© Pathé
This beginning of the year is rich from a cinematographic point of view. Nosferatu, Bird, Love in the present, Pretty, pretty or again A bear in the Jura… It’s safe to say that there’s something for everyone in theaters right now. Good news: this week continues to delight moviegoers.
This new week offers us its share of good films to discover in the dark rooms. Like every weekend, you can count on us to know which film to go see at the cinema right now. We have carefully combed through the box office to select 4 films for you to discover in theaters.
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Pedro Almodóvar is back. With The room next door, the renowned filmmaker has already enchanted the press (4.1 out of 5) and AlloCiné viewers (3.5 out of 5). Starring Tilda Swinton (We need to talk about Kevin) and Julianne Moore (Still Alice), both excellent, the feature film immerses us in the intimacy of two long-time friends. We quickly understand that tissues will have to be part of the game. After losing each other's lives, Ingrid crosses paths again with Martha, who is terminally ill with cancer. She asks her friend for help to end her life with dignity.
Encouraged by remarkable acting and intelligent writing, The Room Next Door is a poignant and delicate film. Enough to rejoice at the return of the Spanish director to the dark rooms.
Cécile is the daughter of a great love. If Ana and Yves loved each other passionately, they are now separated. Years later, the young girl has to make a documentary about her parents for her film school. She decides to make them talk about their meeting and their story, forcing them to find each other again. Still marked by their past love, they will look for a way to get back to each other.
200% Deposit Bonus up to €3,000 180% First Deposit Bonus up to $20,000Critics are thrilled by the precise acting of François Damiens, Isabelle Carré and Claire Duburcq. With La fille d'un grand amour, screenwriter Agnès de Sacy goes behind the camera and succeeds in transcribing the story of this couple marked by a powerful secret. The press and AlloCiné viewers agree on the respective scores of 3.2 and 3 out of 5.
Sokcho is a small seaside town in South Korea. There, Soo-Ha leads a routine life, between her visits to her mother, a fishmonger, her relationship with her boyfriend, Jun-oh, and her work in a small guesthouse. The arrival of a Frenchman, Yan Kerrand, disrupts her daily life, awakening in her questions about her own identity and her French father about whom she knows nothing (or almost nothing). Soo-Ha and Yan will spend the winter observing each other, sizing each other up, trying to communicate with their own means and weaving a fragile bond.
This adaptation of the eponymous novel by Elisa Shua Dusapin is both funny and very touching. Its staging is accurate and modest while the acting of Roschdy Zem (Roubaix, une lumière) and Bella Kim is particularly moving. The press gives it a score of 3.2 out of 5 while AlloCiné viewers are more enthusiastic with an average of 3.9 out of 5.
Released last week, it It's not too late to discover Everything will be fine. In Hong Kong, Angie and Pat have been living the perfect love story for three decades. But when Pat suddenly dies, Angie's place in her in-laws is seriously called into question. While the love of the two women was accepted, they were not married and this becomes a real problem in dealing with Pat's death. Angie will have to fight to stay in the apartment she shared with her lifelong love.
Directed by Ray Yeung, Everything Will Be Fine is a feature film of extreme sensitivity and infinite delicacy. To be seen in theaters while there is still time. AlloCiné viewers loved it (3.9 out of 5), as did the press (3.4 out of 5).
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