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  • Director:
    Richard Linklater

    Jesse, a writer from the US, and Celine, a Frenchwoman working for an environment protection organization, acquainted nine years ago on the train from Budapest to Vienna, meet again when Jesse arrives in Paris for a reading of his new book. As they have only a few hours until his plane leaves, they stroll through Paris, talking about their experiences, ...

    Our Take: One of the most romantic and realistic romances ever made.

  • Director:
    Spike Jonze

    Craig, a puppeteer, takes a filing job in a low-ceilinged office in Manhattan. Although married to the slightly askew Lotte, he hits on a colleague, the sexually frank Maxine. She's bored but snaps awake when he finds a portal leading inside John Malkovich: for 15 minutes you see, hear, and feel whatever JM is doing, then you fall out by ...

    Our Take: A little bit crazy, very funny, and one of the most inventive movies you will ever see.

  • Director:
    Kimberly Peirce

    Based on actual events. Brandon Teena is the popular new guy in a tiny Nebraska town. He hangs out with the guys, drinking, cussing, and bumper surfing, and he charms the young women, who've never met a more sensitive and considerate young man. Life is good for Brandon, now that he's one of the guys and dating hometown beauty Lana. ...

    Our Take: It is no wonder Hilary Swank won an Oscar for this extraordinary performance, not a film for the squeamish but an amazingly powerful story

  • Buffalo 66 Cover Art 1998
    Director:
    Vincent Gallo

    Having just served 5 years in prison for a crime he did not commit, Billy Brown (Gallo)'s first desperate post-incarceration action is to desperately search for somewhere to relieve himself. Then, to impress his dunceish, thoroughly neglectful parents, Gallo kidnaps a dance class student called Layla (Ricci) and forces her to pretend to be his wife. Layla allows herself to ...

    Our Take: Director Vincent Gallo is a true original and he has made one of the most original, surprisingly beautiful modern love stories we've ever seen. And watching Ben Gazzara and Angelica Huston as an old married couple is reason alone to see this movie!

  • Capote Cover Art 2005
    Director:
    Bennett Miller

    In November 1959, Truman Capote (Philip Seymour Hoffman), the author of Breakfast at Tiffany's and a favorite figure in what is soon to be know as the Jet Set, reads an article on a back page of the New York Tome. It tells of the murders of four members of a well-known farm family in Holcomb, Kansas. Similar stories appear ...

    Our Take: One of two films in two years about Truman Capote and his experience in writing "In Cold Blood." Philip Seymour Hoffman stars with an eerily powerful star turn as the title character.

  • Director:
    Patrice Leconte

    William Faber became a tax accountant like his father and resolved himself to a life where nothing much ever changed. At least until the beautiful Anna walked in one day and mistook his office for the therapist's down the hall. Unsolicited, Anna begins to reveal intimate details of her life which include how she is seeking security by attempting to ...

  • Director:
    Todd Haynes

    Cathy (Julianne Moore) is the perfect 50s housewife, living the perfect 50s life: healthy kids, successful husband, social prominence. Then one night she surprises her husband Frank (Dennis Quaid) kissing another man, and her tidy world starts spinning out of control. In her confusion and grief, she finds consolation in the friendship of their African-American gardener, Raymond (Dennis Haysbert) - ...

    Our Take: Todd Haynes' contemporary vision of Douglas Sirk's world is full of humor, pathos and beauty.

  • Director:
    Nicole Holofcener

    A drama that examines the shifting relationships between four women who have been friends all of their adult lives. Now as they settle into their early middle age, their friendship is increasingly challenged by the ever-growing disparity in their individual degrees of financial comfort. It is a poignant snapshot of the way we live today, where the safe divisions that ...

    Our Take: A fresh, keenly observed, and authentic feeling ensemble portrait…rather like the Big Chill 15 years later.

  • Director:
    Zach Braff

    Anti Hero Andrew Largeman returns to his New Jersey hometown to visit from his Hollywood existence where he is an employed, but not famous actor. He decides to stop taking the psychopharmacological drugs his psychiatrist father has long insisted he take. As his mood changes, and his feelings of sadness and regret deepen he is also open for the first ...

    Our Take: Tender, funny and definitely indie. Great supporting performance by Peter Sarsgaard.

