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- After the rejection of their latest--preposterous--scenario, two scriptwriters get back to basics to prepare a new movie. The new scenario centers on Henriette, a pretty, lively Parisian, and how she spends the 14th of July in Paris with her fiancé. We follow the tribulations of Henriette as various other characters enter the story and turn a traditional festive day into something more adventurous than expected.
- An addiction is spreading in Paris: Television. Literature teacher Saint-Just is confronted by overtired pupils who can no longer keep their eyes open from all the TV. He and a colleague set out on a mission to save the pupils from the TV.
- You'll see Johnny Rotten or rather his ghost, John Lydon, insulting human herd with "this is religion, your religion". The last images of a film which lets you no escape, no more escape than the punk girl who exhibits her genitals in a toilet hallway, no more escape than all these rock stars who belch to fill the void. On the music aspect, there is a combinatorial saturation of sounds that looks like a requiem. The images: uninterrupted movement in a daily apocalyptic space. This is about savagery, frantic intoxication, suicidal energy.
- The youth of the Lumière brothers ; the invention of the cinematograph ; the first Lumière films ; the first film projection at the Grand Café in Paris ; the Lumières' commercial and cultural heritage ; Louis Lumière at work in Bandol on a project of 3D cinema.
- One of the greatest punk bands of all time, The Clash helped pioneer the punk rock explosion of the mid 70s following infamous tours with the Sex Pistols. In late 1979, The Clash released their career-defining album, London Calling - named best album of the 1980s by Rolling Stone magazine - while the band's political lyrics, musical experimentation and rebellious attitude had a far-reaching influence on alternative music around the world. Featuring the famous line-up of Joe Strummer (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Mick Jones (lead guitar, vocals), Paul Simonon (bass, backing vocals, occasional lead vocals) and Nicky "Topper" Headon (drums, percussion), The Clash here perform live in Paris in 1980 in a rarely-seen performance that finds the band in devastating, career-peak form. Includes the punk anthems Jimmy Jazz, London Calling, Protex Blue, Train In Vain, Koka Kola, I Fought The Law, Spanish Bombs, Wrong Em Bombs, Stay Free, Janie Jones, Complete Control , Garage Land , and Tommy Gun.