*
? ☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
? STREAM
? ???????????????
Céline Sciamma; user ratings - 8,3 of 10 Star; country - France; 2019; Synopsis - France, 1760. Marianne is commissioned to paint the wedding portrait of Héloïse, a young woman who has just left the convent. Because she is a reluctant bride-to-be, Marianne arrives under the guise of companionship, observing Héloïse by day and secretly painting her by firelight at night. As the two women orbit one another, intimacy and attraction grow as they share Héloïse's first moments of freedom. Héloïse's portrait soon becomes a collaborative act of and testament to their love; genre - Romance.
J'ai envie de faire un gros câlin de réconfort à Adèle et de lui dire merci. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en feu d'artifice. The island world of Céline Sciamma’s Portrait of a Lady on Fire contains no men in physical form, but the stench of patriarchy still wafts through its constantly windy environment. In the film’s loosely corseted 1760s French setting, women support and love one another, in ways subtle and dangerous, but the demands of a male-dominated society still threatens from the outside, and Sciamma paints a heartbreaking picture of fleeting freedom that still can’t fully combat the concretized masculine rules that govern and shackle even the fiercest of women. Nonetheless, the passion on display burns with a brilliant, soft rage that speaks to our current political moment (and women’s place within it) with a breathtaking specificity and sensitivity. When artist Marianne (Noémie Merlant) arrives at the remote home of La Comtesse (Valeria Golino), she knows her assignment and the secret she must keep. La Comtesse has hired her to paint a portrait of her rebellious daughter Héloïse (Adèle Haenel), who has just returned from a convent and refuses to have her likeness recorded. But this is not just any portrait; La Comtesse has promised Héloïse to an unseen Milanese suitor, the likeness a requirement for him to make his final judgment, and it’s therefore an extremely important element of La Comtesse’s well-laid plans for herself and her daughter. Over all of this hangs a pall of grief, as Héloïse’s sister has just met a grisly end, having fallen off a cliff, and the house’s young servant girl Sophie (Luana Bajrami) believes it to be a suicide. It’s expressly because of this untimely death that Héloïse has been called back from the convent, as it’s now her who must marry and create good connections for the shrinking family. Héloïse, a defiant spirit, is obviously nonplussed to now be burdened with such expectations, and her refusal to sit for the portrait endangers La Comtesse’s future. This push and pull between the strict, confining frames of society and the wily brushstrokes of those who would dare to paint outside those lines permeate the film’s every scene. So sneakiness and clandestine creativity are Marianne’s orders. She is to snatch snapshots of Héloïse’s likeness as she spends time with her and paint these memories in private. Héloïse has been told that Marianne is a companion for walks and it is over the course of these blustery afternoons, that Marianne begins to feel something more for Héloïse, a curiosity that soon feels more like obsession. And when Héloïse begins to return Marianne’s glances and interest, the film takes a turn into romantic territory that might grate in the hands of a less deft filmmaker, but here ignites in ways that are never exploitative and almost always exhilarating. All of this develops beside an impatiently ticking clock. La Comtesse becomes more and more eager to have the portrait finished and shipped as Marianne and Héloïse become more and more eager to make their time together last. This tension is most gorgeously apparent in the journey of Marianne’s painting itself. While her early renderings of Héloïse capture a stern, uncooperative subject, the likeness transforms as the women transform, and the final version of Marianne’s creation is both heart-rending and heart-stopping, a portrait of a lady in love, beautifully bewitched, bothered, and bewildered. While this budding romance between these two remains the centerpiece, Sciamma fills the margins with moments that are less explicitly romantic, but that round out rich stories for all four women. From a quietly affecting scene in which the ill-fated myth of Orpheus and Eurydice is read to a subplot in which Sophie discovers she is pregnant, Sciamma constructs flashes of connection that always speak to a larger context while also rooted in character, never contrived simply for sermonic purposes. The ways in which Marianne and Héloïse take care of Sophie in her time of need display a layer of feminine communal care that cannot help but make pointed commentary on the current state of women’s reproductive freedom, but it's also intensely true to who these women are. Along the way to helping Sophie on her decision, the trio also encounters a large group of a capella singing village women who are participating in some sort of feminist community ritual and singing the Latin lyrics, “fugere non possum, ” which translate to “I cannot escape. ” The simple phrase, sung in unison by a growing chorus of voices is a moving musical moment that underlines remarkable feminist connections without clearly definining whether these connections are as intimate as the one between Marianne and Héloïse. It’s in these various permutations of female companionship that Portrait of a Lady on Fire finds its most powerful spiritual sustenance, always steering away from the more exploitative nature of some lesbian films made for the male gaze and instead building bridges of intimacy that feel wholly authentic and even authentically holy. Of course, all of these loving connections blossom amidst the rocky ground of a society that does not have any patience for or interest in their continuing growth, and this outside reality inevitably breaks in, a phallic reminder of the harshness of patriarchy. But Sciamma is less interested in overt messages about the insidious ubiquitousness of masculinity than she is in creating an ode to the exquisite melancholy of love attained and never abandoned, even as time moves on and distance expands. As the Latin lyrics sung by those village women attest, none of the characters in Portrait of a Lady on Fire can escape from the boxes built around them, no matter how hard they struggle, but even inside these boxes, Marianne and Héloïse build a blaze from which they never want to escape. Their story is as timeless as the most enduring myths.