  • Director:
    Terry Zwigoff

    Based on the well-known comic, GHOST WORLD tells the story of neo-cool Enid (Thora Birch) and Rebecca (Scarlett Johansson) who, faced with graduation take a hard look at the world they wryly observe and decide what they really want. When Enid takes an interest in the offbeat Seymour (Steve Buscemi) and Rebecca focuses her attention on their mutual romantic fixation ...

    Our Take: Not only do you get to check out Scarlett Johansson before she became a blonde femme fatale, you also experience one of the wittiest coming-of-age stories of our time. Also starring the great Steve Buscemi, this comical film about suburban boredom and being an outsider is a must-see.

  • Director:
    Don Roos

    An ensemble cast telling 10 stories with intertwining characters. One story is about a father and son who are dating the same woman . Another features a woman who long ago gave her baby up for adoption but is now being blackmailed by a documentary filmmaker who claims to know the now-grown child's whereabouts. Written by Anonymous

  • Director:
    Burr Steers

    Igby Slocumb (Kieran Culkin), a rebellious and sarcastic seventeen-year-old boy, is at war with the stifling world of "old money" privilege he was born in to. With a schizophrenic father (Bill Pullman), a self-absorbed, distant mother (Susan Sarandon), and a shark-like young republican big brother (Ryan Phillippe), Igby figures there must be a better life out there - and sets ...

    Our Take: In what many call a modern day adaptation of Catcher In the Rye, Kieran Culkin stars opposite an all-star cast as he fights against his bourgeois surroundings, his manic parents, a tormented upbringing, and the world itself.

  • Director:
    Todd Field

    When young Frank Fowler (Nick Stahl) becomes romantically involved with an older single mother (Tomei), his parents (Spacek and Wilkinson) are concerned. But when the relationship takes a sudden and tragic turn, the Fowlers are forced to confront the harsh reality of their situation and the inescapable consequences of their actions. An uncommonly suspenseful and disturbing film powered by a ...

    Our Take: Just when you think this movie is one thing, it becomes quite another, and then turns direction again. Sissy Spacek and Tom Wilkinson are both amazing.

  • Director:
    Valeria Bruni Tedeschi

    A wealthy but dysfunctional family teeters on the brink of collapse in this emotional drama leavened with a strong dose of dark comedy. Federica (Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi) is the daughter of a wealthy Italian business magnate (Roberto Herlitzka) who relocated himself and his family to France in the 1970s, after a wave of kidnappings among the rich and prominent led him ...

    Our Take: In this age of heiresses becoming celebrities here is a movie that paints an honest and unvarnished portrait of growing up rich.

  • Director:
    Eric Mendelsohn

    Judy Berlin allows the audience to take a glimpse of a day at once strange and ordinary with the residents of Babylon, Long Island. Judy (Edie Falco) is an aspiring actress who is quitting her job as a "pilgrim" in a local historical museum's display to take her chances in Los Angeles. Her mother is a gifted but bitter schoolteacher ...

  • Junebug Cover Art 2005
    Director:
    Phil Morrison

    Madeleine (Embeth Davidtz), a sophisticated Chicagoan who owns a gallery devoted to "outsider art," goes south in an effort to woo an eccentric painter (Frank Hoyt Taylor) to her gallery. She brings along her husband, George (Alessandro Nivola), a native of the area, and the couple stays with his family. Peg (Celia Weston), George's mother, gives Madeleine a rather chilly ...

    Our Take: No matter how far we go, it seems we never leave home. This adorable and character-rich film follows a Chicago art dealer and her younger newly-wed to North Carolina where each are confronted with the complexity and beauty of family relations, the struggle for identity, and what truly matters most.

  • Director:
    Charles Herman-Wurmfeld

    Fed up with her fruitless search for "Mr. Right" and tired of blind dates from hell, attractive journalist Jessica Stein whimsically responds to a classified ad - from Helen! Making and breaking new rules of dating as they go, the two women muddle through an earnest but hilarious courtship that blurs the lines between friendship and romantic love in this ...

    Our Take: Jessica is a "nice Jewish girl" who never expected to be gay... or did she? This is a wonderful, touching family dramedy.

  • Look at Me Cover Art 2004
    Director:
    Agnes Jaoui

    Lolita (Marilou Berry) is the 20-year-old daughter of Étienne Cassard (Jean-Pierre Bacri), a wealthy and well-known editor and writer, and most of the people she meets seem to be more interested in her dad than in her; her zaftig figure doesn't help her self-esteem much, either. Lolita is a gifted singer and has been studying with a voice coach, Sylvia ...

