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#Jean-Marc Roulot
movienized-com · 3 months
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La passion de Dodin Bouffant (2023)
La passion de Dodin Bouffant (2023) #AnhHungTran #JulietteBinoche #PierreGagnaire #JanHammenecker #BenoitMagimel #JeanMarcRoulot Mehr auf:
Geliebte KöchinJahr: 2023 (November) Genre: Drama / History / Romantik Regie: Anh Hung Tran Hauptrollen: Juliette Binoche, Pierre Gagnaire, Jan Hammenecker, Benoît Magimel, Jean-Marc Roulot … Filmbeschreibung: Ganze 20 Jahre kocht Eugénie (Juliette Binoche) bereits für den berühmten Gastronomen Dodin Bouffant (Benoît Magimel). Nach dieser langen Zeit ist aus ihrer anfänglich rein…
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"Ce Qui Nous Lie" de Cédric Klapisch (2017) avec Pio Marmaï, Ana Girardot, François Civil, Jean-Marc Roulot, María Valverde, Yamée Couture, Jean-Marie Winling, Florence Pernel, Éric Caravaca, Sarah Grappin et Karidja Touré, décembre 2022.
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vinhosemsegredo · 6 months
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M. Roulot
A vida do Domaine Roulot sofreu uma reviravolta em 1982, quando Guy Roulot morreu precocentemente aos 53 anos de idade. Jean Marc, seu filho e o natural herdeiro, queria ser ator e tinha deixado Meursault e partido para Paris para estudar no Le Conservatoire. Naquele mesmo ano, quando seu pai estava de cama, ele tinha participado da colheita, mas, com a morte do seu pai, a família decidiu nomear…
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byneddiedingo · 1 year
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Niels Arestrup and André Dussollier in Diplomacy (Volker Schlöndorff, 2014)
Cast: André Dussollier, Niels Arestrup, Burghart Klaußner, Robert Stadlober, Charlie Nelson, Jean-Marc Roulot, Stefan Wilkening, Thomas Arnold. Screenplay: Cyril Gely, Volker Schlöndorff, based on a play by Gely. Cinematography: Michel Amathieu. Production design: Jacques Rouxel. Film editing: Virginie Bruant. Music: Jörg Lemberg. 
The enormity of some crimes against humanity so swamps the imagination that it's often more effective to try to comprehend their analogs: crimes against art. The Taliban received perhaps as much international condemnation for its destruction of the Buddhist statues of Bamiyan as for any of its murderous repression of human beings. And Hitler's threat to destroy the city of Paris rather than let it fall into the hands of the liberating Allies stands as a kind of symbol of the deep-rooted evil that manifested itself in the Holocaust. It inspired the 1966 film Is Paris Burning? (René Clement), which had an all-star international cast, but Volker Schlöndorff's Diplomacy tells the same story more compactly and effectively. It also does it without relying on star-power: Few Americans will be familiar with the work of the two French actors, André Dussollier and Niels Arestrup, who face off in the film. Arestrup plays General von Choltitz, the commander of German troops in Paris who was tasked with carrying out Hitler's orders to obliterate such monuments as Notre Dame, the Louvre, and the Eiffel Tower, and to blow up the bridges on the Seine, damming the river and flooding the crowded low-lying areas of the city. The film opens with Choltitz and his officers reviewing the plans for the city's destruction in his suite at the Hotel Meurice. After the officers leave, there is a blackout caused by the shelling of the power plants by the approaching Allies, and when the lights come up again, Choltitz discovers that he is not alone: The Swedish diplomat Raoul Nordling (Dussollier) has somehow appeared in his room. Nordling, it turns out, has used a secret passage into the hotel that was built for Napoleon III to make clandestine visits to his mistress. He has also witnessed the plans for the obliteration of a city he loves, and has come to persuade Choltitz to defy the Führer. The touch of melodrama in this "theatrical" entrance betrays Diplomacy's origins in a play by Cyril Gely, who collaborated with Schlöndorff on the screenplay. What ensues is a dialogue-heavy debate, somewhat "opened up" with scenes of German soldiers preparing the explosives and battling with the French resistance. We know Paris survives, but Schlöndorff and his two lead actors manage to create suspense through the give-and-take of their debate, during which we learn that Choltitz's family is under threat of death if he refuses Hitler's orders. Diplomacy suffers only a little from its touches of staginess, thanks to intelligent dialogue and performances.
