
no in-person audience to witness the performances that resulted. That’s the
part-real, part-fictional premise of Honoré’s latest film, which—for the first
time—places the writer-director front and center as a character in his own
work. Despite the obstacles around them, Honoré and his theatrical community
forge ahead, finding love, inspiration, and a healthy helping of casually nude
conversations along the way.
Tuesday,
March 8, 3:00pm
Sunday, March 13, 12:30pm
Hold Me Tight / Serre moi fort
Mathieu Amalric, 2021, France, 97m
French and German with English subtitles
Vicky Krieps (Phantom
Thread, Bergman Island) gives another riveting performance as
Camille, a woman on the run from her family for reasons that aren’t immediately
clear. Widely renowned as an actor but less well-known here for his equally
impressive work behind the camera, Mathieu Amalric’s sixth feature directorial
outing—his most ambitious to date—is a virtuosic, daringly fluid portrait of
one woman’s fractured psyche. Alternating between Camille’s adventures on the
road and her abandoned husband Marc (Arieh Worthalter) as he struggles to take
care of their children at home, Amalric’s film keeps viewers uncertain as to
the reality of what they’re seeing until the final moments of this richly
rewarding, moving, and unpredictable portrait of grief.
Sunday,
March 6, 9:00pm (Q&A with Mathieu Amalric)
Sunday, March 13, 6:00pm
The Horizon / L’Horizon
Emilie Carpentier, 2021, France, 85m
French with English subtitles
North American Premiere
As Emilie Carpentier’s
debut feature The Horizon begins, 18-year-old Adja (Tracy
Gotoas) is disconnected from her community—indifferent to climate change and
mocking the efforts of activists to oppose construction of a new mixed-use
facility. But when she grows closer to classmate Arthur (Sylvain Le Gall)—an
earnest activist and fellow intern at a nursing home—Adja begins to find a
sense of purpose in political engagement, drifting away from her shallow group
of friends. At The Horizon’s center is an in-depth immersion in the
routines, self-constructed communities, and urgent day-to-day efforts of an
organically diverse coalition of young activists. Harnessing flawless
performances from her young leads, Carpentier plunges viewers into the midst of
a new generation of activists’ coming of age.
Tuesday,
March 8, 1:00pm
Thursday, March 10, 6:00pm (Q&A with Emilie Carpentier)
Lost Illusions / Illusions perdues
Xavier Giannoli, 2021, France, 149m
French with English subtitles
In 1821, Lucien de
Rubempré (Benjamin Voisin) arrives in Paris as a sensitive and idealistic young
poet determined to write a reputation-making novel. Instead, he finds himself
swept into journalism, whose influence and reach is booming with the help of
the printing press, widely available of late. Under the mentorship of editor
Étienne Lousteau (Vincent Lacoste), Lucien agrees to write rave theater reviews
for bribes, achieving material success at the expense of his conscience. With
this sweeping, sumptuous adaptation of one of Honoré de Balzac’s greatest
novels, Xavier Giannoli crafts a surprisingly contemporary tale of corruption
amidst an early form of “fake news,” boasting an all-star cast that includes
Gérard Depardieu and Jeanne Balibar. A Music Box Films release.
Tuesday,
March 8, 9:00pm
Friday, March 11, 6:00pm
Madeleine Collins
Antoine Barraud, 2021, France/Belgium/Switzerland, 102m
French with English subtitles
Judith Fauvet (Virginie
Efira, most recently acclaimed for her leading performance in Paul
Verhoeven’s Benedetta) leads a double life with two families:
raising a daughter with one partner in Switzerland, and another two sons in
France with another. The mysterious reasons for Judith’s lies, and the
complications that ensue from her increasingly futile efforts to keep the two
lives separate, propel the third narrative feature from Antoine Barraud (Portrait
of the Artist, Rendez-Vous 2015), anchored by a virtuoso turn from Efira in
all of her character’s many guises. The question of what Judith wants is slowly
unraveled in this gorgeously shot film that’s equal parts drama and
thriller—unpredictable in its unfolding, full of unexpected twists, and
unexpectedly satisfying in its resolution.