    Our Take: Director Agnes Jaoui and star Jean-Pierre Bacri (real-life husband and wife) are the most popular and sucessful comic duo in France. Look At Me proves why: it's smart, funny, moving and unflinchingly honest in its depiction of love of all kinds. It was a smash at the Cannes Film Festival and it's one of the most satisfying movies we've seen in a long time.

  • Director:
    Sofia Coppola

    Bob Harris (Bill Murray) and Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson) are two Americans in Tokyo. Bob is a movie star in town to shoot a whiskey commercial, while Charlotte is a young woman tagging along with her workaholic photographer husband (Giovanni Ribisi). Unable to sleep, Bob and Charlotte cross paths one night in the luxury hotel bar. This chance meeting soon begins ...

    Our Take: Sofia Coppola has captured the essence of disorientation and isolation which can plague us all in this visually arresting, beautifully acted drama.

  • Director:
    Miranda July

    Me and You and Everyone We Know is a poetic and penetrating observation of how people struggle to connect with one another in an isolating and contemporary world. Christine Jesperson is a lonely artist and “Eldercab” driver who uses her fantastical artistic visions to draw her aspirations and objects of desire closer to her. Richard Swersey (John Hawkes), a newly ...

    Our Take: Director Miranda July started out as a visual artist and it shows- unlike a lot of artists who turn to movies she didn't make a "weird" movie. She applied her artistic sensibility to a very funny and romantic story that features the most hilarious depiction of online dating you may ever see. This miraculously poetic and award-winning debut film explores the outwardly generic yet internally brave dreamers of companionship and human connection who must reconcile their fantasies of love and happiness.

  • Monster Cover Art 2004
    Director:
    Patty Jenkins

    Charlize Theron stars in Monster, a shockingly moving film that burrows deep beneath the tabloid-sized headline stories on Aileen Wuornos, the man-hating --- and murdering --- serial killer executed last year in Florida. Director Patty Jenkins unearths a love story in the midst of the horrors and pathologies of two misfits: Wuornos, a drifter prostitute who kills many of her ...

    Our Take: Critics called Charlize Theron's performance among the best in the history of movie acting. They were right.

  • Director:
    David Lynch

    A beautiful woman (Laura Elena Harring) riding in a limousine along Los Angeles' Mulholland Drive is targeted by a would-be shooter, but before he can pull the trigger, she is injured when her limo is hit by another car. The woman stumbles from the wreck with a head wound, and in time makes her way into an apartment with no ...

    Our Take: “No hay Banda” says a stage performer as she sings to the music of a non-existent band. This is just a taste of David Lynch’s surreal world in Mulholland Drive. A mind-blowingly complex performance by Naomi Watts and a picture of a world where no one and nothing is as it seems, make this arguably the director’s best film but irrefutably the most discussed.

  • Director:
    Allan Moyle

    A gifted teenager, dreaming of life beyond her small Nova Scotia town, becomes inspired when a 15-year-old girl from New York moves in next door.

  • Nola Cover Art 2003
    Director:
    Alan Hruska

    Nola (Emmy Rossum) is a Kansas teen who runs away to New York City to escape an abusive stepfather. Once she gets to the big town, she sets about looking for a job and for her father, whom she's never met. She attacks both tasks with fierce determination, but has little success, until she stumbles upon a greasy spoon near ...

  • Director:
    Caroline Link

    Walter Redlich (Merab Ninidze) is a successful Jewish lawyer living in Germany during the rise of the Third Reich. Aware of the increasing dangers of remaining in Germany, Walter seeks exile on a farm in Kenya, while his socially prominent wife, Jettel (Juliane Koehler), and his young daughter, Regina (Lea Kurka), stay behind, as does his father, Max (Gerd Heinz), ...

    Our Take: The Holocaust continues to provide the backdrop to some of the most memorable films. This film by German filmmaker Caroline Link went on to win the Oscar® for best foreign language film as it explores the world of a family with a daughter, roughly the age of Anne Frank, who survive the War as an exile in Africa.

  • Director:
    John Sayles

    May-Alice Culhane was a successful soap opera star, but a car accident has left her bound to a wheelchair. She returns to her now-empty family home in the bayous of Louisiana, which she had eagerly left years before. She drinks heavily and vents her bitterness on the succession of nurses hired to take care of her, who immediately quit because ...