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lunesalsol · 1 year
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alexlacquemanne · 2 years
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Mai MMXXII
Films
100 % bio (2020) de Fabien Onteniente avec Didier Bourdon, Catherine Jacob, Lolita Chammah, Nicolas Bridet et Olivier Barthélémy
César et Rosalie (1972) de Claude Sautet avec Romy Schneider, Yves Montand, Sami Frey, Umberto Orsini, Eva Maria Meineke, Bernard Le Coq et Isabelle Huppert
Bienvenue, mister Chance (Being There) (1979) de Hal Ashby avec, Peter Sellers, Shirley MacLaine, Melvyn Douglas et Jack Warden
Whiplash (2014) de Damien Chazelle avec Miles Teller, J. K. Simmons, Paul Reiser et Melissa Benoist
À bout de souffle (1960) de Jean-Luc Godard avec Jean-Paul Belmondo, Jean Seberg, Daniel Boulanger, Michel Fabre et Henri-Jacques Huet
Le Dernier Train pour Frisco (One More Train to Rob) de Andrew V. McLaglen avec George Peppard, Diana Muldaur, John Vernon, Steve Sandor et Richard Loo
A Star Is Born (2018) de Bradley Cooper avec Bradley Cooper, Lady Gaga, Sam Elliott, Rafi Gavron et Andrew Dice Clay
125, rue Montmartre (1959) de Gilles Grangier avec Lino Ventura, Andréa Parisy, Robert Hirsch, Dora Doll et Jean Desailly
Batman: Year One (2011) de Sam Liu et Lauren Montgomery avec Adrien Antoine, Jean-Claude Sachot, Kelvine Dumour, Marc Alfos, Anne Rondeleux et Jacques Ciron
Élémentaire, mon cher… Lock Holmes (Without a Clue) (1988)de Thom Eberhardt avec Michael Caine, Ben Kingsley, Jeffrey Jones, Lysette Anthony et Paul Freeman
Le Sens de la fête (2017) de Éric Toledano et Olivier Nakache avec Jean-Pierre Bacri, Jean-Paul Rouve, Gilles Lellouche, Vincent Macaigne, Eye Haïdara, Suzanne Clément et Alban Ivanov
La Voleuse (Schornstein Nr. 4) (1966) de Jean Chapot avec Romy Schneider, Michel Piccoli, Hans Christian Blech, Sonia Schwarz et Mario Huth
Diplomatie (2014) de Volker Schlöndorff avec Niels Arestrup, André Dussollier, Burghart Klaußner, Robert Stadlober et Jean-Marc Roulot
Vincent, François, Paul… et les autres (1974) de Claude Sautet avec Yves Montand, Michel Piccoli, Serge Reggiani, Gérard Depardieu, Stéphane Audran, Marie Dubois, Umberto Orsini et Ludmila Mikaël
Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022) de Sam Raimi avec Benedict Cumberbatch, Elizabeth Olsen, Rachel McAdams, Benedict Wong et Xochitl Gomez
Séries
James May's Cars of the People Saison 2, 1
Le pouvoir de la vapeur - 4x4 - Transport et totalitarisme - Gravir l'échelle sociale - Microcars & Vans - Le boom d'après-guerre
Le Coffre à Catch
#70 : L'Anecdote d'Ichtou - #71 : Kane crée la surprizz et Kelly Kelly…. - #72 : "Voilà la Purge" - #73 : 1000kg de MONSTER MASH BATTLE ROYAL - #74 : WWE SmackDown débarque ! - #21 : Le Pauvre Big Show et ses Mésaventures à Echelle
Meurtres au paradis Saison 11
Addiction - Un meurtre sans cadavre - Dans le noir - Echec à la dame
Starsky et Hutch Saison 4
Vengeance - Noblesse désoblige - Quel métier ! - Cover girl - Un cas difficile - Un oiseau de malheur
James May: Oh Cook! Saison 1
Un Air D'Asie - Comme au Pub - Pasta Delisioza - Festin Italien - Desserts et Gourmandises - Petit Déjeuner des Champions - Roti de Famille
Le Visiteur du Futur Saison 2
Reboot : partie 1 - Reboot : partie 2 - Reboot : partie 3 - Le dommage collatéral - Le Destin - Le Maharaja - Rétrospection - Double Jeu - L'esprit d'équipe - Les Lombardi - La Crise - À la recherche du bon Raph - Le vrai Docteur Castafolte : partie 1 - Le vrai Docteur Castafolte : partie 2 - Un véritable héros
Kaamelott Livre III, IV, V
