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Posts with tag the last mistress

Indie Weekend Box Office: American Girl 'Kit' vs. French 'Mistress'

Filed under: Documentary », Drama », Foreign Language », IFC », ThinkFilm », Box Office », Family Films », Cinematical Indie », Samuel Goldwyn Films », Picturehouse »

Despite dropping more than 50% in its second week of release, Kit Kittredge: An American Girl (Picturehouse) outdrew all other specialty releases over the weekend, earning $21,200 per screen at five theaters, according to estimates compiled by Box Office Mojo.

Directed by Canadian indie veteran Patricia Rozema (I've Heard the Mermaids Singing, When Night is Falling), Kit Kittredge has clearly benefited from a devoted fan base that convinced thousands of their parental units to fork over $20 per ticket -- which, to be fair, includes a limited-edition t-shirt -- to see the movie in advance of its wide release tomorrow. That's a very good performance when you consider its main competition was not, actually, a French-language flick that skewed very adult, but actually a heavily-advertised animated film.

Catherine Breillat's The Last Mistress (IFC Films), starring Asia Argento, took in $17,600 per screen at two locations, which probably owes as much, if not more, to the name recognition of Argento as that of the often-confounding Breillat.

Review: The Last Mistress

Filed under: Drama », Foreign Language », Independent », Romance », New Releases », Theatrical Reviews »



Catherine Breillat is a director fascinated with the intricacies of desire. This does not, however, mean that her work is altogether sexy. Rather, the celebrated French director's esteemed canon - highlighted by 1999's graphic Romance and 2001's stunning Fat Girl - is cerebral even when steamily carnal, her films intellectual exercises that arouse the head as much as the nether regions. Her latest, The Last Mistress, is by and large no different. Based on Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly's taboo 1851 novel, it's a period piece revisitation of her interest in the ambiguous motivations of, and feelings born from, romance, here delivered not with her usual shocking transgressiveness but, instead, with the refinement, grace and sensuousness of a charged costume drama. This 19th-century setting results, on the one hand, in something of a startling change of pace for Breillat, whose cinema has long been infused with a decidedly modern strain of provocation. And yet on the other hand, her preoccupation with love's thorny complications feels right at home in the drawing rooms and boudoirs of indolent 1835 Parisian aristocrats, whose public civility masks private conduct of a much more lascivious sort.

EXCLUSIVE: Two Clips from 'The Last Mistress'

Filed under: Drama », Foreign Language », Romance », IFC », Trailers and Clips »



Cinematical has just received two exclusive clips from The Last Mistress (watch one above, and the other after the jump). Based on the novel by Jules-Amédée Barbey d'Aurevilly, Mistress comes to us from writer-director Catherine Breillat (Fat Girls, Romance) whose film's are known for carrying distinct personal and sexual flavor. Reporting from the San Francisco International Film Festival, Cinematical's Jeffrey M. Anderson called The Last Mistress "the most enjoyable of the three Breillat films I've seen," and says "It works on a gut level of sexual turmoil that her other films never approach ..."

Back when Cinematical premiered the poster for this film, Monika provided this description: "Asia Argento stars as Vellini, a courtesan who has lust-filled and violent forays with Ryno (Fu'ad Aït Aattou) for years. But then he leaves her to marry Hermangarde (Roxane Mesquida), and she's not prepared to say goodbye." I'd see this based on the Breillat/Argento pairing alone, as one can only imagine the amount of devilish spice contained within.

The Last Mistress arrives in theaters today, June 27, in NYC at the IFC Center and Lincoln Plaza Cinemas, as well as On Demand. Look for it to expand in the coming weeks.

EXCLUSIVE: 'The Last Mistress' Poster Premiere!

Filed under: Drama », Foreign Language », Movie Marketing », Posters »



Cinematical has just gotten this stunning, exclusive poster for Catherine Breillat's new film, The Last Mistress (click on image above to enlarge). I just absolutely adore pictures and posters that combine that grainy look with sharp, contrasting colors, and this one pulls it all off wonderfully. Based on the novel by Jules-Amédée Barbey d'Aurevilly, the film is another sexy and shocking taste of Breillat, director of Fat Girl and Anatomy of Hell, but this time, she goes back to the 19th century. Asia Argento stars as Vellini, a courtesan who has lust-filled and violent forays with Ryno (Fu'ad Aït Aattou) for years. But then he leaves her to marry Hermangarde (Roxane Mesquida), and she's not prepared to say goodbye.

If this slice of sexy is right up your alley, the film will open on June 27 at IFC Center & Lincoln Plaza Cinemas, and On Demand, before rolling out nationwide.

SFIFF Review: The Last Mistress

Filed under: Foreign Language », New Releases », Theatrical Reviews », Festival Reports », San Francisco International Film Festival », Cinematical Indie »



For some mysterious reason, Catherine Breillat's newest film, The Last Mistress, was chosen as the Opening Night Feature for the 51st San Francisco International Film Festival. It's probably the same mysterious reason that caused most critics to praise Breillat's intolerable Fat Girl (2001). It's a reason I'll never understand. I usually love filmmakers who tackle their personal demons in film, but Breillat is different in several ways. She's a nutcase who doesn't admit to her personal demons so much as she tries to analyze them (self-analysis is always a bad idea). She raises the intellectual (or pretentiousness) level of her films rather than wallowing bodily in anything (her films have lots of sex, but it's cold and judgmental). And through it all, her films seem to have a kind of punishing contempt for everyone, her characters, critics and audience included.

However, The Last Mistress is the most enjoyable of the three Breillat films I've seen. It works on a gut level of sexual turmoil that her other films never approach, although I suspect that most of the film's success lies more with star Asia Argento than with Breillat. Argento is the exact opposite of someone like Breillat; she's a corporeal creature, a lithe force of nature. You can't even really call what she does acting. It's more like she explodes onscreen in a shitstorm of lust, blood, and unspeakable emotions made flesh. Her first appearance has her lying invitingly horizontal on a couch, and you envy the pillows. Director and actress have a meeting of minds in only one scene, the most purely Breillat-ian scene in the film: Argento leaps upon the bloody body of her lover, licks the blood out of his gunshot wounds and rises, sneering and screaming with the red, hot liquid dribbling down her chin. It's not exactly the bloody tampon teabag image from Breillat's Anatomy of Hell (2004), but it'll do.

IFC First Take Grabs Breillat's 'The Last Mistress'

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

If there is one thing you can't describe Catherine Breillat as, it's "ordinary." I remember happening upon one of her films on a regular cable channel here in Canada. It was sexual dysfunction film Anatomy of Hell, which of course, stars porn star Rocco Siffredi. I sat there, thinking it was Rocco, then thinking: no, it couldn't be! But after some, erm, attention to the rectal area, I knew it was definitely him. While I don't know if we can expect the same shock value as Hell, we will soon be getting a taste of her new film, The Last Mistress. indieWIRE has posted today that IFC First Take has grabbed the film's North American rights.

Mistress
stars Asia Argento (Marie Antoinette) as a "tempestuous Spanish mistress" who has an affair with the "distinguished, well-bred Ryno de Marigny (Fu'ad Ait Aattou)." IFC Entertainment president Jonathan Sehring says that pairing the director and Argento "has produced one of the most entertaining, witty and electrically charged films in recent memory." Before you wonder if that's entertaining and witty in an inaccessible arthouse way, he also states: "Not only is this Catherine Breillat's most accessible film, it's also one of her best. We're thrilled to bring it to American audiences and look for it to be one of her most successful." I guess we'll have to wait and see if he's right. While there's no word on when the company plans to release the movie, it has joined the roster for the New York Film Festival.
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