    Our Take: This beautifully directed and acted story is one of the few movies that gets it right about the wonderful and deep friendships that can develop between even the most different women.

  • Director:
    Peter Sollett

    Victor is growing up on the Lower East Side and is at the age where he is driven by desire and unchained by maturity. His image as a ladies man is shattered when he is found in Fat Donna's bedroom. Soon, as a result of his sister's big mouth, the whole Dominican community knows. Full of confidence, Victor sets out ...

    Our Take: A refreshingly intimate, tender, and comic portrayal of three Hispanic teens trying to grow up facing familiar problems with unique approaches.

  • Director:
    Darren Aronofsky

    Drugs. They consume mind, body and soul. Once you're hooked, you're hooked. Four lives. Four addicts. Four failures. Doing their best to succeed in the world, but failing miserably, four people get hooked on various drugs. Despite their aspirations of greatness, they succumb to their addictions. Watching the addicts spiral out of control, we bear witness to the dirtiest, ugliest ...

    Our Take: Yes it is a harrowing depiction of drug use- but we chose it because it is one of the artistically impressive movies of our time. Director Aronofsky takes you on a journey of the senses you will never forget.

  • Director:
    Dylan Kidd

    Set against the bright lights of Manhattan, a tale which takes a comic, urbane look at the modern male ego at war in the singles scene trenches. Roger Swanson is a hopelessly cynical advertising copywriter with a razor-sharp wit who believes he has mastered the art of manipulating women. But Roger's seemingly foolproof world of smooth talk and casual sex ...

  • Director:
    James Ivory

    Nominated for eight Oscars in 1986, including Best Picture, and winner of three (Costumes, Art Direction and Adapted Screenplay), A Room with a View is the film that defined Merchant-Ivory as the masters of the romantic period piece. A brilliant adaptation of E.M. Forster's novel, A Room with a View tells the story of the coming of age of Lucy ...

    Our Take: One of the most sensual and romantic movies ever made, period.

  • Secretary Cover Art 2002
    Director:
    Steven Shainberg

    Lee Holloway is a smart, quirky woman in her twenties who returns to her hometown in Florida after a brief stay in a mental hospital. In search of relief from herself and her oppressive childhood environment, she starts to date a nerdy friend from high school and takes a job as a secretary in a local law firm, soon developing ...

    Our Take: A funny and romantic movie about loneliness, sex, power, pain and subordination, featuring Maggie Gyllenhall's star-making performance.

  • Director:
    Steven Soderbergh

    Ann is married to John, who is having an affair with her sister Cynthia. Ann's a quiet type and unwilling to let herself go. When John's old friend, Graham, shows up, all their lives change. Graham likes to videotape interviews with women.

    Our Take: This has been called the movie that put the Sundance Film Festival on the map- it is talked about in every book, movie, and article on modern American film.

  • Sexy Beast Cover Art 2000
    Director:
    Jonathan Glazer

    Gal, a retired gangster, lives a happy life with his wife Deedee in a beatiful house in spain. Don Logan, a respected name with the mob and an old "friend" to Gal, suddenly shows up. He wants Gal to join him on this big strike in London together with a well picked out gang of respected gangsters. When Gal keeps ...

    Our Take: Ben Kingsley plays a wicked but sympathetic gangster. He's totally believable!

  • Director:
    Billy Ray

    This film tells the true story of fraudulent Washington, D.C. journalist Stephen Glass (Christensen), who rose to meteoric heights as a young writer in his 20s, becoming a staff writer at "The New Republic" for three years (1995-1998), where 27 of his 41 published stories were either partially or completely made up. Looking for a short cut to fame, Glass ...

    Our Take: Pay close attention to every detail and nuance in the film, by then end you will want to rethink all of your assumptions. Another great Peter Sarsgaard performance.

  • Sideways Cover Art 2004
    Director:
    Alexander Payne

    Miles is a failed writer living a meager existence in San Diego as an English teacher. With his career seemingly fading and the fate of a book hinging on a publisher's decision, Miles is depressed with himself and what he hasn't achieved. Jack is a television actor whom some recognize but not many do, as if he were a minor ...