La Fête de l'hiver II - Le Tribut - L'espion - Stargate II - Raison d'argent - Le Vulgarisateur - Le Mangonneau - Sous les verrous II - Alone in the Dark - Le Justicier - L'insomniaque - La Chevalerie - La Veillée - L’Ultimatum - Le Oud II - La Répétition - Le Discours - Le Choix de Gauvain - Fluctuat nec mergitur - Le Face-à-face : 1re partie - Le Face-à-face : 2e partie - L’Entente cordiale - L’Approbation - Alone in the Dark II - La Blessure d’Yvain - Corpore sano II - L’Enchanteur - Les Bien Nommés - La Prisonnière - Les Paris III - Les Plaques de dissimulation - Le Vice de forme - Le Renoncement : 1re partie - Le Renoncement : 2e partie - L’Inspiration - Les Endettés - Double Dragon - Le Sauvetage - Le Désordre et la Nuit - Le Législateur - Les défis de merlin II - L' assemblée des rois : première partie - L'assemblée des rois : deuxième partie - Le Mauvais Augure - Le Culte Secret - Le baiser romain - Le médiateur - La dispute : première partie - La dispute : deuxième partie - Corvus Corone - La Roche et le Fer - Vae Soli ! - Le Dernier Jour
Top Gear Saison 22, 20, 11, 12, 17, 8, 18
Road Trip en Australie - A l'abordage ! - La fièvre du vintage - L'art de la chasse - Mission Camping-Car - La fiesta dans tous ses états - Happy Birthday Jaguar ! - Essais sur la côte d'azur - C6, le haut de gamme français à l'essai - La vallée de la mort - Tout doit disparaitre - Une Lamborghini à la mer ! - Défilé a Buckingham - Hommage à Saab - Made in China
Parlement Saison 1
J'ai jamais eu de rapports - L'invincible Armada - La politique et les saucisses - Le plus vieux métier du monde - Demos Kratos - Je suis Sharky - Wild West Wing - Le Pacte de Stabilité - Strasbourg, Outre-Rhin - C'était un jeune requin
Dix pour cent Saison 3
Jean - Monica - Gérard - Isabelle - Béatrice - ASK
Affaires sensibles
Tchernobyl, autopsie d'une catastrophe nucléaire - 68' aux Etats-Unis : "Non à la guerre au Viêt Nam !" - « Tcherno-Blaye » : une centrale les pieds dans l’eau - Vélo-labo : Tour de France 1998 - 1979, la centrale nucléaire de Three Mile Island aux Etats-Unis, un aperçu de l’enfer
Star Wars : Obi-Wan Kenobi
Part I
Commissaire Dupin
Sœurs ennemies
Spectacle
Les FMR de Rollin : Pourquoi ça marche ? (2006) de François Rollin
Par le bout du nez (2022) de Alexandre de la Patellière et Matthieu Delaporte avec François Berléand et Antoine Duléry
Livres
Kaamelott, tome 4 : Perceval Et le Dragon d'Airain de Alexandre Astier, Steven Dupré et Benoît Bekaert
The gutter de Cyril Durr et Sergio Yolfa
Batman : Les Nouvelles Aventures Volume 2 de Ty Templeton et Rick Burchett
(II) : Avec l'odeur de tes caresses de Léa Celle qui aimait
Partie de Manille pour OSS 117 de Jean bruce
Un printemps à Tchernobyl de Emmanuel Lepage
Tout le plaisir est pour moi de Frédéric Dard
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cinemascop · 6 years
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<3
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wineninja · 3 years
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【ブログ更新しました!】飲んだワイン ドメーヌ・ルーロ/ジャン・マルク・ルーロ ムルソー2008 7点 https://ift.tt/3ub71kg
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benjaminmcmahon · 3 years
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Jean-Marc Roulot for Noble Rot @luchets007 @noblerotmag https://www.instagram.com/p/CUcXRD6NxMl/?utm_medium=tumblr
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35milimetross · 7 years
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Crítica – ‘Nuestra vida en la Borgoña’
Póster español de Nuestra vida en la Borgoña
Título original: Ce qui nous lie
Año: 2017
Duración: 113 min.