&ref(https://3.bp.blogspot.com/_bQMF5T2EUlA/S868TFLe2EI/AAAAAAAAABM/HapwRC9fu9U/s1600/Rapha%C3%ABl+Zacharie+de+IZARRA+-+Farrah+FAWCETT+(27).jpg)
? ☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
? STREAM
? ???????????????
Céline Sciamma; user ratings - 8,3 of 10 Star; country - France; 2019; Synopsis - France, 1760. Marianne is commissioned to paint the wedding portrait of Héloïse, a young woman who has just left the convent. Because she is a reluctant bride-to-be, Marianne arrives under the guise of companionship, observing Héloïse by day and secretly painting her by firelight at night. As the two women orbit one another, intimacy and attraction grow as they share Héloïse's first moments of freedom. Héloïse's portrait soon becomes a collaborative act of and testament to their love; genre - Romance.
J'ai envie de faire un gros câlin de réconfort à Adèle et de lui dire merci. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en feu d'artifice. The island world of Céline Sciamma’s Portrait of a Lady on Fire contains no men in physical form, but the stench of patriarchy still wafts through its constantly windy environment. In the film’s loosely corseted 1760s French setting, women support and love one another, in ways subtle and dangerous, but the demands of a male-dominated society still threatens from the outside, and Sciamma paints a heartbreaking picture of fleeting freedom that still can’t fully combat the concretized masculine rules that govern and shackle even the fiercest of women. Nonetheless, the passion on display burns with a brilliant, soft rage that speaks to our current political moment (and women’s place within it) with a breathtaking specificity and sensitivity. When artist Marianne (Noémie Merlant) arrives at the remote home of La Comtesse (Valeria Golino), she knows her assignment and the secret she must keep. La Comtesse has hired her to paint a portrait of her rebellious daughter Héloïse (Adèle Haenel), who has just returned from a convent and refuses to have her likeness recorded. But this is not just any portrait; La Comtesse has promised Héloïse to an unseen Milanese suitor, the likeness a requirement for him to make his final judgment, and it’s therefore an extremely important element of La Comtesse’s well-laid plans for herself and her daughter. Over all of this hangs a pall of grief, as Héloïse’s sister has just met a grisly end, having fallen off a cliff, and the house’s young servant girl Sophie (Luana Bajrami) believes it to be a suicide. It’s expressly because of this untimely death that Héloïse has been called back from the convent, as it’s now her who must marry and create good connections for the shrinking family. Héloïse, a defiant spirit, is obviously nonplussed to now be burdened with such expectations, and her refusal to sit for the portrait endangers La Comtesse’s future. This push and pull between the strict, confining frames of society and the wily brushstrokes of those who would dare to paint outside those lines permeate the film’s every scene. So sneakiness and clandestine creativity are Marianne’s orders. She is to snatch snapshots of Héloïse’s likeness as she spends time with her and paint these memories in private. Héloïse has been told that Marianne is a companion for walks and it is over the course of these blustery afternoons, that Marianne begins to feel something more for Héloïse, a curiosity that soon feels more like obsession. And when Héloïse begins to return Marianne’s glances and interest, the film takes a turn into romantic territory that might grate in the hands of a less deft filmmaker, but here ignites in ways that are never exploitative and almost always exhilarating. All of this develops beside an impatiently ticking clock. La Comtesse becomes more and more eager to have the portrait finished and shipped as Marianne and Héloïse become more and more eager to make their time together last. This tension is most gorgeously apparent in the journey of Marianne’s painting itself. While her early renderings of Héloïse capture a stern, uncooperative subject, the likeness transforms as the women transform, and the final version of Marianne’s creation is both heart-rending and heart-stopping, a portrait of a lady in love, beautifully bewitched, bothered, and bewildered. While this budding romance between these two remains the centerpiece, Sciamma fills the margins with moments that are less explicitly romantic, but that round out rich stories for all four women. From a quietly affecting scene in which the ill-fated myth of Orpheus and Eurydice is read to a subplot in which Sophie discovers she is pregnant, Sciamma constructs flashes of connection that always speak to a larger context while also rooted in character, never contrived simply for sermonic purposes. The ways in which Marianne and Héloïse take care of