Age of Panic (2013)

£0.00

(La bataille de Solférino)


Country: FR
Technical: col 94m
Director: Justine Triet
Cast: Laetitia Dosch, Vincent Macaigne, Arthur Harari, Virgil Vernier

Synopsis:

With the results of the 2012 election about to be announced, a news reporter makes her way distractedly to the Rue Solférino where the crowds are gathered, having left a green babysitter in charge of her daughters while their unstable father loiters below their apartment.

Review:

Shot in part on the actual day in question, the cast mixed in with the various shades of public opinion, Triet's film also has her cast keep their real forenames for the screenplay, as if to heighten sense of tension and immediacy. In aligning marital divorce and a political transfer of power, the director may be looking to the flash points in the human condition, the moments where mutual understanding breaks down and shouting and screaming take over; accordingly, as the revellers retire to their homes, peace and quiet resume. In the meantime, however, this is an exhausting watch, with its cacophony of crying toddlers and Macaigne's intolerable 'Vincent' demanding his civil rights of the new regime.

Add To Cart

(La bataille de Solférino)


Country: FR
Technical: col 94m
Director: Justine Triet
Cast: Laetitia Dosch, Vincent Macaigne, Arthur Harari, Virgil Vernier

Synopsis:

With the results of the 2012 election about to be announced, a news reporter makes her way distractedly to the Rue Solférino where the crowds are gathered, having left a green babysitter in charge of her daughters while their unstable father loiters below their apartment.

Review:

Shot in part on the actual day in question, the cast mixed in with the various shades of public opinion, Triet's film also has her cast keep their real forenames for the screenplay, as if to heighten sense of tension and immediacy. In aligning marital divorce and a political transfer of power, the director may be looking to the flash points in the human condition, the moments where mutual understanding breaks down and shouting and screaming take over; accordingly, as the revellers retire to their homes, peace and quiet resume. In the meantime, however, this is an exhausting watch, with its cacophony of crying toddlers and Macaigne's intolerable 'Vincent' demanding his civil rights of the new regime.

(La bataille de Solférino)


Country: FR
Technical: col 94m
Director: Justine Triet
Cast: Laetitia Dosch, Vincent Macaigne, Arthur Harari, Virgil Vernier

Synopsis:

With the results of the 2012 election about to be announced, a news reporter makes her way distractedly to the Rue Solférino where the crowds are gathered, having left a green babysitter in charge of her daughters while their unstable father loiters below their apartment.

Review:

Shot in part on the actual day in question, the cast mixed in with the various shades of public opinion, Triet's film also has her cast keep their real forenames for the screenplay, as if to heighten sense of tension and immediacy. In aligning marital divorce and a political transfer of power, the director may be looking to the flash points in the human condition, the moments where mutual understanding breaks down and shouting and screaming take over; accordingly, as the revellers retire to their homes, peace and quiet resume. In the meantime, however, this is an exhausting watch, with its cacophony of crying toddlers and Macaigne's intolerable 'Vincent' demanding his civil rights of the new regime.