País: Francia
Director: Cédric Klapisch
Guion: Santiago Amigorena, Cédric Klapisch
Música: Loïc Dury, Christophe Minck
Fotografía: Alexis Kavyrchine
Reparto: Pio Marmaï, Ana Girardot, François Civil, Jean-Marc Roulot, María Valverde, Karidja Toure, Yamée Couture, Florence Pernel, Eric Caravaca, Jean-Marie Winling, Tewfik Jallab
Productora: Ce Qui Me Meut Motion Pictures
Distribuidora: Avalon
Género: Drama
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Tras cerrar en 2013 con Nueva vida en Nueva York su serie de películas sobre la juventud que empezó con la celebrada Una casa de locos (2002), el director Cedric Kaplisch regresa a las pantallas para adentrar al espectador en las tierras de viñedos franceses. En Nuestra vida en la Borgoña, el francés presenta en nuestro país una historia amable, un drama con tintes de comedia, sobre la familia, el madurar y sobretodo, el vino.
El mundo del vino aparece como transfondo en el conflicto fraternal entre tres hermanos sobre como gestionar los viñedos de su padre recientemente fallecido. Un conflicto desarrollado mas bien poco.
Nuestra vida en la Borgoña no es una historia a tres. Las relación entre los tres hermanos protagonistas es poco equilibrada, centrándose más en la vida del mayor, Jean, interpretado por Pio Marmaï, en sus recuerdos de la infancia (intercalados en cortes y flashbacks que desean causar empatía, pero que suelen caer en el sentimentalismo y ralentizan la trama), y la tensa relación que mantuvo con su padre que le empujó a dejar su hogar atrás y conocer mundo. Para luego regresar como ‘hijo prodigo’ con el propósito de enmendar sus errores del pasado y, de paso, los del presente.
Es por tanto, la evolución de Jean la piedra angular sobre la se que asienta la película, un proceso de maduración que se produce a la par de las uvas que cosecha y el paso de las estaciones. Mientras que el otro personaje masculino, interpretado por François Civil tiene un desarrollo parecido con cierta tensión existente con su familia política, las mujeres adquieren un escaso protagonismo, La hermana mayor, pese a ser la encargada de dirigir el negocio, destaca a lo largo de la historia en contadas ocasiones. Con el personaje de la española Maria Valverde (Gernika) sucede lo mismo, aunque destaca con su trabajo, aparece muy en segundo plano.
El film entretiene, y aunque de la impresión de parecerse a una película de sobremesa por su argumento, en ocasiones previsible, y cuente con personajes secundarios que rozan el tópico, no es una cinta que genere falta de interés.
El espectador puede perderse en ocasiones, puede incluso no entender lo que dicen los personajes debido al vocabulario enológico que se utiliza en momentos, y pese a su falta de fondo, la película logra disfrutarse. En mayor parte, gracias a una bonita fotografía compuesta de bucólicas postales rupestres. Secuencias sobre la vida en el campo, las fiestas que celebran, el trabajo de la tierra, la vendimia, etc… con la que se trata de acercar al espectador la calidez del ambiente que se recrea.
  Lo mejor: La acogedora sensación que produce el entorno campestre en el que se produce.
Lo peor: La relación entre los personajes principales podría haber dado mas jugo a la historia.
Nota: 6,5
Puedes leer la entevista a su director, Cedric Kaplisch, pinchando aquí
La entrada Crítica – ‘Nuestra vida en la Borgoña’ aparece primero en 35milimetros.
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dandelionwineshop · 5 years
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VERY SPECIAL GUEST STAR PEDRO PARRA AKA DR TERROIR
TASTING TONIGHT 6-7:30 PM
OUR DOPEST GUEST EVER?
F**K.  Pedro Parra is pouring at Dandelion tonight and we feel like, damn. True, we have had a lot of fantastic people in, and true, it’s not a competition. But, um, don’t miss this one??  Pedro Parra is a terroir consultant. He has a Ph.D. in terroir from the French Agricultural Institute in Paris. He regularly digs trenches in famous vineyards to figure out what the soil type is so he can tell the winemakers what to do. He also makes his own wine in his native Chile, both under Pedro Parra y Familia and with some partners as Clos des Fous, which he’ll be focusing on tonight. Ok, we’re just going to pause here to say that the wineries he consults for around the world are a big deal, that he’s smarter about where wine flavors actually come from than anyone we’ve ever met, and also? People call him Dr. Terroir. Can you imagine how much of a badass you have to be for people to call you “Dr. Terroir” and for you not to look like a dick? The guy is all that. And the wines of course are super smart, very delicious, and amazingly affordable! Ever wondered what the deal really is with wine? Have ANY questions? Come taste a few of Pedro’s wines and ask him. That simple. Do not fail. Trust us when we tell you not to miss this.
