Isabelle, madre soltera, artista divorciada con un hijo, busca el amor verdadero, pero sólo va encontrando decepciones... Adaptación de la novela de Roland Barthès "Fragmentos de un discurso amoroso".
40 years of "Apostrophes". Hours and historical meetings, Pierre Assouline has composed an anthology of the best extracts presented in the form of a primer, which he had commented on by a surprised Bernard Pivot.
Most of the time, Roland Barthes is classified in the category of the 1970s intellectuals, where all his fascinating singularity fades. Our movie holds exactly to the desire of making perceptible his singularity. In this purpose, the movie is constituted by an editing of archives, articulated around Barthes presence and the progress of his career. It is thus a kind of a Roland Barthes’s cinematic version by Roland Barthes, a self–portrait that could be resumed by a point of view as accurate as possible.
Un drama que compitió en la sección oficial del Festival de Cannes de 1979. Recibió dos nominaciones a los Premios César de la Academia de cine francesa: a la mejor fotografía y al mejor montaje.
En una mansión, cuatro señores se reúnen con cuatro exprostitutas y con un grupo de jóvenes de ambos sexos, partisanos o hijos de partisanos, que han sido hechos prisioneros. Nadie en la casa puede eludir las reglas del juego establecidas por los señores; toda transgresión se castiga con la muerte. Además, ellos gozan de la facultad de disponer a su antojo de la vida de los cautivos.
In 1961, philosopher Roland Barthes collaborated with filmmaker Hubert Aquin to produce a film, for Canadian television, intended to reveal the poetics of sport and spectatorship. The question 'what is sport' is answered by Barthes' eloquently scripted commentary. The recurring theme of purging violence from society into the spectacle of sport runs through the film.