Cyril Collard Movies
French filmmaker, writer and actor Cyril Collard is best known for his semi-autobiographical directing debut Les Nuits Fauves/ Savage Nights (1992) the story of an AIDS-afflicted filmmaker. At the beginning of his career, Collard assisted director Maurice Pialat and directed six music videos and a few French television programs. He has also acted in films. In 1989, Collard penned the novel that later became his most famous film. He was the first person to ever be nominated for the three highest categories of the French Cesar Awards (their version of the American Oscars): "Best Director, Best Film, and Best Debut Director" in one year. Unfortunately, Collard died of AIDS a few days before he was to accept his award for "Best Debut Director." ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- 2004
- Add Henri Langlois: The Phantom of the Cinematheque to QueueAdd Henri Langlois: The Phantom of the Cinematheque to top of Queue
Henri Langlois was, in many respects, the ultimate film fan. In 1936, at the age of 22, Langlois became (along with Jean Mitry and Georges Franju) one of the founders of the Cinémathèque Française, a theater and museum devoted to preserving the history of the motion picture. Initially a tiny operation financed by private funds, the Cinémathèque, with time, grew into Europe's most important film archive, collecting and preserving prints of rare films from all over the world and protecting many rare gems of the French cinema from destruction during the Nazi occupation of World War II. Langlois' enthusiasm for sharing the treasures of his collection with others helped spawn a film-crazy generation who created the French New Wave of the '50s, and in time, the French government acknowledged the importance of the Cinémathèque's work by financing their endeavors. In 1968, the French minister of culture, André Malraux, responded to Langlois' difficult personality and sloppy bookkeeping by pulling the government's financing of his projects, which led to an international outcry leading to the shutdown of the Cannes Film Festival by activists and film buffs. The Cinémathèque's funding and Langlois' leadership were later restored, and in 1973, his work in film preservation was honored with a special Academy Award. Henri Langlois: The Phantom of the Cinémathèque is a documentary which chronicles the life, times, and passions of the legendary archivist and includes interviews with his friends, contemporaries, and colleagues -- including Claude Berri, Claude Chabrol, Jack Valenti, and Daniel Cohn-Bendit. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Henri Alékan, Jo Amorin, (more)
The troubled lives of youths living in the grim housing projects of Paris provide the basis of this gritty, topical French drama with comedic overtones that tells the tale of two disparate Arabic brothers. Djamel is the good brother and Nordine is the bad one. Both young men still live at home, in a high-rise housing project, with their mother, who still wears traditional garb. Nordine is a drug addict and is first seen holding a horse hostage so he can get the money he needs to pay off his pusher. Djamel is seen working hard and dreaming of marrying Sahlia, a beautiful girl with an overprotective brother, Mezz, with whom Djamel is good friends. These two and their friends try hard to keep away from trouble. Sahlia, on the other hand, is tired of living like a traditionally submissive Arab girl and defies both Djamel and Mezz by sleeping with one of their friends. Meanwhile, Nordine shoots his handgun from the roof of an apartment block and starts a riot. The film's title refers a genre of North African rock music that is popular in the projects. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Tabatha Cash, Samy Naceri, (more)
This award-winning drama follows the romantic and sexual misadventures of a bisexual, HIV-positive Frenchman as he searches for meaning in his life. Jean (Cyril Collard, who also directed), a successful photographer, dates women but has furtive sex with men on the side. When he meets Samy (Carlos Lopez), an aimless, half-Spanish young rugby player, Jean easily steals him right from under his girlfriend's watchful eyes. Just months after learning that he's HIV-positive, Jean only practices safe sex with his male partners. The same isn't true of his relationship with Laura (Romane Bohringer), an intense 17 year old whose combination of youthful exuberance and world-weary cynicism captivates him. The first night they make love, Jean struggles to warn Laura of his HIV status, but her emotional nakedness and his own confusion prevent him. When he finally does tell her, she's more concerned about living life without him than she is about the danger into which he has put her. Laura's mother (Corine Blue) struggles to steer her daughter toward a more suitable match, especially after Jean stops hiding his liaison with Samy. Vacillating from one extreme and one lover to the other, Jean unwittingly wreaks emotional havoc in Laura's life. Meanwhile, Samy finds himself slowly drawn into Jean's orbit and seems to have no problem with the ambiguity involved. He also dabbles in violent sex and even racist nationalism -- all reactions to his complex, troubled family life. As Laura spins out of control and Samy drifts away, Jean tries to make some sense of his own destructiveness; all the while, his illness progresses. Adapted from director Collard's own novel, Les Nuits Fauves won the filmmaker a French Cesar for Best Debut Director just days after he died of AIDS-related illness. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Cyril Collard, Romane Bohringer, (more)
This strange crime-cum-romance story starts out with the ordinary work-a-day life of Mangin, an apparently straight-and-narrow cop (Gerard Depardieu), and then segues into a love story after he meets Noria, a beautiful Arab woman (Sophie Marceau) who has just been arrested during a drug raid. Mangin grills her, but his buddy, a lawyer of dubious ethics named Lambert (Richard Anconina), gets the woman released. Enamored almost from the beginning, Mangin begins to pursue Noria and soon finds himself faced with making the ethical decision to arrest her -- or not. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Gérard Depardieu, Sophie Marceau, (more)
Director, co-writer, and star Maurice Pialat brought his typically unblinking New Wave style and interest in socially aberrant behavior to this psychological drama, winner of two Cesars (the French equivalent of the Oscar) for Best Film and Most Promising Young Actress (Sondrine Bonnaire). Bonnaire plays Suzanne, a 15-year-old girl who has become sexually promiscuous with anyone who will have her, despite her lack of affection for any of her lovers. The only boy she refuses is Luc (Cyr Boitard), whose feelings for Suzanne are sincere. When Suzanne's beloved father (Pialat) abandons his increasingly neurotic wife (Evelyne Ker), Suzanne's depression and lack of direction deepen. While her mother becomes a screeching mental case, her brother Robert (Dominique Besnehard) begins beating her, although he also harbors a disturbing attraction to Suzanne. In the denouement, Pialat depicts the devastating long-term results of Suzanne's abusive upbringing. Pialat draws powerful performances from his cast, with no finer example than the riveting acting Bonnaire -- in only her second film. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Sandrine Bonnaire, Maurice Pialat, (more)










