Reclining with Agnès Varda… 30 Years of French Film Festival UK

October 26, 2022

It all started in Paris. The second European Film Awards took place on a cold November evening in 1989 at the Art Deco Théâtre des Champs-Elysées. Liv Ullmann was President of the Jury, and the stellar assembly of talents included Yves Montand, Micheline Presle, Leslie Caron, and Sir Richard “Dickie” Attenborough. 

As journalists, Richard Mowe and I were lucky to attend.  It was a night to remember—Philippe Noiret was named European Actor for his roles in Bertrand Tavernier’s La Vie et rien d’autre (Life and Nothing But) and Giuseppe Tornatore’s Cinema Paradiso. Theo Angelopoulos’ Landscape in the Mist was chosen as best film. Presenter Hanna Schygulla brought fellow presenter Pedro Almodóvar a chunk of stone from the Berlin Wall, which had fallen just two weeks earlier. There was a goosebump moment when a hushed auditorium listened to an audio message of welcome from Marlene Dietrich. She lived just a few streets away, and had glimpsed the preparations for the ceremony from her window. The following year, the awards would be held in Glasgow.

Left – Right: Jean-Paul Rappeneau with Festival Founder Richard Mowe in 2007; Agnès Varda at the 1995 Festival.

The powerful sense of a shared community that night left us both pondering why so many European films never saw the light of day in Britain. There were countless French and Francophone films that might only have made a solitary appearance at a festival and then disappeared from view. There were some notable exceptions as audiences flocked to Jean de Florette, Au revoir les enfants (Goodbye, Children) or Cyrano de Bergerac – but those were just the highly visible tip of a much more substantial national industry. There was a feeling that something should be done about it. Perhaps, we should start an event celebrating French and French-language cinema. That was how the French Film Festival UK began.

It took a little time to convince others that this was a good idea. Sponsors, venues, sales agents and filmmakers came on board – all of them have been vital partners in the Festival ever since. Later, Richard headed back to Paris to visit Jeanne Moreau, wooing her with flowers and charm as he invited her to become the patron of the Festival. She accepted.

The first Festival was held in 1992 in Glasgow and Edinburgh, opening with the devilish Josiane Balasko comedy Ma vie est un enfer (My Life Is Hell). It was to be a Festival without barriers – showcasing commercial success and arthouse promise, big titles and fresh discoveries. Focusing on short films and education work encouraged a younger generation to broaden their horizons and try something different.

In the first year of the Festival you could have seen Jean-Jacques Beineix’s IP5: L’île aux pachydermes (IP5: The Island of Pachyderms) with Yves Montand, Régis Wargnier’s Indochine with Catherine Deneuve, and Claude Chabrol’s Madame Bovary with Isabelle Huppert (revived for this year’s anniversary edition). Looking back, it is heartening to recall how much of an emphasis the Festival placed on the work of female directors. In 1993, there were new films from Coline Serreau, Claire Devers, Christine Pascal, and Anne Fontaine. 

Cover of the first ever French Film Festival UK brochure in 1992, featuring My Life Is Hell by Josiane Balasko

Early Festivals championed Claire Denis, Diane Kurys, Tonie Marshall, Nicole Garcia, Marion Vernoux and, in later years, such talents as Danielle Arbid and Blandine Lenoir. The Festival also developed a pretty good record for talent spotting. The first Festival included first features from Arnaud Desplechin and Brigitte Roüan. The second edition brought the first features of Cédric Klapisch and Anne Fontaine to British audiences, and later Emmanuel Mouret made his bow.

Looking back, there is such a jumble of memories from the Festival’s earliest years. Who can forget Agnès Varda draped like Cleopatra across the front-row seats at Filmhouse in Edinburgh, relaxed and contently horizontal as she took questions from an audience who had just watched L’une chante, l’autre pas (One Sings, the Other Doesn’t). Or Bertrand Tavernier storming around the country like a touring rock star and reviving memories in Glasgow of Death Watch, the film he made there with Romy Schneider and Harvey Keitel.

Gérard Jugnot kept his secret when an audience member at the Glasgow Film Theatre cheekily inquired whether he was a boxers or briefs man – it was relevant to his film. Jugnot was represented at the first Festival with Une Époque formidable. And Fontaine admitted that Miou-Miou would be delighted to hear that someone felt there was a striking resemblance between her and handsome co-star Stanislas Merhar in Nettoyage à sec (Dry Cleaning). 