Oh, Pedro loves Jazz. And we’ll be playing jazz. Boring jazz? Dinner jazz? No, my sister. The kind of jazz where you slyly sidle up to the person you know best on the staff and, sotto voce, ask “which record is this?” when you don’t even know the artist. Matter of fact, we’ll be serving up  WINE, BREAD, CHEESE, VINYL & LOVE!
Clos des Fous, Pour Ma Gueule Assemblage Itata 2017
Cabernet from the Cachapoal Vineyard in Grillos Cantores, at 1380ft. The soil here is carbonated alluvial. Aged in Concrete Vat and Stainless Steel, 18 months on the fine lees. Clos des Fous was founded in 2008 by Pedro Parra, Francois Massoc, Paco Leyton and Albert Cussen. The four friends were tired of hearing that Chilean wine was all boring, industrial, green and overripe so they set out in search of the Dark Side of the Moon. Francois and Pedro are longtime friends, like brothers, and both have spent much time abroad making wine and working vineyards in Europe. Organic, biodynamic. $17
Clos des Fous, Pinot Noir Pour Ma Gueule Valle del Itata 2016
88% Pinot Noir, 12% Cinsault bush vines on granite in the Vinedo Latqui in Itata Valley, aged in concrete with 12 months on the lees. Parra has a Masters degree in precision agriculture and a Ph.D. for his work with terroir. He currently consults as a terroir specialist around the globe in Argentina, Oregon, Italy, France, Spain, Georgia, Croatia and beyond working with world renowned vignerons like Jean Marc Roulot. Organic, biodynamic.  $17
Clos des Fous, Pinot Noir Subsollum 2016
92% Pinot Noir and 8% Cinsault from the Pucalan and Larqui vineyards (about 10 acres total). Viñedo Larqui was planted in 1998 on paleozoic calcareous and sandy soils; Pucalan, planted in 2008, has granitic soil. The wine was made in concrete and stainless and aged on the lees for 18 months. The Clos des Fous philosophy is to produce wines with tension from grapes grown in extreme terroir with minimal intervention in the winery. Clos des Fous owns and manages vineyards in Malleco, Guarilihue, Alto Cahapoal and Western Aconcagua. They produce a variety of wines and work with multiple iterations of Pinot Noir, Cinsault, Pais, Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay and Riesling at their winery in Cauquenes, Maule.  Organic, biodynamic. $24
Clos des Fous, Grillos Cantores Alto Cachapoal Cabernet 2014
Award-winning Cabernet Sauvignon from Cachapoal Vineyard in Grillos Cantores at 1380ft. Soil type is carbonated alluvial. Yields here are 3 tons/acre. Aged in concrete and stainless steel, 18 months on the fine lees.  Clos des Fous is one of Chile’s most innovative, inspiring and authentic wineries producing some of the most exciting wines in South America. Organic, biodynamic. Dark notes of earth, coffee and black berries. $24
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paworn · 4 years
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Jean-Paul Brun « Charme » Blanc de Blancs Extra Brut - Crémant de Bourgogne NV - Jean-Marc Roulot - Bourgogne 2016 - François Carillon - Saint-Aubin Premier Cru « Les Murgers des Dents de Chien » 2016 - Comtesse de Chérissey - Meursault-Blagny Premier Cru « La Genelotte » Monopole 2015 (at เลเลฟอง - L'éléphant) https://www.instagram.com/p/B7qa7XIn58g/?igshid=mom94kn4imp8
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fuoridicinema · 7 years
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I poco visibili in sala dal 19 ottobre
I poco visibili in sala dal 19 ottobre
La nostra rubrica di cinema poco visibile. Ogni settimana vi segnaliamo e consigliamo i film in sala con una bassa distribuzione, correte a cercarli nella vostra città prima che vengano tolti!
  Una donna fantastica
(Cile, Germania, Spagna, USA 2017) un film di Sebastián Lelio. Con Daniela Vega, Francisco Reyes, Luis Gnecco, Aline Küppenheim, Amparo Noguera. Drammatico. Durata 108 minuti. Il film…
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smashpages · 5 years
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Zdarsky, Carroll and more take home 2019 Shuster Awards
The winners of the 15th annual Joe Shuster Awards were announced this weekend, which included Chip Zdarsky, Emily Carroll, Karl Kerschl and more.
Established in 2004, The Joe Shuster Awards are Canada’s national award recognizing outstanding achievement in the creation of comic books, graphic novels and webcomics. Named in honor of Superman co-creator Joe Shuster, the awards recognize the best of the Canadian comics world; nominees must be either Canadian citizens or permanent residents in Canada. The winners were chosen by a jury.
