Contact: Rick Peterson, Manager of News Services, 920-832-6590/richard.peterson@lawrence.edu
For Immediate Release
January 2, 2007
Lawrence University Hosts Month-Long French Film Festival
APPLETON, WIS. — Award-winning contemporary French
cinema, including a 2005 Cannes Film Festival Golden Palm winner, will be featured
in a month-long film festival at Lawrence University beginning January 11. Five
films will each be shown three times as part of the 2007 Tournees Festival,
which was made possible with the support of the Cultural Services of the French
Embassy and the French Ministry of Culture.
The films, in French with English subtitles, will be shown in the Wriston Art
Center auditorium on the Lawrence campus beginning at 7 p.m. Admission is free
with a Lawrence University I.D. or $3 for the general public.
“Given that the Fox Cities doesn’t have any regular venue for foreign films, this is a fabulous opportunity for the Lawrence French and Francophone Studies department to offer the community a glimpse of the breadth and variety of the French-speaking world and its cultures through contemporary films,” said Eilene Hoft March, professor of French at Lawrence, who is coordinating the series.
“The Cultural Services of the French Embassy and the French Ministry of Culture has subsidized film festivals through competitive grants on campuses all over the United States in an effort to encourage cross-cultural understanding,” Hoft-March added. “We’re thrilled to be one of those campuses that received the grant this year. We hope to enhance the series through post-film discussions led by a member of the Lawrence faculty on Thursday evenings.”
The films and dates are as follows.
• Jan. 11, 12, 13 — “No Rest for the Brave”
(2003)
A refreshingly original combination of a coming-of-age story and French existentialism
spiced with plenty of wit and vivid imagery, where grand ideas mesh with bizarre
occurrences to create a fascinating, surreal journey of discovery, chance and
mystery. The film follows the adventures of Basile, an angst-ridden French teenager
who is convinced he will die if he falls asleep. The notion leads him on a road
trip that becomes a hallucinatory odyssey as he encounters murder, sex and intrigue.
• Jan. 18, 20, 21 — “Moolade” ( 2004) Note:
No showing on Friday. Jan. 19
Winner of the 2004 Cannes Best Film Award, “Moolade” tackles the
explosive issue of female circumcision. Set in a small African village, four
young girls face a ritual purification that involves genital mutilation. They
flee to the house of Collé Ardo Gallo Sy, a strong-willed woman who invokes
the time-honored custom of “mooladé” (sanctuary) to protect
the fugitives, creating a conflict in the community and forcing every villager
to take sides. The film explores heroism in daily life and the “underground
struggle” of people which is often overlooked by their governments and
the rest of world.
• Jan. 25, 26, 27 — “Little Jerusalem” (2004)
Recognized with a screenwriting award at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival, “Little
Jerusalem” is the nickname of a low-income housing neighborhood near Paris
where a large number of Jewish immigrants live. The film focuses on sisters
Laura and Mathilde, members of a Tunisian family of eight, who share a cramped
apartment amid rising tensions between Muslim and Jewish communities. The film
delicately depicts the intimate lives of two women while raising questions of
religious interpretation, freedom, sexuality and family relationships.
• Feb. 1, 2, 3 — “The Child” (2005)
Winner of the 2005 Golden Palm Award, the highest prize given to a film at the
Cannes Film Festival, “The Child” follows the transformation of
Bruno, a dispossessed 20-year old who lives with his girlfriend, Sonia. Surviving
on unemployment benefits, panhandling and petty thievery, Sonia gives birth
to a son, Jimmy, for whom Bruno feels little attachment. Seeing Jimmy as little
more than a potential source of wealth, Bruno sells Jimmy on the black market,
which sends Sonia to the hospital. Realizing his mistake, Bruno sets out to
get Jimmy back, robbing a store to do so. Overcome with a newly discovered sense
of obligation to his son, Bruno steps forward and takes responsibility for the
crime, which lands him in prison.
Feb. 8, 9, 10 — “Far Side of the Moon” (2003)
The recipient of several honors, including the FIPRESCI Prize (International
Film Critics Award) at the 2004 Berlin Film Festival, “Far Side of the
Moon” is an engaging metaphor of mysterious dualities, juxtaposing sibling
rivalry with the U.S.-Soviet space race. The film centers around two estranged
brothers with little in common who relive childhood disputes while disposing
of their deceased mother’s belongings. Philippe is a 40ish doctoral student
who has repeatedly failed to defend his dissertation on human narcissism and
space exploration. His younger brother André is a television meteorologist.
The film probes issues of competition and reconciliation while searching for
meaning in the universe.