Review Living Paris: Promise of resilience and reconstruction

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Living is the story of the inevitability of death. A film that will give hope to everyone.

Live – "I don't have time to get angry"

Mr. Williams suffers from existential apathy and will learn the deadline of his life. From there, everything will change: he will no longer ring grumbling and complaining; It will finally begin its existence. Going to the cinema with a friend, enjoying a good restaurant, enriching yourself from a seemingly playful conversation and your relationships are some of the things that will revolutionize its finitude; in short, to live. The film avoids the pitfalls of the abundance of pathos for example by not revealing the fatal fate that awaits his son. The film asks priceless questions: Have we lived enough? What would we have left to experience if we knew the date of our cessation?

The menu – "But you're not smart when you're little"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evmdPkItZl8&t=19s It's a film of rich gluttons with pompous gastronomic delusions but which will be disturbed by an epiphanic unveiling but I may have the mind as twisted as Mark Mylod because I had guessed the twist from the beginning. In addition, we hardly see the dishes unlike the Hannibal series which made its dishes shine, they lack the sweet and tasty aspect. Even if I understand the intention which is to denounce culinary gentrification. On the acting side, Ralph Fiennes in chief judiciously toqué is phenomenal.

Review Paris – "I saw the killer's head, he had an angel's mouth"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yNvvA2xLjeE Revoir Paris is a title in the form of a promise of resilience and reconstruction. This is the beginning of a cathartic reappropriation of the city of Paris. Virginie Efira, sober and surprising, bypasses the one-upmanship. The film evokes the city in the aftermath of the attacks of November 13 where we wake up panicked to no longer recognize it. This is by no means the point of view of the murderers or the investigator but of an average victim, which adds a dramatic aspect.