Left – Right: Jean Reno and Glasgow Film Theatre’s Jaki McDougall, 2007; Bérénice Bejo and Michel Hazanavicius taking time out from ‘OSS 117’, 2007 – Image: Valentina Bonizzi

Director Jean-Paul Rappeneau, who was the subject of an early retrospective, savoured a visit to Edinburgh Castle. and subsequently has loyally made several return trips. Meanwhile, Claude Lelouch (Hommes, femmes, mode d’emploi / Men, Women: A User’s Manual) went for his morning jog with Richard. He figures nostalgically in this year’s edition, with Les Plus belles années d’une vie (The Best Years of a Life) as a tribute to the late Jean-Louis Trintignant. And there were so many more: Alain Corneau, Nadine Trintignant, and Jean Becker.

Over the past three decades, the unique Festival has only grown in importance as a showcase for French and Francophone films that now has a footprint across more than 35 cinemas in the United Kingdom. It has given audiences an early chance to spot rising talents and see in person a galaxy of greats that stretches from Bérénice Bejo to  Patrice Chéreau, Yolande Moreau to Antoine de Caunes, Claude Sautet to Roschdy Zem, Jean Reno to Agnès Jaoui. The organisers helped bring Sylvain Chomet and his wife Sally to Edinburgh, where he stayed to make The Illusionist. Although back in Normandy, he remains a patron of the Festival. 

Access to French cinema has grown easier – more films secure British distribution and more classics than ever are being restored and revived. The core values of the Festival remain the same – a grand and glorious celebration of French and Francophone cinema in all its rich variety and guises. Here’s to the next 30 years!

Allan Hunter is co-director of the Glasgow Film Festival, a former co-director of the French Film Festival UK and the Italian Film Festival UK, a biographer, and a journalist contributing to many international film publications.

FFF Recommends: Lola

February 11, 2022

11 February 2022

 


 

Lola and the Sea

Available to watch on DVD and on demand NOW!

 

 


 

Lola and the Sea / Lola vers la mer (PG)

 

Just when Lola, 18 years old and transgender, learns that she can finally have surgery her mother, her only financial support, passes away. Abiding by her mother’s last wishes, Lola and her father, who have a thorny relationship and have not seen each other for two years, have to undertake a journey to the Belgian coast.

 

Director Laurent Micheli
Cast Benoît Magimel, Mya Bollaers
France / Belgium | 2019 | 90 mins
French with English subtitles

 

Awards & Festivals

Official Selection, French Film Festival UK (2020)
Winner Most Promising Actress and Best Production Design, Magritte Awards, Belgium (2020)

 

Watch the trailer

 

 


 

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FFF Recommends: MyFrenchFilmFestival

January 18, 2022

18 JANUARY 2022

 


 

The 12th Edition Of

MyFrenchFilmFestival

Our top picks from this year’s selection!

 

 

MyFrenchFilmFestival is back with 30 films on offer: features and shorts, all with English subtitles and available online until 14 February. The selection includes Rémi Chayé’s animation Calamity and Maximilian Badier-Rosenthal’s Malabar – both part of last year’s French Film Festival UK. Read on to see our top picks.

 

Selection of feature films available for €1.99 each until Monday 14 February

Selection of short films available for free until Monday 14 February

 

 

 


 

 

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Paris Calligrammes

August 29, 2021

29 AUGUST 2021

 


 

Ulrika Ottinger’s

Paris Calligrammes

In cinemas now

 

 

 


 

Paris Calligrammes / Paris Calligrammes

 

Documentary. Director and artist Ulrike Ottinger gives the personal documentary a historical turn: a memoir of the 1960s, centred on her life in Paris from 1962 featuring her encounters with Dadaist and Surrealist artists, her trips to the Cinémathèque française, Claude Lévi-Strauss’s lectures and her friends’ political activism, all against the backdrop of the city’s teeming street life and café society.

 

Cast Ulrike Ottinger
2020 | Germany, France | 129 mins | German, French and English with English subtitles.

 

Watch FFF director Richard Mowe introduce the trailer

 

 


 

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July MUBI Selection

June 26, 2021

26 JUNE 2021


Four award-winning Cannes favourites

Screening online in July on MUBI

With the Cannes Film Festival taking place in July, MUBI is screening a selection of award-winning films from previous years. Here are some of the highlights: to watch, just log in to your MUBI account. If you don’t have one, sign up today and get MUBI free for the next three months.

 


 

FROM WEDNESDAY 7 JULY

Alice and the Mayor / Alice et le maire

After 30 years in politics, the mayor of Lyon (Fabrice Luchini), still devoted to his city, has lost his ability to come up with new ideas. Enter low-key academic Alice (Anaïs Demoustier) taken on by City Hall to conjure up new suggestions.

