Susan Sarandon channeled her “Thelma & Louise” days for Justice’s new “Fire” music video. In the fun and playful clip, the actress portrays a mechanic who takes the French electronic duo, Gaspard Augé and Xavier de Rosnay, on a joyride in the desert.
The video has an ‘80s vibe with Sarandon dressed in washed-out blue jeans and a simple white t-shirt. She’s first seen welding and changing outfits before talking the guys out for a spin. “Fire” is directed by Pascal Teixera who explained that the treatment for the video was inspired by a conversation about washing a car.
“On a hot summer afternoon, Gaspard and I were in Xavier’s kitchen, collectively daydreaming about washing a car. The year we like for car design, the make, where that could take place, how much soap, the mood, the sun, and there should be a woman to go cruising with,...
The video has an ‘80s vibe with Sarandon dressed in washed-out blue jeans and a simple white t-shirt. She’s first seen welding and changing outfits before talking the guys out for a spin. “Fire” is directed by Pascal Teixera who explained that the treatment for the video was inspired by a conversation about washing a car.
“On a hot summer afternoon, Gaspard and I were in Xavier’s kitchen, collectively daydreaming about washing a car. The year we like for car design, the make, where that could take place, how much soap, the mood, the sun, and there should be a woman to go cruising with,...
- 12/1/2016
- by Liz Calvario
- Indiewire
Ryan Lambie Nov 7, 2016
Arrival star Jeremy Renner tells us why Richard Dreyfuss in Jaws was key to his performance, and lots more...
An unexpected chill breeze greets us as we meet Jeremy Renner in a London Hotel room. We find the Hollywood star standing next to a window, his black coat swathed around him, collars turned up and pointy like a vampire's cape.
See related The shows & films that made Britain fall in love with anime Kill La Kill: 2014's hidden anime gem?
"It's chilly. I love it," Mr Renner says, cupping a roll-up cigarette, leaning partly out of the window. He's in town to promote Arrival, the sensational sci-fi drama-thriller from director Denis Villeneuve. A chill, moody breeze blows through the movie, too, as the unexpected appearance of alien craft leave our planet on the brink of a new cold war.
What do the aliens want? Can we trust them,...
Arrival star Jeremy Renner tells us why Richard Dreyfuss in Jaws was key to his performance, and lots more...
An unexpected chill breeze greets us as we meet Jeremy Renner in a London Hotel room. We find the Hollywood star standing next to a window, his black coat swathed around him, collars turned up and pointy like a vampire's cape.
See related The shows & films that made Britain fall in love with anime Kill La Kill: 2014's hidden anime gem?
"It's chilly. I love it," Mr Renner says, cupping a roll-up cigarette, leaning partly out of the window. He's in town to promote Arrival, the sensational sci-fi drama-thriller from director Denis Villeneuve. A chill, moody breeze blows through the movie, too, as the unexpected appearance of alien craft leave our planet on the brink of a new cold war.
What do the aliens want? Can we trust them,...
- 11/4/2016
- Den of Geek
Exclusive: Violin prodigy Alix Vaillot [pictured] stars as a musician battling blindness.
Gaumont has been pulling in sales on Michel Boujenah’s touching drama Heartstrings, starring French violin prodigy Alix Vaillot as a young musician battling blindness, ahead of its official roll-out at the Afm. Other cast include Charles Berling and Pascal Elbe.
The film has sold to Japan (Kino Films), Canada (Az Films) and Korea (Woo Sung). A deal to Germany and Switzerland (Ascot Elite) was announced over the summer. “It’s rare to get a Japanese pre-sale on a script for a French film,” comments Gaumont’s deputy head of international sales Yohann Comte.
The comedy-drama – based on Pascal Ruter’s best-seller Le Coeur en Braille – is in the vein of this year’s French box-office hit La Famille Bélier, adds Comte. Vaillot plays a young girl with musical aspirations, battling her parents’ plans to put her in an institution for the blind. Such a move...
Gaumont has been pulling in sales on Michel Boujenah’s touching drama Heartstrings, starring French violin prodigy Alix Vaillot as a young musician battling blindness, ahead of its official roll-out at the Afm. Other cast include Charles Berling and Pascal Elbe.
The film has sold to Japan (Kino Films), Canada (Az Films) and Korea (Woo Sung). A deal to Germany and Switzerland (Ascot Elite) was announced over the summer. “It’s rare to get a Japanese pre-sale on a script for a French film,” comments Gaumont’s deputy head of international sales Yohann Comte.
The comedy-drama – based on Pascal Ruter’s best-seller Le Coeur en Braille – is in the vein of this year’s French box-office hit La Famille Bélier, adds Comte. Vaillot plays a young girl with musical aspirations, battling her parents’ plans to put her in an institution for the blind. Such a move...
- 11/4/2015
- ScreenDaily
Exclusive: Violin prodigy Alix Vaillot [pictured] stars as a musician battling blindness.
Gaumont has been pulling in sales on Michel Boujenah’s touching drama Heartstrings, starring French violin prodigy Alix Vaillot as a young musician battling blindness, ahead of its official roll-out at the Afm. Other cast include Charles Berling and Pascal Elbe.
The film has sold to Japan (Kino Films), Canada (Az Films) and Korea (Woo Sung). A deal to Germany and Switzerland (Ascot Elite) was announced over the summer. “It’s rare to get a Japanese pre-sale on a script for a French film,” comments Gaumont’s deputy head of international sales Yohann Comte.
