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Arnaud Desplechin Tagged Articles at Cinematical

Exclusive: Clip from 'A Christmas Tale'

Filed under: Comedy », Drama », Foreign Language », Independent », Trailers and Clips »



Cinematical
has received this exclusive clip for the buzzed-about French flick A Christmas Tale, directed by Arnaud Desplechin. Back when Cinematical premiered the poster, we told you how the film centers on a family who, throughout the years, struggle to come to terms with a personal tragedy that changed their lives forever. In our review from Cannes, Kim called it a "tragically comic tale of love, death, and familial strife and forgiveness." And that pretty much describes the scene below -- obviously tensions are high for this family, and important decisions need to be made, but there's still light humor to be found in the darkest of places. Starring Mathieu Amalric, Catherine Deneuve, Anne Consigny and Jean-Paul Rossillon, IFC will place A Christmas Tale in theaters and On Demand on November 14, before it expands to other cities.

Cannes Review: Un Conte de Noel (A Christmas Tale)

Filed under: Cannes », Theatrical Reviews », Festival Reports », Cinematical Indie »

Arnaud Desplechin's film Un Conte de Noel (A Christmas Tale), playing in competition here at Cannes, is a tragically comic tale of love, death, and familial strife and forgiveness. The film centers around Junon (Catherine Deneuve) and her husband Abel (Jean-Paul Roussillon), whose oldest child, Joseph, is diagnosed at a young age with Burkitt's lymphoma.

The boy's disease is curable only with a bone marrow transplant, and neither the parents nor his younger sister, Elizabeth, are compatible. The couple conceives another child in the hopes of making a match to cure their son, but the third child, Henri, is also incompatible, and Joseph dies at the age of six. Eventually the grieving parents have a fourth child, Ivan, and in time the family's wounds over the death of the eldest son heal ... but not really.

Cannes Deals: IFC Acquires US 'Pleasure,' French 'Christmas'

Filed under: Comedy », Drama », Foreign Language », Independent », Deals », Cannes », IFC », Distribution », Cinematical Indie »

The deals are already flying fast and furious in Cannes. As befits an international marketplace, most of the action involves far-flung territories, but we're keeping an eye out for US distribution deals too. indieWIRE has a great round-up of the first day's activity, which includes the news that IFC Films has acquired distribution rights to two films.

Good buzz about 24-year-old Joshua Safdie's feature debut The Pleasure of Being Robbed began when it world premiered at SXSW in March. Somehow, the Cinematical crew missed seeing it (hey, we're only human, we miss things sometimes), but David Lowery at Spout raved: "It's pure cinema, and as such it's one of the best films I've seen this year." The comedy revolves around a kleptomaniac, played by co-writer Eleonore Hendricks, with a philanthropic streak. Pleasure is the only US title in the Director's Fortnight this year.

In 2005, Tom Hall declared: "There is not a more important filmmaker working today than Arnaud Desplechin." He previously made Kings & Queen and Esther Kahn, among other critically-acclaimed work. The French filmmaker's latest, A Christmas Tale (Un conte de Noël), features Catherine Deneuve, Jean-Paul Roussillon and Mathieu Amalric "in a contemporary family drama set in France." The film plays in Official Competition and has its first screening on Friday night before opening theatrically in France next week.

We'll have to wait to hear about IFC's specific plans for distribution.
 
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