Dir Nicolas Pariser
Cast Fabrice Luchini, Anaïs Demoustier, Nora Hamzawi
2019 | France | 105 mins
French with English subtitles

AWARDS & FESTIVALS

Winner, Label Europa Cinemas, Cannes Film Festival (2019)
Official Selection, French Film Festival UK (2019)

 


 

FROM THURSDAY 8 JULY

Jeannette: The Childhood of Joan of Arc / Jeannette, l’enfance de Jeanne d’Arc

The story of France’s patron saint, who was martyred during the Hundred Years’ War, is told through the joyful noise of a heavy-metal musical. Adapted from two versions of a play by French writer Charles Peguy.

Dir Bruno Dumont
Cast Lise Leplat Prudhomme, Jeanne Voisin, Lucile Gauthier
2017 | France | 105 mins
French with English subtitles

AWARDS & FESTIVALS

Directors’ Fortnight, Cannes Film Festival (2017)
Official Selection, French Film Festival UK (2019)

 


 

FROM SUNDAY 11 JULY

Sibyl / Sibyl

Lacking inspiration for her new novel, psychotherapist Sibyl (Festival favourite Virginie Efira) borrows source material from the life of her newest patient Margot, a young actress wrapped up in a dramatic affair with her co-star, Igor.

Dir Justine Triet
Cast Virginie Efira, Adèle Exarchopoulos, Gaspard Ulliel
2019 | France, Belgium | 101 mins
French with English subtitles

AWARDS & FESTIVALS

Official Selection, Cannes Film Festival (2019)
Winner, ASECAN Award for Best Film in the Official Selection, Seville European Film Festival (2019)

 


 

FROM THURSDAY 15 JULY

Jimmy P: Psychotherapy of a Plains Indian / Jimmy P.

A troubled Native American veteran forms an extraordinary friendship with his maverick French psychoanalyst as they try to find a cure to his suffering. Adapted from the 1951 non-fiction account by the psychoanalyst.

Dir Arnaud Desplechin
Cast Benicio Del Toro, Mathieu Amalric, Gina McKee
2013 | France, USA | 117 mins
French with English subtitles

AWARDS & FESTIVALS

Nominee, Palme d’Or, Cannes Film Festival (2013)

 


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Films to watch on MUBI in June

May 27, 2021

French documentaries screening on MUBI


This week we take a look at some of the great documentaries which are coming up in June on MUBI – all by female directors. To give you some ideas we’ve picked our top four.

Included in the line-up, and screening from 12 June, is Callisto McNulty’s Delphine and Carole, which we showed during the 2019 Festival. It charts the creative collaboration between Delphine Seyrig and Carole Roussopoulos looking at the history of women’s rights and feminist filmmaking.

To watch, just log in to your MUBI account.  If you don’t have one, sign up today and get MUBI free for the next three months.

We hope you enjoy the films.

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Letters Home / Letters Home

Available 6 June

Dir Chantal Akerman

Synopsis

Keeping the original theatrical mise-en-scene, the film features Delphine Seyrig and her niece Coralie Seyrig reciting poet Sylvia Plath’s letters to her mother directly to the audience as though we were the recipients of these private missives.

Watch the trailer

Credits

Director Chantal Akerman
1986 | Belgium, France | 104 mins | French with English subtitles.

WATCH IT FROM 6 JUNE


Delphine and Carole / Delphine et Carole, insoumuses

Available 12 June

Dir Callisto McNulty

Synopsis

The portrait of 1970s enchanted feminism, the film retraces the encounter between actress Delphine Seyrig and director Carole Roussopoulos in 1974, their creative and disruptive use of video, their radical actions and incisive humour.

Watch the trailer

Credits

Director Callisto McNulty
2018 | France, Switzerland | 70 mins | French with English subtitles.

WATCH IT FROM 12 JUNE


Be Pretty and Shut Up! / Sois belle et tais-toi!

Available 21 June

Dir Delphine Seyrig

Synopsis

In 1976, Delphine Seyrig asked 24 French and US actresses about their professional experiences as women, their roles and their relationships with directors. A sobering assessment of an industry that only awards parts based on clichés and stereotypes. Includes interviews with Jane Fonda, Jenny Agutter, Luce Guilbeault and Marie Dubois.

Watch the trailer

Credits

Director Delphine Seyrig
1981 | France | 111 mins | French with English subtitles.