Friday,
March 4, 3:45pm (Q&A with Antoine Barraud)
Saturday, March 12, 9:15pm (Q&A with Antoine Barraud)
Magnetic Beats / Les Magnétiques
Vincent Maël Cardona, 2021, France/Germany, 98m
English, German, and French with English subtitles
Brittany, early 1980s:
With political and cultural transition in the air, little brother Philippe
(Thimotée Robart) stands in awe of moody, indulgent, but charismatic older
sibling Jérôme (Joseph Olivennes). The two are passionate about operating a
post-punk pirate station named (in homage to Joy Division) Radio Warsaw. Jérôme
is the silver-tongued but mercurial on-air DJ, Philippe the shy technical
support with a talent for sonic collage. Both fall for single mother Marianne (Marie
Colomb), just before Philippe has to begin his compulsory year of military
service abroad in Berlin. Vincent Maël Cardona’s feature-film debut (which
premiered in Directors’ Fortnight at last year’s Cannes) is a heady,
emotionally rich reconstruction of an intense moment of social and cultural
change, complete with an excellent soundtrack.
Saturday,
March 5, 3:30pm (Q&A with Vincent Maël Cardona)
Wednesday, March 9, 8:30pm
Our Men / Mon légionnaire
Rachel Lang, 2021, Belgium/France, 106m
French, Russian, and English with English subtitles
U.S. Premiere
In a dramatic change of
pace from his usual urbane parts, Louis Garrel (a regular presence in
Rendez-Vous selections and a talented director in his own right) stars as
Maxime, a stoic commander in the French Foreign Legion. Stationed at an outpost
in Corsica, Maxime is placed in charge of a dangerous and sensitive mission to
Mali. Under his command is Ukrainian soldier Vlad (Aleksandr Kuznetsov), whose
fiancée Nika (Ina Marija Bartaité) babysits for Maxime’s wife (Camille Cottin).
Deftly juggling the perspectives of officers, the men they command, and the
partners of both, Our Men is an impressively assured and
unsensational drama about an oft-misunderstood organization, given palpable
realism by writer-director Rachel Lang, who draws upon her own background as an
officer in the French army reserves.
Friday,
March 4, 1:00pm
Monday, March 7, 8:30pm
Paris, 13th District / Les Olympiades, Paris
13e
Jacques Audiard, 2021, 105m
French, Mandarin, and English with English subtitles
Transplanting the work
of graphic novelist Adrian Tomine from the U.S. to France, Palme d’Or–winner
Jacques Audiard (Dheepan) dives into the mores of modern love in his
latest film. A series of overlapping characters and stories begins with Émilie
(Lucie Zhang), a young woman who hooks up with the first roommate she finds to
supplement her income. Meanwhile, young Nora (Noémie Merlant) is mistaken for
an online sex worker, Amber Sweet (Jehnny Beth, of the post-punk band Savages),
and gets in touch with her, only to unexpectedly develop a connection. Casual
sex, webcams, and fluidly intertwining relationships are all explored in this
unsparing but nonjudgmental portrait of young Parisians in and out of love and
lust. An IFC Films release.
Friday,
March 4, 9:00pm (Q&A with Jacques Audiard)
Monday, March 7, 1:00pm
Petite Solange
Axelle Ropert, 2021, France, 86m
French with English subtitles
North American Premiere
Jade Springer makes an
extraordinary feature-film debut as Solange, a lively 13-year-old living in
Nantes with her music-shop-owner father Antoine (Philippe Katerine) and actress
mother Aurélia (Léa Drucker). When their marriage starts falling apart, the
normally cheerful Solange is unprepared and emotionally destabilized. While her
brother Romain (Grégoire Montana) takes advantage of an opportunity to avoid
turmoil by going abroad, Solange feels increasingly alone and erratic in
navigating this unexpected familial collapse. Deftly transitioning from comedy
to drama, director Axelle Ropert (Miss and the Doctors, Rendez-Vous
2014) takes inspiration from The 400 Blows in a sensitive
divorce drama that places children, rather than adults, at the center of
attention.
Monday,
March 7, 3:30pm
Saturday, March 12, 12:30pm (Q&A with Axelle Ropert)
Rise / En corps
Cédric Klapisch, 2022, France/Belgium, 117m
French and English with English subtitles
North American Premiere
Ballerina Elise (Marion
Barbeau) suffers two injuries at the same time: a devastating fall on stage
that leaves her injured and unable to dance for up to two years, and her
partner suddenly and humiliatingly breaking up with her for another dancer.