Sophie in her time of need display a layer of feminine communal care that cannot help but make pointed commentary on the current state of women’s reproductive freedom, but it's also intensely true to who these women are. Along the way to helping Sophie on her decision, the trio also encounters a large group of a capella singing village women who are participating in some sort of feminist community ritual and singing the Latin lyrics, “fugere non possum, ” which translate to “I cannot escape. ” The simple phrase, sung in unison by a growing chorus of voices is a moving musical moment that underlines remarkable feminist connections without clearly definining whether these connections are as intimate as the one between Marianne and Héloïse. It’s in these various permutations of female companionship that Portrait of a Lady on Fire finds its most powerful spiritual sustenance, always steering away from the more exploitative nature of some lesbian films made for the male gaze and instead building bridges of intimacy that feel wholly authentic and even authentically holy. Of course, all of these loving connections blossom amidst the rocky ground of a society that does not have any patience for or interest in their continuing growth, and this outside reality inevitably breaks in, a phallic reminder of the harshness of patriarchy. But Sciamma is less interested in overt messages about the insidious ubiquitousness of masculinity than she is in creating an ode to the exquisite melancholy of love attained and never abandoned, even as time moves on and distance expands. As the Latin lyrics sung by those village women attest, none of the characters in Portrait of a Lady on Fire can escape from the boxes built around them, no matter how hard they struggle, but even inside these boxes, Marianne and Héloïse build a blaze from which they never want to escape. Their story is as timeless as the most enduring myths.
&ref(https://3.bp.blogspot.com/_bQMF5T2EUlA/S868TFLe2EI/AAAAAAAAABM/HapwRC9fu9U/s1600/Rapha%C3%ABl+Zacharie+de+IZARRA+-+Farrah+FAWCETT+(27).jpg)
Elle est géniale. Something went wrong, but don’t fret ? let’s give it another shot.I can't stop thinking of this movie. ??????. Beautiful film. Imperdonable el final de esta película.
Free Portrait de la jeune fille en feu vert. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en feu arrière. Portrait of a lady on fire is just a bunch of snobby French women sniffing their own farts for 2 hours, terrible movie. Don't waste your time. What a beautiful video! The clips you chose and your edit is so impressive, I was left speechless after viewing it. Great work.
I seldom rate 10 but this is an exceptional film. The performance of the two main characters is superb. This is a sparsely told, but extremely well done love story. It should be a slam dunk for an Oscar. It's in French with English subs but don't let that slow you down. Exceptional. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en. This movie nuked me. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en euros.
What a movie! Beautiful, deep, sweet and sour. My favourite French movie of 2019.
Nepraleisk šio vieno vaikino filmo.
Correspondent: Frédéric Mignard
I seldom rate 10 but this is an exceptional film. The performance of the two main characters is superb. This is a sparsely told, but extremely well done love story. It should be a slam dunk for an Oscar. It's in French with English subs but don't let that slow you down. Exceptional. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en. This movie nuked me. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en euros.
What a movie! Beautiful, deep, sweet and sour. My favourite French movie of 2019.
Incredible frames as splendid as paintings. Fantastic actresses in a patriarcal world emptied of its men to let the women discover themselves. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en fête. I have seen millions of movies. But this one is such a piece of art. masterpiece. Tho it left a scar in my heart. But i will always remember this. Just came home after seeing this film in a cinema. this film is unbelievably great, i mean wow. What a screenplay, direction and the acting was like oscar standard. P.S. loved this song totally. What a composition. Hats off. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en œuvre. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en fer forgé. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en europe.I saw a screener for this a few months ago and have been haunted by the memory of it ever since. Now it's playing in NY for a week and I'm heading back tomorrow for the third night in a row. This movie is absolutely remarkable. Absolutely breathtaking. Free Portrait de la jeune fille en ferme.
Nepraleisk šio vieno vaikino filmo.
Correspondent: Frédéric Mignard
コメントをかく