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Blue Jean, Chien de la casse, Sur l'Adamant... Which films should you see or avoid this week?

2023-04-19T04:32:07.703Z


A PE teacher forced to hide her lesbianism, the toxic relationship between two friends in a small village in the Hérault, a psychiatric center installed on a boat... What should we see this week? Discover the cinema selection of Le Figaro.


Blue Jean

- What to see

Drama by Georgia Okley, 1h37

The first film of the young British director Georgia Oakley,

Blue Jean

, looks like an uppercut.

Set in the conservative England of Margaret Thatcher, it paints the portrait of a physical education teacher forced to conceal her homosexuality.

Especially after the vote for "Section 28", a law stigmatizing the gay community, which has become an electoral campaign argument for the "Iron Lady" party.

By filming the intimacy of Jean (hence the title), short peroxidized hair, Georgia Oakley shows a silent young woman who conceals part of her personality.

In this homophobic climate in the United Kingdom at the end of the 1980s, Jean must at all times be on the lookout, watch his words.

Blue Jean, audience award at the last Venice Film Festival in the Venice Days section, demonstrates great stylistic mastery, as well as a beautiful narrative sensitivity.

OD

Read alsoOur review of Blue Jean, by Georgia Oakley: a dream come true

On the Adamant

- To see

Documentary by Nicolas Philibert, 1h49

Welcome to the Adamant.

This superb all-wooden boat, which seems to wake up every morning when its blinds are rolled up and its shutters half-open, was inaugurated in 2010. It is one of the links in the care pathway offered by the psychiatric center of Paris Center for patients in the first four districts of the capital.

They are in care, at home or on the street, but we will not know.

Nicolas Philibert's idea is to pick them on this boat which seems like a miracle amidst the noises of the city and the lapping of the Seine.

L'Adamant has the false air of an ideal entertainment center for older children.

Sewing, cinema, jam, drawing workshops… There is an associative café and musical instruments, sofas and books.

No one in a white coat and everything is a pretext for discussion.

The director captures the light moments.

He lets the word come without rushing.

There are flashes of lucidity and chasms opening up.

Confessions rain down.

“We cure madness, I want to heal.

“I've never had a job, poetry isn't one, right?

"Go see who I am over there 

" is the custom of this documentary filmmaker who films children (

Being and Having

), orangutans (

Nénette

) and already patients (

La Moindre des choses

) with the same humanist focus and the same extreme attention.

The mirror is disturbing.

We come out of the jostled Adamant, the faces of “these actors without knowing it” engraved in memory.

Holy stars, indeed.

FD

Read alsoOur review of Sur l'Adamant: the stars of the Seine

Junkyard dog - To see

Drama by Jean-Baptiste Durand, 1h33

Dog and Mirales.

Their nicknames are not innocent.

Dog is Damien (Anthony Bajon), silent and shy.

Mirales (Raphaël Quenard) is Antoine, chatterbox and talker.

They are almost thirty years old and live in a small village.

Dog kills time playing PlayStation.

Mirales does nothing with her CAP as a cook.

He deals bars of hash, walks with his dog, Malabar.

He lives with his depressed mother.

For his first feature film, Jean-Baptiste Durand talks about what he knows.

He films a village in Hérault during the off-season.

The streets are empty.

The shutters closed.

Boredom everywhere.

Chien de la casse is a village film, as one speaks of a suburban film.

It shows a rather rare suburban youth on French screens.

In the United States, they are called underdogs.

Less than a dog.

It's powerful fiction, the tale of a toxic friendship.

One thinks of La Boétie and voluntary servitude.

Chien de la casse records the birth of a filmmaker.

Durand is less than thirty years old.

He is full of talent.

Looking forward to his second feature film.

ES

Read alsoOur review of Junkyard Dog: A Biting Friendship

Life for Real - Avoid

Comedy by Dany Boon, 1h50

It's brutal.

The hero grew up at Club Med in Yucatan: his name is therefore Tridan (laughs).

Later, someone will call it Strident (humor), or it will be Freedent (there, we will still be responsible for pointing out that it is a brand of toothpaste. Really?).

The tone is set.

Hang on to your chair.

At eight years old, he was in love with a little Violette.

He never saw her again.

The simpleton stayed in the tropics to host shows for tourists.

At fifty, he decides to find his sweetheart.

It lasts, drags on.

Dany Boon is undoubtedly a nice person.

He's been so successful that if he reads a dishwasher manual, his producers laugh.

They will be the only ones.

Telephone replies, agreed situations, ugliness of images,

fascinates like a slide show at a friend's house who continues the end-of-meal jokes right from the aperitif.

Dany Boon, who had his teeth whitened (the only thing to remember from the session), plays simpletons.

He takes us mostly for idiots.

IN

Read alsoOur review of Life for real, by Dany Boon: comedy for fake

Source: lefigaro

All life articles on 2023-04-19

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