Initially devastated, Elise slowly rebuilds her life while redirecting her
efforts to contemporary dance in the troupe of real-life Israeli choreographer
Hofesh Shechter, playing himself. Opening with a lengthy performance sure to
delight ballet aficionados, Rise places real-life ballerina
Barbeau at the center of the latest crowd-pleaser from Cédric Klapisch (L'Auberge
espagnole; Rendez-Vous 2020 selection Someone, Somewhere). In a
star-making performance, Barbeau—a principal in the Paris Opera Ballet—proves
every bit as talented an actress on screen as she is a dancer on stage.
Wednesday,
March 9, 6:00pm
Sunday, March 13, 8:30pm
Robust / Robuste
Constance Meyer, 2021, France/Belgium, 95m
French with English subtitles
Well past his prime,
once-famed actor Georges (Gérard Depardieu) is struggling with health problems
and a reputation for being difficult to work with. While preparing for his
latest role, Georges is thrown for a loop when his assistant takes time off,
leaving him temporarily dependent on help from replacement security guard (and
amateur female wrestler) Aïssa (Déborah Lukumuena). The two develop an
increasingly warm and supportive relationship in Constance Meyer’s assured
feature debut, whose premise is reminiscent of the unlikely friendship in
2012’s Rendez-Vous selection The Intouchables, but with a drier
sense of humor that’s all its own. Front and center is Depardieu, winking at
his own image as an increasingly difficult and divisive legend in a part as
hilarious as it is poignant.
Sunday,
March 6, 3:30pm (Q&A with Déborah Lukumuena)
Thursday, March 10, 3:45pm
Secret Name / La Place d'une autre
Aurélia Georges, 2021, France, 112m
French with English subtitles
While serving on the
front lines of World War I, a former sex worker who’s now a nurse, Nélie
Laborde (Lyna Khoudri, The French Dispatch), is given the
unexpected chance to start a new life when one of her patients, Rose Juillet
(Maud Wyler), is seemingly killed by invading German troops. Nélie assumes
Rose’s identity and leaves the field of battle for the north of France, where
the well-off Eléonore de Lengwil (Rendez-Vous favorite Sabine Azéma) lives. Rose
was to be her ward, and—under her false identity—Nélie grows closer to Eléonore
over their shared love of literature. Loosely adapted and updated from a Wilkie
Collins novel, Aurélia Georges’s film (which premiered at last year’s Locarno
Film Festival) brings the intensity of a thriller to a thoughtful drama about
female identity.
Thursday,
March 10, 1:00pm
Saturday, March 12, 3:15pm (Q&A with Aurélia Georges)
A Tale of Love and Desire / Une histoire
d'amour et de désir
Leyla Bouzid, 2021, France/Tunisia, 102m
French and Arabic with English subtitles
Two students from very
different backgrounds, both enrolled at the Sorbonne, find themselves
passionately attracted to each other in Tunisian-born writer-director Leyla
Bouzid’s sophomore feature. Ahmed (Sami Outalbali) is a shy, socially
conservative Arab of Algerian background, born and raised in Paris; Farah
(Zbeida Belhajamor) is an outgoing, sexually confident young Tunisian
immigrant. They meet on the way to the same bookstore to purchase ancient,
sexually charged Arabic poetry, and their mutual study of these texts helps
kindle a spark between the two that causes Ahmed to increasingly question his
values. Bouzid’s sensual and sensitive drama is a cross-sectional portrait of
the diverse varieties of Arab diaspora life unfolding in the heart of a very
contemporary Paris. A Distrib Films US release
Saturday,
March 5, 12:30pm (Q&A with Leyla Bouzid)
Wednesday, March 9, 3:30pm
Touchez pas au grisbi
Jacques Becker, France/Italy, 1954, 94m
French with English subtitles
Aging hoods Max le
Menteur (Jean Gabin) and Riton (René Dary) are sitting pretty after pulling off
the heist of a lifetime—50 million francs in gold bullion snatched at Orly
airport. For Max, this grisbi (loot) will ensure him a cushy
retirement; for Riton, it will help him hold onto his two-faced girlfriend Josy
(Jeanne Moreau, in one of her earliest film appearances), who, along with Max’s
moll Lola, is appearing in a new floor show at the nightclub of their longtime
underworld buddy, Pierrot (nicknamed “Fats”). But Max and Riton have another
thing coming. Director Jacques Becker’s brilliantly crafted, surprisingly
poignant crime drama features Gabin in a tremendous performance that helped
relaunch his sagging career and won him the Best Actor award at the 1954 Venice
Film Festival.