    Our Take: We rarely see the friendship between two guys as the central plot point of a film, and even more rarely explored with such humor, keen observation and deft acting.

  • Director:
    David Mamet

    Having left New Hampshire over excessive demands by the locals, the cast and crew of "The Old Mill" moves their movie shoot to a small town in Vermont. However, they soon discover that The Old Mill burned down in 1960, the star can't keep his pants zipped, the starlet won't take her top off, and the locals aren't quite as ...

    Our Take: A fun look at what happens when the circus, or in this case, Hollywood comes to town. David Mamet's direction of this ensemble piece is wonderful

  • Tadpole Cover Art 2002
    Director:
    Gary Winick

    Beautiful, sophisticated women are all over Oscar Grubman. He is sensitive and compassionate, speaks French fluently, is passionate about Voltaire, and thinks the feature that tells the most about a woman is her hands. On the train home from Chauncey Academy for the Thanksgiving weekend, Oscar confides in his best friend that he has plans for this vacation--he will win ...

    Our Take: One of the early examples of digital filmmaking that hit the big screen- a May/September romantic comedy on New York's upper east side. Sigourney Weaver is very convincing as a step mother being romantically pursued by her step son.

  • Director:
    Miguel Arteta

    Director Miguel Arteta and writer Mike White, who had previously collaborated on Chuck and Buck, turn an eye toward suburban boredom with the quirky comedy The Good Girl. Jennifer Aniston stars as Justine, a woman who is feeling constrained by her life. Her husband, Phil (John C. Reilly), is a house painter who spends the majority of his time smoking ...

    Our Take: Good girls never have it easy. Neither does Jennifer Aniston in her unconventional performance as a super-market clerk in small-town Texas who embarks on a love affair to find meaning and stimulation in her otherwise dead-end life.

  • Director:
    Danny Leiner

    Avinash alias Avi and his partner Satish are Manhattan-based Security guards, hired in the wake of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in New York. They have now been assigned to ensure the protection of a visiting Indian General, Ganjee. While Avi is a flirt, and of a cheerful disposition, Satish is quite grouchy, wrestling with personal and family problems. ...

    Our Take: Watch Maggie Gyllenhaal do her special magic on the screen. This film takes you inside the characters in a super competetive world of high end cake making and drills deeply into really bad psychotherapy. The high stakes drive people crazy - suicidal.

  • The Limey Cover Art 1999
    Director:
    Steven Soderbergh

    Two actors best known for their work in the late 1960s, Terence Stamp and Peter Fonda, star in The Limey, a drama in which a recently released felon contemplates the gulf between aging criminals like himself and their modern counterparts. Wilson (Stamp) is a British career criminal who has been released after nine years in prison. He has learned that ...

  • Director:
    Don Roos

    A 16-year-old Louisiana girl (Christina Ricci) moves in with her homosexual half-brother (Martin Donovan) and immediately starts coming on to his sexual partner (Ivan Sergei), finally forcing him into an affair in which she becomes pregnant. The whole affair blows into a scandal exposing her school teacher brother and the true parent of the child is called into question as ...

    Our Take: Be afraid of your worst relationship nightmares. Christina Ricci is irresistible as always.

  • Director:
    Noah Baumbach

    The patriarch (Jeff Daniels) of an eccentric Brooklyn family claims to once have been a great novelist, but he has settled into a teaching job. When his wife (Laura Linney) discovers a writing talent of her own, jealousy divides the family, leaving two teenage sons to forge new relationships with their parents. Linney's character begins dating her younger son's tennis ...

    Our Take: They are urbane and sophisticated and their lives are falling apart - A dysfunctional New York family drama filled with wit, poignancy and memorable performances and dialogue.

  • Director:
    Thomas McCarthy

    When his only friend and co-worker dies, a young man born with dwarfism moves to an abandoned train depot in rural New Jersey. Though he tries to maintain a life of solitude, he is soon entangled with an artist who is struggling with a personal tragedy and an overly-friendly Cuban hot dog vendor.

    Our Take: Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows could well be the description of this rich, rewarding, funny and memorable three way buddy movie.

  • Director:
    Jenniphr Goodman

    In his early 30s, the beer-bellied Dex has things figured out. He's widely read in philosophy, he's studied Steve McQueen the prototypical cool American hero, and he's distilled Buddhism and Taoism into three laws that make him a hit with women: don't express desire, do something heroic in front of her, then retreat. A part-time job with young children, beer, ...