Congratulations to this year’s winners, whose names are in bold below:
ARTIST
Dylan Burnett – Cosmic Ghost Rider (Marvel Comics), Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers 2018 Annual (BOOM! Studios), Reactor (Vault Comics)
Emily Carroll – Speak: The Graphic Novel (Farrar, Straus And Giroux)
Marc Delafontaine – Les Nombrils 08: Ex, Drague Et Rock’n’roll! (Dupuis)
Mike Feehan – Exit Stage Left: The Snagglepuss Chronicles (Dc Comics)
Karl Kershl – Isola (Image Comics)
Sacha Lefebvre – U-merlin (éditions Michel Quintin)
Yanick Paquette – Action Comics, Wonder Woman Earth One Book Two (DC Comics)
Denis Rodier – Arale (Dargaud)
WRITER
Maryse Dubuc, Marc Delafontaine – Les Nombrils 08 Ex, Drague Et Rock’n’roll! (Dupuis)
Meredith Finch – Xena: Warrior Princess (Dynamite Entertainment), Rose (Image Comics)
Jean-francois Laliberte – U-merlin (éditions Michel Quintin)
Jeff Lemire – Black Hammer: Age Of Doom, Black Hammer: Cthu-Louise, Doctor Star & The Kingdom Of Lost Tomorrows, Quantum Age (Dark Horse), The Terrifics (DC Comics), Descender, Gideon Falls, Hit-Girl (Image Comics), The Sentry (Marvel Comics), Bloodshot: Salvation (Valiant)
Tristan Roulot – Arale (Dargaud)
Chip Zdarsky – Marvel 2-In-One, Peter Parker The Spectacular Spider-Man (Marvel Comics), The Wicked + The Divine: The Funnies (Image Comics)
Jim Zub – Dungeons & Dragons: Evil At Baldur’s Gate (IDW), Wayward (Image Comics), Avengers, The Champions, Hunt For Wolverine: Mystery In Madripoor, Infinity Countdown: Champions (Marvel Comics), Rick & Morty Vs. Dungeons & Dragons (Oni Press)
CARTOONIST
Ho Che Anderson – Godhead (Fantagraphics)
Emily Carroll – Beneath The Dead Oak Tree (Shortbox)
Svetlana Chmakova – Crush (Yen Press)
Johnnie Christmas – Firebug (Image Comics)
Francis Desharnais – Le Petite Russie (éditions Pow Pow)
Michel Falardeau – L’esprit Du Camp T.2 (Studio Lounak)
Faith Erin Hicks – The Divided Earth: Nameless City Vol. 3 (First Second)
Jeff Lemire – Royal City (Image Comics)
Mikael – Giant T.2 (Dargaud)
Gene Day Award FOR SELF-PUBLISHED COMICS AND GRAPHIC NOVELS
Beaver Damn 2 – A. Shay Hahn
Christie Pits – Jamie Michaels, Doug Fedrau
Happily Ever After – Ricky Lima, Nicolas Londeix, Andrew Thomas
Hockey Apocalypse Season 4: Cult Of Hockey – Jeff Martin
Les Animaux Se Revoltant (Ringo Starr Aussi) – Val-bleu
The Complete Squid-gee Octology – Keenan Poloncsak
GENE DAY AWARD FOR INDEPENDENT PRESS ANTHOLOGY COLLECTIONS 
Cauldron 1 (Shane Heron)
Gothic Tales Of Haunted Love (Bedside Press)
Jewish Comics Anthology Vol. 2 (Ah Comics)
Swan Song (Cloudscape Comics Collective)
Toronto Comics: Osgoode As Gold (To Comix Press)
Wayward Sisters (To Comix Press)
The Dragon Award (Comics for Kids)
Peter and Ernesto: A Tale of Two Sloths – Graham Annable (First Second)
Crafty Cat and the Great Butterfly Battle – Charise Mericle Harper (First Second)
The Nameless City: The Divided Earth – Faith Erin Hicks (First Second)
Crush – Svetlana Chmakova (Yen Press)
13e Avenue – Genevieve Pettersen et Francois Vigneault (La Pasteque)
Aventurosaure tome 1 – Julien Pare-Sorel (Presses Aventure)
TM MAPLE AWARD (FOR ACHIEVEMENTS OUTSIDE THE CREATIVE)
Jennifer Haines. A leading Canadian comic retailer for over 20 years, Jenn Haines has been an active and vocal supporter of the comics industry and the role comics and comic shops have in their communities. She established the Comics in the Classroom initiative to help educators use comics and graphic novels in their classrooms to improve student literacy.
