Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kanaval is a 2023 drama film, directed by Henri Pardo.A co-production of companies from Canada and Luxembourg, the film centres on Rico (Rayan Dieudonné), a young boy who has emigrated with his mother Erzuile (Penande Estime) from their native Haiti to a small town in Quebec, where they live with childless older couple Albert (Martin Dubreuil) and Cécile (Claire Jacques).
The settlement of Chinon is on the bank of the river Vienne about 10 kilometres (6 mi) from where it joins the Loire.From prehistoric times, when the settlement of Chinon originated, [1] rivers formed the major trade routes, [2] and the Vienne joins the fertile southern plains of the Poitou and the city of Limoges to the thoroughfare of the Loire. [3]
Jean-Luc Godard later used the existing material as the basis for his 1976 film Ici et ailleurs (Here and Elsewhere). In the film, Godard and his wife, Anne-Marie Miéville, deconstruct his and Gorin's methods for making Jusqu'à la victoire and they in turn call into question the methods and the manifesto of the Dziga Vertov Group as a whole.
Opening Night (formerly One Shot) is an American musical comedy film directed by Isaac Rentz and written by Gerry De Leon and Greg Lisi. The film takes place in real time, backstage on the opening night of a Broadway musical. [1]
Henri Vidal, Maria Mauban, Françoise Arnoul: Crime: Rome Express: Christian Stengel: Hélène Perdrière, Jean Debucourt, Denise Grey: Thriller [10] Sending of Flowers: Jean Stelli: Tino Rossi, Micheline Francey: Historical drama: Shot at Dawn: André Haguet: Renée Saint-Cyr, Franck Villard, Nathalie Nattier: War drama [11] They Are Twenty ...
Asked how Matisse's drawings seem to have been done in a single flourish, she said she was "a pretty good eraser". [6] Her second book, Henri Matisse: Contre vents et marées (French Edition) 1996 (in English: Against Winds and Storms), is her carefully detailed and documented account of the years of Matisse's "second life" from the early 1940s.
[6] The fourth version (1832; acquired by the Louvre Museum in 1981) [7] is slightly smaller than the others. The setting is changed from the Salle des Caryatides to the Stairway of Henri II, and the number of onlookers is augmented by the inclusion of the poet François de Malherbe, Cardinal Jacques Davy Duperron, and an unidentified man. [7]
Assassination of Henri I, Duke of Guise, by Henri III, in 1588. Painting by Charles Durupt in the Château de Blois, where the attack took place. On 23 December 1588, Henri I, Duke of Guise was assassinated by the Quarante Cinq serving King Henri III. The event was one of the most critical moments of the French Wars of Religion.