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Interview: The Indie Spirit-nominated actress has made just 2 films, but both speak to her finely tuned ability to portray ...
Set in the countryside of France during the summertime, “Bonjour Tristesse” follows the father-daughter duo of Cécile and ...
“Bonjour Tristesse” is set in the present day but pulls from vintage aesthetics. It “exists out of time” and taps into a ...
“Bonjour Tristesse” works best as a sustained mood, as an evocation of long summer days that might not actually exist outside ...
The first rule of making a film of Bonjour Tristesse is that it must look splendid, and if nothing else, Durga Chew-Bose’s adaptation achieves that. Gently updating Françoise Sagan’s generational 1954 ...
Returning to Françoise Sagan's novel made famous by Otto Preminger’s 1958 movie, writer-director Durga Chew-Bose makes an ...
A remake of the 1958 Bonjour Tristesse , once again finds the setting on the Riviera. Bonjour Tristesse, which means “Hello ...
A French literary classic, “Bonjour Tristesse” (translates as “Hello Sadness”) was a publishing sensation in 1954 with its ...
The producers of this iconic adaptation on how they champion women directors, are extremely persistent and are great at ...
A review of Bonjour Tristesse, a drama starring Lily McInerny and Chloë Sevigny, in select Canadian theatres on Friday,.
Bonjour Tristesse isn’t a particularly enriching adaptation or entry into its genre, but it’s well-crafted and well-performed enough to be worth watching.
Less than five minutes into her debut feature, “Bonjour Tristesse,” as faultlessly framed shots of the rippling French seaside and all of its natural wonders cascade across the screen ...
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