WATCH IT FROM 21 JUNE


F.H.A.R / Le F.H.A.R (Front Homosexuel d’Action Révolutionnaire)

Available 21 June

Dir Carole Roussopoulos

Synopsis

First meetings and then participation of the FHAR (Front Homosexuel d’Action Révolutionnaire) in a public demonstration.

Watch the trailer

Credits

Director Carole Roussopoulos
1971 | France | 26 mins | French with English subtitles.

WATCH IT FROM 21 JUNE


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Suzanne Lindon’s Spring Blossom

April 24, 2021

FROM 24 April 2021


Suzanne Lindon’s Spring Blossom


This week we take a look at Suzanne Lindon’s directorial debut, Spring Blossom, which has just been released on Curzon Home Cinema.

Premiering in the UK earlier this year at Glasgow Film Festival, it’s a remarkably assured debut film. Delicately evoking the worlds of François Truffaut and Éric Rohmer, Lindon proves herself a dazzling new screen talent in a complete charmer of a film.

For a bit of a flavour why not take a look at this short introduction by FFF Director Richard Mowe in our Trailer of the Week? We hope you enjoy the film.


Spring Blossom / Seize printemps

(N/C 12+)

Dir Suzanne Lindon

Synopsis

Suzanne (Lindon) is 16. She is bored with people of her age. Every day on her way to high school, she passes a theatre. There, she meets an older man, and becomes obsessed with him. Despite their age difference, they find in each other an answer to their ennui and fall in love. But Suzanne is afraid she’s missing out on life – that life of a 16-year-old, which she had struggled so much to enjoy in the same way as her peers.

Read FFF Director Richard Mowe’s review on Eye For Film

Watch the trailer on YouTube

Credits

Director Suzanne Lindon
Cast Suzanne Lindon, Arnaud Valois
2020 | France | English subtitles | 73 mins

WATCH IT NOW ON CURZON HOME CINEMA

 


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Last chance to catch this year’s MyFrenchFilmFestival

February 13, 2021

FROM 12 FEBRUARY 2021


Last chance to catch this year’s MyFrenchFilmFestival


We hope you’ve been enjoying our top selections from this year’s MyFrenchFilmFestival. As there’s only a few days left of the Festival, we take a look at more of our favourites. From short films to features, and documentaries to animations, there’s something for everyone. They’re all available to watch until Monday 15 February.

Included in the line-up is Aurel’s haunting animation Josep, which was first screened at the 2020 Cannes Film Festival. Younger audiences will enjoy Javier Navarro Avilés‘ fantasy animation Dalia’s World, part of the official selection at this years Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival.

Remember, to watch all you need is a MyFrenchFilmFestival account. The short films are free to view, while there is a small fee for features. We hope you enjoy the films.

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Dalia’s World

Dir Javier Navarro Avilés

Synopsis

Dalia is exploring her father’s tropical greenhouse. After taking a few pictures, she realises that she has lost sight of her father. A real tropical forest appears in front of her. Animation.

Awards

Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival (2021)
Official Selection

Credits

Director Javier Navarro Avilés
2019 | France | No dialogue | 3 mins

WATCH NOW


Josep

Dir Aurel

Synopsis

February 1939. Faced with so many Spanish republicans fleeing Franco’s dictatorship the French Government confines them to concentration camps. Despite being separated by barbed wire, two men strike up a close friendship: later the prison guard remembers this encounter with Catalan artist Josep Bartoli, who later settled in New York. Animation.

Awards

Cannes Film Festival (2020)
Official Selection

Credits

Director Aurel
Voice Cast Sergi López, Bruno Solo, David Marsais, Gérard Hernandez, Valérie Lemercier, Thomas VDB, Silvia Pérez Cruz, François Morel, Sophia Aram, Alain Cauchi
2020 | France, Belgium, Spain | English subtitles | 74 mins

WATCH NOW


Madame

Dir Stéphane Riethauser

Synopsis

A grandmother and her grandson (the director) explore gender, sexuality, and the transmission of identity. Documentary.

Awards

Madrid International Documentary Film Festival (2019)
Winner –  Grand Jury Prize

Credits

Director Stéphane Riethauser
Cast Caroline Della Beffa, Stéphane Riethauser
2019 | Switzerland | English subtitles | 94 mins

WATCH NOW


Recoding Entropia

Dir François Vautier

Synopsis

At the core of nothingness, on the horizon of infinite space and unfathomable time, wanders an imposing geometrical form, delivering a mysterious message as its shape changes. Animation, VR Experience.

Awards

Festival du Nouveau Cinéma de Montréal (2020)
Official Selection

Credits

Director François Vautier
2020 | France | No dialogue | 8 mins

WATCH NOW


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