Didier Sandre Movies
The life and times of Paul, one of the co-founders of Christianity, is the subject of this documentary by Israeli-French filmmaker Abraham Segal, who first explored the life of a major biblical figure in his 1996 documentary The Abraham File. Originally known as Saul of Tarsus, Paul was not one of the original 12 apostles, but instead spent his life in an apparently disreputable manner. A witness to the martyrdom of Stephen, the first saint, Paul did not come face to face with Jesus until the Resurrection. Paul wanted to unite everybody under one faith, and his writings and preachings were at odds with Jewish laws; his personal rejection of some of these laws was the source of controversy among Jews even as it garnered hostile interest among others. In his attempt to deduce whether Paul was merely a traitor to his Jewish brethren or a true visionary, Segal interviews people ranging from rabbis to Biblical scholars to a born-again New York taxi driver. He also retraces Paul's steps throughout the Middle East, Europe, and elsewhere, searching for answers but usually finding contradiction instead. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Didier Sandre
The final installment in Eric Rohmer's Tales of the Four Seasons quartet of films examines matchmaking among the middle-aged and romance in the Rhone Valley. The target of the matchmakers is widowed vintner Magali (Béatrice Romand), alone at her vineyard after the departure of her grown children. Her best friend (Marie Rivière) plots to pair her with a friendly businessman (Alain Libolt), while her son's girlfriend (Alexia Portal) schemes to introduce her to a high-school philosophy teacher. Rohmer's film was shown at the 1998 Venice Film Festival, the 1998 Telluride Film Festival, the 1998 Toronto Film Festival, and the 1998 New York Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Marie Rivière, Béatrice Romand, (more)
A handful of people find themselves haunted on an idyllic summer afternoon by memories of death and loss in this contemplative drama from France. Siblings Zaza (Catherine Ferran) and Francois (Charles Berling) are enjoying a day at the beach with their brother Vincent (Didier Sandre) when Zaza and Francois each find themselves reminded in different ways of a tragic incident of 20 years ago when their younger sister died in an accident with a motorbike. Meanwhile, the grown-up Vincent builds a sand castle, as a young boy, Jumbo (Guillaume Charras), guards his creation from the waves. Jumbo, however, can't keep his mind from straying to thoughts of a close friend who recently died of cancer, and the boy can't help but imagine that he could have somehow prevented the death if he had tried. Director Pascale Ferran's work on Petits Arrangements avec les Morts was awarded with the Golden Camera at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Didier Sandre, Alexandre Zloto, (more)
Dramatized account of the 19th-century French painter Theodore Gericault, who joined the circus as a young man and came to develop a brilliant talent for painting horses. Writer/director Bartabas also stars as the circus master Franconi. ~ Nicole Gagne, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Miguel Bose, Bartabas, (more)
Emma (Nathalie Baye) has been happily married to Charles (Didier Sandre), a hardworking journalist, for over ten years. They have a son, and are considering having another child when she learns that she is both pregnant and HIV-positive at a time when Charles is away. As Emma has never used drugs or slept around, and has never had a blood transfusion, there can only be one source for her infection: her absent husband. Shocked to the core by this turn of events, she goes through his things and finds an address book with the names of many women in it. Determined to discover what has been going on, she begins contacting every name in the book. She continues her investigations even after her husband, whom she confronts over this, returns. While this film never comes across as an instructional piece, it was co-written by an AIDS specialist. It is also significant because is marks the final movie performance of Louis Ducreux (as the grandfather) after more than fifty years in the business. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Nathalie Baye, Didier Sandre, (more)
- Starring:
- Elizabeth Bourgine, Pierre-Loup Rajot, (more)
The year 1989 marked the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution, and a number of filmmakers put together movies intended to celebrate that event. This historical action drama, based on the book Sous le vent de galerne by Andre Guilloteau looks at some of the less well-known and unappealing consequences of the republican takeover. In 1793, the entire region of Vendee rose up in revolt against the republican French government. Instead of bringing relief from the heavy taxation imposed under the monarchy, the republican government actually raised taxes in the region, and to add insult to injury, also imposed a heavy burden of military conscription ("the draft") on it. In the story, the inhabitants of one of the villages of the region organize under their blacksmith and a local nobleman to fight the government forces, but before they can prepare for a proper battle, they are massacred. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Charlotte Laurier, Roger Jendly, (more)
- Starring:
- Robin Renucci, Alexandre Arbatt, (more)
The personal tragedy of an alcoholic hemmed in by a domineering wife is the focus of this drama of hope lost and regained. Simon (Christophe Malavoy) is a solo violinist in an orchestra managed by his wife Laura (Jane Birkin). Haunted by specters of his own inadequacy, he loses his insecurities in drink, but that only results in rejection from his fellow musicians. They do not want him playing in the next major concert, which puts Laura in a bind. She fights for him to continue playing, not realizing that he may actually need time off. Simon begins to turn himself around when he meets a recovering alcoholic who introduces him to AA-style meetings and new friends. They understand his problem from their own perspective, yet he still has his increasingly belligerent wife and his future as a musician to handle. La Femme de ma vie was awarded Best First Film by the French Academy of Cinema. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Jane Birkin, Christophe Malavoy, (more)
This melodramatic, clichéd story loosely based on a true, 1983 racially-motivated murder, starts with three men arrested for disorderly conduct at a dance. After they are released, they take a train trip, vent their continuing anger on a young Arab, and kill the man by forcing him out of a window on the speeding train. Their crime is witnessed by Isabelle (Christine Pascal) and reported to the police, enabling commissioner Couturier (Roger Hanin) to find the killers. The major problem now is to prevent a race riot when right-wing extremists falsely accuse some Arabs of reprehensible actions and the townspeople gather to demonstrate at the prison. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Roger Hanin, Gerard Klein, (more)









