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The film was shot in Paris and in the Yonne department, including the communes Collemiers, Sens and Pont-sur-Yonne. Julie's house in the film is located in Collemiers, a commune familiar to the director Éric Gravel, who lives in the Sens area, and whose many residents – like Julie – commute to Paris by train every day for work.
Clean Films was a mormon company in the United States founded by Chad Fullmer that edited the content of DVDs to remove profanity, nudity, violence, crude language ...
A group of major film productions studios sued CleanFlicks in 2002, arguing that their service constituted copyright infringement. A 2006 court ruling [2] closed the company. On March 13, 2007, CleanFlicks reopened its website with "Movies You Can Trust."
The film received largely positive reviews from critics. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes , it holds a 97% score based on 30 reviews, with an average rating of 7.34/10. The site's consensus states: " The Big Bad Fox and Other Tales uses its simple, classic animation style to tell a series of equally undemanding - yet utterly ...
The film has attracted a passion for alternative forms of consumption and participation in the society it presents. The co-director Cyril Dion has since been using the film's success to support the mouvement Colibris (Hummingbird movement), a group looking forward to change modern lifestyle, e.g. during the French presidential campaign of 2017 .
Elevator to the Gallows (French: Ascenseur pour l'échafaud), also known as Frantic in the US and Lift to the Scaffold in the UK, is a 1958 French crime thriller film directed by Louis Malle. The film stars Jeanne Moreau and Maurice Ronet as illicit lovers whose murder plot starts to unravel after one of them becomes trapped in an elevator.
The film was a success for Demy in his native France, with 1,319,432 admissions, [3] and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Scoring of a Musical Picture — Original or Adaptation at the 41st Academy Awards. A stage musical based on the film was produced in France in 2003, adapted by Alain Boublil and directed by Daniel Moyne.