  • Director:
    Alan Hruska

    Rookie lawyer Alec Brno has just been assigned the case of his career: exposing a billion-dollar oil scam led by a ruthless mafia boss. When he reluctantly falls for the gangster's beautiful but drug-addicted wife - also his key witness - Alec soon realizes that all the legal savvy in the world can't protect him from the dangerous reality of ...

    Our Take: An aspiring, high-stakes litigator jeopardizes his career, and his life, by falling in love with his chief witness- a recovering addict and the wife of a Mafia boss. You have to fall in love with Anson Mount and Erica Leehrsen.

  • Director:
    David Mamet

    Early 20th century England: while toasting his daughter Catherine's engagement, Arthur Winslow learns the royal naval academy expelled his 14-year-old son, Ronnie, for stealing five shillings. Father asks son if it is true; when the lad denies it, Arthur risks fortune, health, domestic peace, and Catherine's prospects to pursue justice. After defeat in the military court of appeals, Arthur and ...

  • Director:
    Nicole Kassell

    After twelve years in prison, Walter arrives in an unnamed city, moves into a small apartment across the street from an elementary school, gets a job at a lumberyard, and mostly keeps to himself. A quiet, guarded man, Walter finds unexpected solace from Vickie, a tough-talking woman who promises not to judge him for his history. But Walter cannot escape ...

    Our Take: A quiet and delicate film about a pedophile's return to society after imprisonment. With moving performances by Kevin Bacon and wife Kyra Sedgwick, and the director's tender take on the subject matter, this one should not be missed.

  • Director:
    Rob Reiner

    Rob Reiner's directorial debut has developed into a cult phenomenon. The film that invented the "rockumentary" has now outlasted most of the bands it mocked. Following the ill - fated American comeback tour of an aging heavy metal group, this film has joined the ranks of the greatest comedies ever made.

    Our Take: Before there was 'Behind the Music" and Borat, there was this hilarious "documentary" about a heavy metal band.

  • Director:
    Mike Leigh

    After their production "Princess Ida" meets with less-than-stunning reviews, the relationship between Gilbert and Sullivan is strained to breaking. Their friends and associates attempt to get the two to work together again, which opens the way to one of their greatest successes.

    Our Take: Crisply paced and thoroughly charming, bouncing along like a Gilbert & Sullivan "patter song."

  • Tsotsi Cover Art 2005
    Director:
    Gavin Hood

    Set amidst the sprawling Johannesburg township of Soweto, where survival is the primary objective, Tsotsi traces six days in the life of a ruthless young gang leader who ends up caring for a baby accidentally kidnapped during a car-jacking. Tsotsi is a gritty and moving portrait of an angry young man living in a state of extreme urban deprivation. His ...

    Our Take: A deserved Oscar winner for best foreign film, this South African drama will keep you in suspense and move you to tears.

  • Tully Cover Art 2000
    Director:
    Hilary Birmingham

    Tully Coates, Jr., with his good looks and chiseled body, is the local heartthrob, and while he has a new girlfriend virtually every night, he's incapable of getting close to anyone. His younger brother Earl, the shy and sensitive type, frequents the local revival house. The only common bond between these disparate siblings is Ella Smalley, an intelligent and even-tempered ...

    Our Take: Beautiful and subtle writing and directing. Anson Mount and Julianne Nicholson invite you into an intimate rural world.

  • Director:
    Raymond De Felitta

    Set during the 1950s in Staten Island, the film charts the financial failures of Buddy (Michael Rispoli), a nice-guy entrepreneur who has perpetual bad luck. While he was in the army, he sang songs on stage to bolster troop morale. During one performance, he received a warm reception from none other than Arthur Godfrey, who invited him to audition when ...

    Our Take: We can only describe this movie as old-fashioned in the best sense of the word - a great story about characters you grow to love and don't want to leave when the movie ends.

  • Director:
    François Ozon

    Marie, a professor of English literature in a Paris university, has been happily married to Jean for 25 years, although they have no children. During their summer vacations in the southwest of France, Jean leaves Marie sunbathing on the beach and goes to swim in the sea. When Marie turns back, she cannot find Jean. Has he left her? Committed ...

    Our Take: Charlotte Rampling's triumphant "return" to movies and one of the most beautiful and haunting movies about loss ever made.