Harry Kremer Award (Retailers)
Alpha Comics (Calgary, AB)
Cape and Cowl Comics (Lower Sackville, NS)
Comic Book Addiction (Whitby, ON)
Comic Hunter (Moncton, NC)
Curious Comics (Victoria, BC)
Cyber City Comics (North York, ON)
Variant Edition (Edmonton, AB)
HARRY KREMER AWARD (Special Bonus)
Eisner Award-Winning Guelph, ON retailer The Dragon celebrated their 20th Anniversary in 2018. In 2019 they are being given an honorary Harry Kremer Award for their Contributions to the Canadian comic retail landscape and beyond.
As an awards sponsor and booster, they have self-omitted themselves previously from consideration for the Kremer Award, but unbeknownst to them, the Awards Executive felt that in light of their special anniversary year as well as the JSA’s 15th, and in lieu of Jenn being honored with the TM Maple Award and the awards being presented in Guelph that all of these factors added up to it being the right time for the Dragon to officially be included to the short list of Canada’s top comic retailers. Congratulations Jenn!
Canadian Comic Book Creator Hall of Fame
Al Hewetson (1946-2004) (active from 1970-1999)
Alan Hewetson was a Scottish-Canadian writer and editor of American horror-comics magazines, best known for his work with the 1970s publisher Skywald Publications, where he created what he termed the magazines’ “Horror-Mood” sensibility. He went on to become a publisher of city magazines in Canada.
Gerhard (1959-) (active 1984-present)
Gerhard is the professional name of a Canadian artist known for the elaborately detailed background illustrations in the comics series Cerebus the Aardvark.
Dale Keown (1962-) (active 1986-present)
Dale Keown is a Canadian comic book artist, known for his runs on The Incredible Hulk and his creator-owned book, Pitt.
Ken Lashley (1967-) (active 1988-present)
Ken Lashley is a prolific artist and editor, credited as a colorist, penciller, cover colorist, inker, finisher, cover, and variant cover artist, has worked across the comic book industry with DC (The Flash, Cyborg, Suicide Squad, Superwoman, Batwing, Superboy) and Marvel (Excalibur, X-Men, Rising Stars, Black Panther, Spider-Man).
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winetibits · 6 years
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J’ai l’impression que mon réalisateur préféré, Cédric Klapish, est à nouveau en tournage!
C’est, lui même, qui le révèle, sur son compte Instagram avec cette photo :
Nouveau tournage de Cédric Klapish dans les Alpes!
Bon apparemment, cela se passe dans les Alpes et le film va s’appeler “deux moi”  et sortira le 11 septembre 2019.
L’histoire : Deux trentenaires parisiens se rendent chez un psychologue pour étudier leur “moi”. Une comédie dramatique avec aux premières loges: François Civil, Ana Girardot et François Berleand.
Née d’une mère psychanalyste, Je sens du vécu dans ce nouveau film!
On se souvient de ces premiers films :
Le péril jeune
mais surtout de la trilogie
L’auberge espagnole
Les Poupées russes
Casse Tête chinois
interprétée par Romain Duris.
C’est  l’histoire d’un étudiant qui part faire ses études en Espagne par le biais d’Erasmus et qui se lie d’amitié avec d’autres étudiants étrangers! Du vécu à nouveau pour Cédric Klapisch qui a fait ses études de cinéma 2 ans aux usa !
Winetibits a adoré particulièrement son dernier film : Ce qui nous lie.
  Affiche du Film “Ce qui nous lie”
Le synopsis : Jean a quitté sa famille et sa Bourgogne natale il y a dix ans pour faire le tour du monde. En apprenant la mort imminente de son père, il revient dans la terre de son enfance. Il retrouve sa sœur, Juliette, et son frère, Jérémie. Leur père meurt juste avant le début des vendanges. En l’espace d’un an, au rythme des saisons qui s’enchaînent, ces trois jeunes adultes vont retrouver ou réinventer leur fraternité, s’épanouissant et mûrissant en même temps que le vin qu’ils fabriquent.
A la base, le film devait s’appeler “le vin et le vent”, finalement “ce qui nous lie” est tout de même plus sexy!
Le choix de tournage n’est pas anodin. Pour Cédric Klapisch,  les propriétés en Bourgogne restent d’une manière générale plus petite, artisanale et familiale et n’a pas encore été autant pris d’assaut par les investisseurs chinois ou américains.
Lieux de tournage : Domaine des Ducs des Magentas notamment!
