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- "Nocturnes at the Golden Gate" - invites us to discover the world and work of Irina Ionesco, a unique figure of contemporary photography. Since the early 70's, she photographer has been working in her apartment near the Porte Dorée, in Paris, principally with the female body. Scraps from the past and elements of the present come together to evoke the coherence and multiple meanings of Irina's baroque universe : the solitude of her Romanian childhood ; her youthful debut in the music hall ; her relationships with her models and her way of building images. Little by little, her work is illuminated and takes on different vibrations, though we have never left the apartment : her workspace, temple and museum.
- He was the great rival and competitor of renowned studios Pathe and Gaumont. He created Paris's two mythical theaters, the Rex and the Olympia, and was one of the talking film pioneers. He's also the one who revolutionized the Arabic cinema by spreading the Egyptian films through out North Africa. Yet today, few know who Jacques Haik was, and his name has almost disappeared from cinema history. Thanks to a mysterious roll of film and some determined descendants, Jacques Haik's name is back on everyone's lips, from Tunis to Paris, from memory to history.
- Follows the rehearsals of 'Faits d'artifice', a choreography by Françoise and Dominique Dupuy, created with Régine Chopinot and the company Le Ballet Atlantique, as the director is aiming to catch the process of creation from the inside.
- How does India, where there are retirement homes for sacred cows, handle the mad cow crisis?
- Three farmers from the central part of Brittany, France, speak about their daily work, pleasure, constraints, and doubts as they face increasingly tough restrictions and regulation in the agricultural policy of the European Union.
- Once upon a time, there was a building in the heart of the city, an architectural gem at the center of the concerns of elected officials and citizens, now demolished, replaced by a luxury apartment building, currently under construction, the new fruit of the architectural work of men. This is the story of the Palais des Congrès in Rouen, once standing on the square by the Cathedral: built in 1976 under Jean Lecanuet, closed since 1996, vanished in 2010. How was this even possible?
- Here is the story of the meeting of artist Raymond Hains with filmmaker Cécile Déroudille-Roussière, an encounter full of coincidences, which is good since those happy coincidences are some of the artist's favorite hobbyhorses.
- While most of Cameroon's Pygmies still live in the bush, a handful of families have moved to a paved road in a village where their daily lives balance between maintaining traditions and adapting to Bantu society. The film takes us to meet the Pygmies of the road, a small community at a crossroads.
- One year, 12 months, 12 filmmakers who are filming Paris in an unusual way: "their" Paris before a symbolic date, the night of 12/31/99 to 01/01/00. They are turning one by one the pages of their own Parisian calendar of the year 1999.
- From February to November 2007, director Henry Colomer followed and filmed the work of French artist and photographer Jean-Michel Fauquet in the privacy of his studio in Paris, and is now releasing this intimate portrait.
- Director Sylvain Bouttet follows the negotiations between farmers, state authorities and environmental associations around the future of the Lannion watershed, invaded by green algae, in the north of Brittany, France.