Friday,
March 4, 6:30pm (Introduced by Jim Jarmusch)
Undercover / Enquête sur un scandale d'État
Thierry de Peretti, 2021, France, 121m
French with English subtitles
U.S. Premiere
Based on the real-life
scandal that led to the 2017 indictment of police chief François Thierry for
drug smuggling, Undercover patiently untangles a complicated
trafficking scheme that unfolded within the legal system itself. When informant
Hubert Antoine (Roschdy Zem) makes his initial outreach to Libération journalist
Stéphane Vilner (Pio Marmaï), he produces documentation that reveals narcotics
chief Jacques Billard (Vincent Lindon, also in this year’s Opening Night
selection Fire) to be a high-level trafficker. The dogged,
sometimes thorny relationship between the two men over three years—and the
consequences of their revelations—drive this methodical procedural in the
tradition of All the President’s Men and Spotlight,
shot by Claire Mathon (Portrait of a Lady on Fire) with classical
restraint and elegance.
Sunday,
March 6, 6:15pm
Thursday, March 10, 8:45pm
FREE TALKS
All talks are held at the Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center (144 W. 65th St.)
Free Talk: Claire Denis & Jim Jarmusch
Claire Denis, the
singular cinematic visionary behind Beau Travail (NYFF37), Let
the Sunshine In (NYFF55), and High Life (NYFF56), returns
to Film at Lincoln Center with this year's Opening Night selection Fire,
a searing and unsparing romantic drama. We're excited to bring together Denis
and Jim Jarmusch—an icon of the American independent filmmaking landscape, and
the official Guest of Honor at the 2022 edition of Rendez-Vous—for an extended
conversation about their decades-spanning careers.
Friday,
March 4, 5:00pm, Francesca Beale Theater
Free Talk: Juliette Binoche & Déborah
Lukumuena
In a Rendez-Vous lineup
that features an abundance of extraordinary performances from women, two names
stand out: Juliette Binoche, a much-acclaimed icon of French and international
cinema, anchoring new films from directors Claire Denis (Fire) and
Emmanuel Carrère (Between Two Worlds); and Déborah Lukumuena, a singular
talent and rising star who embodies the best of a new generation of young
French actors, performing opposite Gérard Depardieu in Constance Meyer's Robust.
Join us for a conversation in which we'll explore two women's professional
trajectories and creative influences, their philosophies and priorities in
selecting new projects, and their respective relationships with the American
film industry.
Saturday,
March 5, 4:30pm, Amphitheater
Free Talk: Working the image: A
French-American look at cinematography
The collaboration
between a film's director and its director of photography is central to
crafting the film's visual language, defining its forms and rhythms, and
bringing its characters and setting to life. This special panel conversation
will bring together French and American filmmakers and cinematographers—working
across a range of genres, styles, and moods—to discuss their influences, their
creative philosophies and working methods, and the choices that shape their
artistic practice. In partnership with French In Motion and the Gotham Film
& Media Institute
Monday,
March 7, 5:00pm, Amphitheater
UNIFRANCE
Founded in 1949 and
strengthened thanks to its merger with TV France International in 2021,
Unifrance is the organization responsible for promoting French cinema and TV
content worldwide.
Located in Paris, Unifrance employs around 50
staff members, as well as representatives based in the U.S., in China, and soon
in Japan. The organization currently brings together more than 1,000 French
cinema and TV content professionals (producers, talents, agents, sales
companies, etc.) working together to promote French films and TV programmes
among foreign audiences, industry executives, and media.
Unifrance is supported by the French
government, the CNC, the PROCIREP and by many public and private partners.
Visit UNIFRANCE.ORG for more information.
FILM AT LINCOLN CENTER
Film at Lincoln Center is dedicated to
supporting the art and elevating the craft of cinema and enriching film
culture.
Film at Lincoln Center fulfills its mission
through the programming of festivals, series, retrospectives, and new releases;
the publication of Film Comment; and the presentation of podcasts,
talks, special events, and artist initiatives. Since its founding in 1969, this
nonprofit organization has brought the celebration of American and
international film to the world-renowned Lincoln Center arts complex, making
the discussion and appreciation of cinema accessible to a broad audience and
ensuring that it remains an essential art form for years to come.
This project is supported in part by an award
from the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the
Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State
Legislature. For more information, visit www.filmlinc.org and follow @filmlinc on Twitter and Instagram.
Labels: Anaïs Demoustier, Arnaud Desplechin, Claire Denis, Emmanuel Carrère, Fire, Jacques Audiard, Juliette Binoche, Mathieu Amalric, Rendez-Vous with French Cinema