Newen Connect has added a trio of French comediesto its EFM slate:Cycle Of Time, No Signal!andThe Family Road.
Vinciane Millereau’s Cycle Of Time stars Elsa Zylberstein, Didier Bourdon, Aurore Clément and Dider Flamand and is about a 1950s French family catapulted into 2025 due to a freak accident with their washing machine, forcing them to face a new world dominated by technology and adapt to a new reality.
Olivier Kahn produces for Ugc which is releasing the film in France in October.
Edouard Pluvieux’s No Signal! is about two young step-siblings spending the weekend with their parents in...
Vinciane Millereau’s Cycle Of Time stars Elsa Zylberstein, Didier Bourdon, Aurore Clément and Dider Flamand and is about a 1950s French family catapulted into 2025 due to a freak accident with their washing machine, forcing them to face a new world dominated by technology and adapt to a new reality.
Olivier Kahn produces for Ugc which is releasing the film in France in October.
Edouard Pluvieux’s No Signal! is about two young step-siblings spending the weekend with their parents in...
- 2/10/2025
- ScreenDaily
French actress Marion Cotillard has been acting in TV and film since she was young, and her movies include everything from independent French dramas to major box office blowouts. Since first appearing in a short film at age 7, Marion Cotillard has appeared in nearly 80 movies in a variety of capacities. She's played background characters and supporting parts, but more often than not, she's led films with her ability to play both dangerous and pathetically sweet in equal measure. With just a small look, Cotillard can go from cold to warm and back again.
Over her lauded career, Cotillard has earned two Academy Award nominations, winning once; four Golden Globe nominations, winning once; and been nominated another four times for the Screen Actors Guild. She's appeared in musical biopics and Christopher Nolan-style blockbuster epics. Cotillard has found a dual home for herself, fitting in well in quiet independent dramas, seamlessly...
Over her lauded career, Cotillard has earned two Academy Award nominations, winning once; four Golden Globe nominations, winning once; and been nominated another four times for the Screen Actors Guild. She's appeared in musical biopics and Christopher Nolan-style blockbuster epics. Cotillard has found a dual home for herself, fitting in well in quiet independent dramas, seamlessly...
- 1/4/2025
- by Zachary Moser
- ScreenRant
Stars: Samy Naceri, Frédéric Diefenthal, Marion Cotillard, Manuela Gourary, Emma Sjöberg, Bernard Farcy, Georges Neri, Dan Herzberg, Sébastien Thiery, Philippe du Janerand | Written by Luc Besson | Directed by Gérard Pirès
Classic high-octane car chase thriller Taxi, created by renowned writer/director/producer Luc Besson, is cult action comedy about a speed freak taxi driver who is forced to make a deal with the police or lose his licence. The film has spawned three sequels, an American remake and a TV series which has sadly not found a UK broadcaster as yet. Now the original film, which introduced the world to high speed car chases and gallic action, hits Blu-ray courtesy of Second Sight, in a new high-def transfer that makes the film look as fresh and exciting today as it did on its debut in 1998.
Like a lot of more modern Besson movies, the plot of Taxi is relatively simple:...
Classic high-octane car chase thriller Taxi, created by renowned writer/director/producer Luc Besson, is cult action comedy about a speed freak taxi driver who is forced to make a deal with the police or lose his licence. The film has spawned three sequels, an American remake and a TV series which has sadly not found a UK broadcaster as yet. Now the original film, which introduced the world to high speed car chases and gallic action, hits Blu-ray courtesy of Second Sight, in a new high-def transfer that makes the film look as fresh and exciting today as it did on its debut in 1998.
Like a lot of more modern Besson movies, the plot of Taxi is relatively simple:...
- 11/6/2014
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
Taxi 3
PARIS -- Producer Luc Besson and director Gerard Krawczyk have teamed up again for the third of the highly successful "Taxi" films. The first had more than 6 million admissions, the second had more than 11 million, and the latest has screeched straight to pole position at the boxoffice.
Fans of the first two films will not be disappointed, but those new to the tale of Marseille taxi driver Daniel (Sammy Naceri) and his best buddy, Emilien (Frederic Diefenthal), may find the ride tedious and uninspired. The opening scenes are promising enough. A helmeted motorcycle rider is pursued through the streets of the city by a band of police officers on Rollerblades. The action is dizzyingly fast. The camera swoops and slides as the rider negotiates parked cars, cobbled streets and flights of stairs. He eventually escapes, and the audience gasps as he takes off his helmet to reveal ... Sylvester Stallone.
The subsequent action scenes never match the energy of the first five minutes. A desultory plot involving a gang of Chinese bank thieves disguised as Santa Clauses is never fleshed out. The humor is predictable, and the characters are two-dimensional. This is a made-to-measure film that unashamedly sets out to please its adolescent following. There are car chases aplenty, bungling police officers, soft drugs, seductive women and a street-wise taxi driver.
Despite the array of special effects, the real star of the film is Commissaire Gibert (Bernard Farcy). At his best, he is reminiscent of the late Peter Sellers in the role of Inspector Clouseau. Commissaire Gibert is grossly incompetent and ridiculous, but underneath is a man who simply wants to do a good job. It's an endearing -- and hilarious -- performance.
Fans of the first two films will not be disappointed, but those new to the tale of Marseille taxi driver Daniel (Sammy Naceri) and his best buddy, Emilien (Frederic Diefenthal), may find the ride tedious and uninspired. The opening scenes are promising enough. A helmeted motorcycle rider is pursued through the streets of the city by a band of police officers on Rollerblades. The action is dizzyingly fast. The camera swoops and slides as the rider negotiates parked cars, cobbled streets and flights of stairs. He eventually escapes, and the audience gasps as he takes off his helmet to reveal ... Sylvester Stallone.
The subsequent action scenes never match the energy of the first five minutes. A desultory plot involving a gang of Chinese bank thieves disguised as Santa Clauses is never fleshed out. The humor is predictable, and the characters are two-dimensional. This is a made-to-measure film that unashamedly sets out to please its adolescent following. There are car chases aplenty, bungling police officers, soft drugs, seductive women and a street-wise taxi driver.
Despite the array of special effects, the real star of the film is Commissaire Gibert (Bernard Farcy). At his best, he is reminiscent of the late Peter Sellers in the role of Inspector Clouseau. Commissaire Gibert is grossly incompetent and ridiculous, but underneath is a man who simply wants to do a good job. It's an endearing -- and hilarious -- performance.
- 2/11/2003
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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