Vous reconnaissez ?
Domaine des Ducs de Magenta à Chassagne Montrachet
Cour Morgeot à Chassagne Montrachet
Abbaye de Morgeot à Chassagne Montrachet
Cédric Klapisch, oenophile, s’est aidé de Jean-Marc Roulot, ami de 25 ans, vigneron réputé de Meursault et également acteur que l’on voit à gauche de la photo ci-dessous :
De gauche à droite : Jean-Marc Roulot, François Civil, Pio Marmai, Yamée Couture, Ana Girardot, Maria Valverde
Il a joué notamment dans “les saveurs du palais” ou “Quai d’Orsay”.
Jean-Marc Roulot propriétaire et acteur
Domaine Roulot en Bourgogne et a participé à la justesse des dialogues dans le film.
  Un nouveau film de Cédric Klapish en préparation J'ai l'impression que mon réalisateur préféré, Cédric Klapish, est à nouveau en tournage! C'est, lui même, qui le révèle, sur son compte…
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dragnews · 6 years
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What Movies to See (or Skip) in Australian Cinemas in July
Did you know The New York Times publishes close to 30 film reviews each week?
Every month, we’ll curate the most relevant and interesting reviews specifically for our Australian audience, based on the local release dates. You can always read more movie reviews from The New York Times here.
[Prefer not to go out? Check out our Australian Netflix guide for July.]
Starring: Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Rafe Spall, Justice Smith, Daniella Pineda
Directed by: J.A. Bayona
What is it? A rehash of a reboot that … hasn’t evolved much. This time the dinosaurs leave the park and rampage in a mansion.
You’ll like it if you liked: The first “Jurassic World” and are actually looking forward to the third.
Critic’s take: “The semi-interesting ethical questions that have hovered around Jurassic Park since the beginning — what are the limits of human tampering with nature? What obligations do we owe to imaginary creatures? — have been stretched to almost invisible thinness.”
Australian release date: June 21
Read the full review by A.O. Scott.
Starring: Benicio Del Toro, Josh Brolin, Isabela Moner, Jeffrey Donovan, Catherine Keener
Directed by: Stefano Sollima
What is it? In this sequel, an American operative calls in a hit man with a grudge to help him foment a war between two rival Mexican cartels.
You’ll like it if you liked: The original “Sicario” from 2015. Although …
Critic’s take: “Emily Blunt is missing, and so is some of the sharpness that made [the first] ‘Sicario’ interesting.”
Starring: Ben Hardy, Elle Fanning, Maisie Williams, Douglas Booth, Tom Sturridge
Directed by: Haifaa Al-Mansour
What is it? A literary biopic with the usual candlelight and impeccable English grammar, but with a modern argument.
You’ll like it if you liked: The story of “Frankenstein” and want more on how the book came to life.
Critic’s take: “‘Mary Shelley’ is a reminder that England in the early 19th century remains a rich repository of stories and characters, an era that can be made to feel charmingly quaint and bracingly modern.”
Also: Here’s hoping “dreamy dirtbag lit bro” becomes common usage in Romantic academia now, after it casually slid into this review.
Australian release date: July 5
Read the full review by A.O. Scott.
Starring: Pio Marmaï, Ana Girardot, François Civil, Jean-Marc Roulot, María Valverde
Directed by: Cédric Klapisch
What is it? The prodigal son of a winemaking family returns to France from his home in Australia to reconcile with his estranged siblings.
You’ll like it if you liked: Olivier Assayas’s “Summer Hours,” an acclaimed French film about inheritance, at least on the surface.
Critic’s take: “Mr. Klapisch lingers his camera lovingly over shots of grapes being harvested and stomped, all the while employing story mechanics and flashbacks indelicate enough to suggest the churn of a factory juicer.”
Australian release date: July 5
Read the full review by Ben Kenigsberg.
Starring: Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Gloria Steinem, Nina Totenberg
Directed by: Julie Cohen, Betsy West
What is it? An adoring documentary of the life and times of Supreme Court justice and pop-culture phenomenon Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
You’ll like it if you liked: Her workout routine with Stephen Colbert, but are interested in the decades of legal pioneering and shattered glass ceilings, too.
Critic’s take: “Its celebration of Justice Ginsburg’s record of progressive activism and jurisprudence is partisan but not especially polemical. The filmmakers share her convictions and assume that the audience will, too.”
Australian release date: July 26
Read the full review by A.O. Scott.
The post What Movies to See (or Skip) in Australian Cinemas in July appeared first on World The News.
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