The comedy-drama – based on Pascal Ruter’s best-seller Le Coeur en Braille – is in the vein of this year’s French box-office hit La Famille Bélier, adds Comte. Vaillot plays a young girl with musical aspirations, battling her parents’ plans to put her in an institution for the blind. Such a move...
Gaumont has been pulling in sales on Michel Boujenah’s touching drama Heartstrings, starring French violin prodigy Alix Vaillot as a young musician battling blindness, ahead of its official roll-out at the Afm. Other cast include Charles Berling and Pascal Elbe.
The film has sold to Japan (Kino Films), Canada (Az Films) and Korea (Woo Sung). A deal to Germany and Switzerland (Ascot Elite) was announced over the summer. “It’s rare to get a Japanese pre-sale on a script for a French film,” comments Gaumont’s deputy head of international sales Yohann Comte.
The comedy-drama – based on Pascal Ruter’s best-seller Le Coeur en Braille – is in the vein of this year’s French box-office hit La Famille Bélier, adds Comte. Vaillot plays a young girl with musical aspirations, battling her parents’ plans to put her in an institution for the blind. Such a move...
- 11/4/2015
- ScreenDaily
Directed by Alain Guiraudie and photographed beautifully by Claire Mathon, Stranger by the Lake has drawn comparisons to the thrillers of Alfred Hitchcock, and rightly so. The atmosphere is one of chilling tension and highly controlled camera work, with point-of-view shots being used to draw attention to the role of both the cruising space and the cinematic space.
For the most part, cruising spots are associated with casual, no-strings-attached sex. They offer a space where the everyday repression of sexuality is ignored; a place where individuals can explore their sexuality without fear of being attacked or shamed by the conservative hetero-normative members of society. Within mainstream cinema, cruising has been vastly underrepresented, with the leather bars of William Friedkin’s Cruising and the problematic space in Shame being two of the better known examples. With Stranger, Guiraudie goes against the darkened interiors of these films, by using picturesque exteriors that display nature and beauty.
For the most part, cruising spots are associated with casual, no-strings-attached sex. They offer a space where the everyday repression of sexuality is ignored; a place where individuals can explore their sexuality without fear of being attacked or shamed by the conservative hetero-normative members of society. Within mainstream cinema, cruising has been vastly underrepresented, with the leather bars of William Friedkin’s Cruising and the problematic space in Shame being two of the better known examples. With Stranger, Guiraudie goes against the darkened interiors of these films, by using picturesque exteriors that display nature and beauty.
- 2/11/2014
- by Griffin Bell
- SoundOnSight
After eight crazy days, Fantastic Fest 2010 is in the books. Here's an index to all of our coverage, reviews, features, interviews, videos, and podcasts.
Last Updated: 10/01/2010
Reviews
"Red," directed by Robert Schwentke
"Agnosia," directed by Eugenio Mira
"Bibliotheque Pascal," directed by Szabolcs Hajdu
"Corridor," directed by Johan Lundborg and Johan Storm
"Fatso," directed by Arild Fröhlich
"Fire of Conscience," directed by Dante Lam
"Ip Man 2," directed by Wilson Yip
"I Saw the Devil," directed by Kim Ji-woon
Kidnapped," directed by Miguel Angel Vivas
"Let Me In," directed by Matt Reeves
"The Man From Nowhere," directed by Lee Jung-beom
"Outrage," directed by Takeshi Kitano
"Red White and Blue," directed by Simon Rumley
"A Somewhat Gentle Man," directed by Hans Petter Moland
"Sound of Noise," directed by Ola Simonsson and Johannes Stjärne Nilsson
Interviews
Mark Hartley, "Machete Maidens Unleashed"
Ryan Kwanten and Patrick Hughes, "Red Hill"
Andrew Lau, "Legend of the Fist"
Ryan Reynolds and Rodrigo Cortés,...
Last Updated: 10/01/2010
Reviews
"Red," directed by Robert Schwentke
"Agnosia," directed by Eugenio Mira
"Bibliotheque Pascal," directed by Szabolcs Hajdu
"Corridor," directed by Johan Lundborg and Johan Storm
"Fatso," directed by Arild Fröhlich
"Fire of Conscience," directed by Dante Lam
"Ip Man 2," directed by Wilson Yip
"I Saw the Devil," directed by Kim Ji-woon
Kidnapped," directed by Miguel Angel Vivas
"Let Me In," directed by Matt Reeves
"The Man From Nowhere," directed by Lee Jung-beom
"Outrage," directed by Takeshi Kitano
"Red White and Blue," directed by Simon Rumley
"A Somewhat Gentle Man," directed by Hans Petter Moland
"Sound of Noise," directed by Ola Simonsson and Johannes Stjärne Nilsson
Interviews
Mark Hartley, "Machete Maidens Unleashed"
Ryan Kwanten and Patrick Hughes, "Red Hill"
Andrew Lau, "Legend of the Fist"
Ryan Reynolds and Rodrigo Cortés,...
- 10/1/2010
- by Matt Singer
- ifc.com
Grammy gets its party on this week with Jennifer Hudson performances, a rap Dream Team of T.I., Kanye West, Lil Wayne and Jay-z rockin' the mic, plus teen queens Miley Cyrus and Taylor Swift on the same stage. Throw in the bashes with Katy Perry, the Jonas Brothers, Akon and Rihanna, and the celebration of pop, rock, hip-hop and country will spill far off the Staples Center stage. People has all the details: Grammy NightAfter Sunday's awards telecast on CBS, nominees the Jonas Brothers and Coldplay will stop by the showpiece party of the night – the Woodstock-themed Grammy Celebration at the L.
- 2/4/2009
- by Mary Margaret
- PEOPLE.com
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